
The Idea of Progress
From Renaissance to Our Days
Kevin Miles(Author)
Colloquium (Publisher)
Published on 10. February 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
460 pages
979-8-232-54750-9 (ISBN)
Description
Progress-once the defining promise of modern civilization-now stands on uncertain ground. In an age marked by climate catastrophe, democratic fragility, technological upheaval, and existential doubt, the old narratives no longer hold. This sweeping, provocative book traces the rise, crisis, and possible renewal of the idea of progress, offering readers a panoramic journey from the Enlightenment to the Anthropocene, from industrial revolutions to digital empires, from human rights movements to transhumanist dreams.
Drawing on philosophy, history, political theory, environmental science, and cutting¿edge debates in biotechnology and AI, the book reveals how the modern faith in improvement has been repeatedly challenged-and yet continues to shape our deepest hopes and fears. Readers encounter the thinkers who built the architecture of progress, the critics who exposed its blind spots, and the movements today struggling to redefine what improvement means in a fractured world.
Across twenty¿one chapters, the book explores:the intellectual origins of progress and its entanglement with empire, capitalism, and scientific rationality
the environmental reckoning that forces humanity to confront planetary limits
the digital revolution's double¿edged impact on democracy, identity, and truth
the rise of biotechnologies that blur the boundaries of the human
the global crisis of liberal democracy and the contested future of human rights
the emergence of multiple modernities and plural visions of flourishing
the possibility of a non¿linear, non¿teleological, yet hopeful framework for the future
Rather than offering easy optimism or fatalistic despair, the book argues for a new imagination of progress-one grounded in humility, plurality, ecological responsibility, and collective agency. It invites readers to rethink what it means to move forward when the future is no longer guaranteed, and when the very definition of "the human" is up for debate.
Ambitious in scope yet deeply attuned to the anxieties of our moment, this is a book for readers who sense that the old stories are breaking down and are searching for new ways to understand where we have been-and where we might still go.
More details
Language
English
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
574 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-232-54750-9 (9798232547509)
Schweitzer Classification