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John F Lang's avatar

The improvements cited in the article are better goods and services.

The problem with the modern era is the significant degradation in Christian faith and human relationships compared to a generation or more ago. These contribute the most to human flourishing, much more than material well-being. I'd gladly trade all of our modern conveniences for life in the past except for one thing that you mentioned: improved medicine. That is arguably the most important improvement. It would be very hard to give that up. Still, I'd at least consider transporting myself back to the late nineteenth century if a time portal existed.

Christophe T's avatar

I've been saying this for years about airports and air travel. The food used to be terrible and outrageously priced. As a kid in the late 90s I remember getting a microwaved hot dog or something at O'Hare airport. Nowadays you have quality options and the prices are much more reasonable.

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