Wonder Club world wonders pyramid logo
×

Reviews for Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2004: The National Data Book

 Statistical Abstract of the United States magazine reviews

The average rating for Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2004: The National Data Book based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2007-09-29 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 3 stars Joe Mckenzie
Spoiler alert: this is an academic book, social psychology, with lots of carefully constructed experiments involving mostly white college undergraduates. Hmm.... I reconnected with this book because its title had always annoyed me. I don't know many people who believe in a just world. Most people I know will admit that their lot in life has a lot to do with luck. The luck to be born white or not, in the USA or not, during a particular up or down phase of an economic cycle, in a particular cohort -- GenX, Baby Boomer, etc -- has a lot of determinative force. This book claims that people like winners and recoil from losers. The explanation is that people want to believe they are playing a more or less fair game in life. They make up stories about these winners and losers. They could say of losers "there but for fortune go I" but often they say "wow that person screwed up his chances, and look where he's ended up". The second, unsympathetic answer was common among test subjects. If these studies were conducted, like many social psych experiments on a particular group, ie, privileged white youth who naively believe in their world because it mostly works for them, does it follow that most people really believe in a just world? Is life really like a football game, with a level playing field and referees who enforce known rules? The first, sympathetic answer, "there but for fortune go I" is where I stand. I have worked hard and been lucky, others have worked just as hard and failed. So my feeling is to be humble towards the less fortunate especially if I don't know their particular story, and a little more skeptical of the self made success stories that get touted around as morality tales. A lot of where you end up depends on where you started. Perhaps the message is that you need to look at context, choices, and luck in any one person's life, to discern the real story, and keep yourself from being overly judgmental or overly adoring.
Review # 2 was written on 2015-02-07 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 3 stars Joe Noble
I'm not sure what exactly I expected from this little book. Certainly, I expected to see Malthus's oft cited argument concerning the rate of food production vs. that of population increase (but I wondered if an entire book, however brief, could be filled on that topic). I just as certainly did not expect to meet such a charming writer and incisive thinker. But why has this book stood the test of time? Doubtless, Malthus was wrong about every specific prediction he ventured to make. He did not foresee the widespread use of contraceptives, nor the dazzling improvements in farming technology that would appear in the years to come. I wonder what Malthus would say if you told him that, in the future, less than 2% of the population of the United States would be farmers, and that the population of the world would exceed 7 billion. Probably nothing, he would just laugh at you. So, he's no Nostradamus. But then why has Malthus been brought up in every class on the environment that I have ever taken? This must be because, although Malthus was gloriously (and thankfully) wrong in the specifics, the general problem that he elucidates here is an important one that somehow eluded the attention of every major thinker before him. As the human species continues to multiply at an ever-increasing rate, the ghost of Malthus will continue to haunt us. I have heard it said that Malthus was an enemy of the poor'a lassez-faire capitalist that didn't want welfare states to impinge on the free market. Yes, he was opposed to the Poor Laws in England; but not because he cared little for the well-being of the poor. Malthus genuinely, and for good reason, believed that simply giving money to the poor without increasing the food supply wasn't likely to make their conditions any better. In point of fact, the central concern of this book is to improve the lot of the greatest possible number of people. True, for reasons he lays forth, Malthus is not very optimistic about this prospect. The tension he identifies between food supplies and population increase lead him to conclude that some poverty and suffering is inevitable, and that a perfect utopia is an idle dream. But don't mistake this realistic view of things for gloating about the destitution of the masses. Surely, if he thought that suffering could be entirely extirpated, he would throw all his weight behind that solution. Population explosion will likely be the major issue of our time. If the world is to be improved, it does no good to play around with utopian dreams where the streets are paved with gold and everyone eats candy without gaining weight or getting cavities. The solution will require a hard-headed, realistic analysis of the problem, our identifying what we can reasonably expect to work based on what has worked in the past, and our working with what is currently possible given the political situation. And when we look back at how much has already been done, we can thank Malthus for giving us a head start.


Click here to write your own review.


Login

  |  

Complaints

  |  

Blog

  |  

Games

  |  

Digital Media

  |  

Souls

  |  

Obituary

  |  

Contact Us

  |  

FAQ

CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!!