Journalists who reported flights that didn’t crash or crops that didn’t fail would quickly lose their jobs. Stories about gradual improvements rarely make the front page even when they occur on a dramatic scale and impact millions of people.
And thanks to increasing press freedom and improving technology, we hear more, about more disasters, than ever before. When Europeans slaughtered indigenous peoples across America a few centuries ago, it didn’t make the news back in the old world. When central planning resulted in mass famine in rural China, millions starved to death while the youngsters in Europe waving communist red flags knew nothing about it. When in the past whole species or ecosystems were destroyed, no one realized or even cared. Alongside all the other improvements, our surveillance of suffering has improved tremendously. This improved reporting is itself a sign of human progress, but it creates the impression of the exact opposite.
At the same time, activists and lobbyists skillfully manage to make every dip in a trend appear to be the end of the world, even if the general trend is clearly improving, scaring us with alarmist exaggerations and prophecies.
Rosling, Negativity Instinct
Rosling, Hans. Factfulness. Milano: Rizzoli, 2018.
Hits: 4119
Latest
- Giving a Voice to the Past: Intangible Heritage and Forgotten Territories 25 October 2025
- Overtourism vs. undertourism: concepts, impacts and management strategies for contemporary tourism 21 June 2025
- Kelly, Safety trumps innovation 15 June 2025
- Kelly, Public space 15 June 2025
- Khanna, Concept of mobility 15 June 2025
Most read
- Ecosystem alterations and human impacts: foundational concepts and critical perspectives
- Literary guide to Italian-speaking Switzerland launched
- AI representations of urban futures: how algorithms imagine cityscapes
- New Perspectives for Cultural Observatories: Towards Dialogue Platforms, Community Participation and Co-Creation
- The Cities of the Future: A Mosaic of Innovation, Sustainability, and Connectivity
- Dubai future visions: urban imaginaries, architecture and cultural narratives
- Statistics and Culture: An Improbable Pairing?
Impressum
Copyright 1999-2026, www.rhpositive.net
Contact: info@rhpositive.net
Source citation: "Roland Hochstrasser, www.rhpositive.net"
Images: Roland Hochstrasser unless otherwise specified; translations Openai ChatGPT