Page 240 - 1984
P. 240

and efficient—a glittering antiseptic world of glass and steel
       and snow-white concrete—was part of the consciousness of
       nearly every literate person. Science and technology were
       developing at a prodigious speed, and it seemed natural to
       assume  that  they  would  go  on  developing.  This  failed  to
       happen, partly because of the impoverishment caused by a
       long series of wars and revolutions, partly because scientific
       and technical progress depended on the empirical habit of
       thought, which could not survive in a strictly regimented
       society. As a whole the world is more primitive today than it
       was fifty years ago. Certain backward areas have advanced,
       and various devices, always in some way connected with
       warfare  and  police  espionage,  have  been  developed,  but
       experiment  and  invention  have  largely  stopped,  and  the
       ravages of the atomic war of the nineteen-fifties have nev-
       er been fully repaired. Nevertheless the dangers inherent
       in the machine are still there. From the moment when the
       machine first made its appearance it was clear to all think-
       ing people that the need for human drudgery, and therefore
       to a great extent for human inequality, had disappeared. If
       the  machine  were  used  deliberately  for  that  end,  hunger,
       overwork, dirt, illiteracy, and disease could be eliminated
       within a few generations. And in fact, without being used
       for any such purpose, but by a sort of automatic process—
       by producing wealth which it was sometimes impossible not
       to distribute—the machine did raise the living standards
       of the average humand being very greatly over a period of
       about fifty years at the end of the nineteenth and the begin-
       ning of the twentieth centuries.

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