Progress, Samuel Miller McDonald
Progress, Samuel Miller McDonald
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Progress
How One Idea Built Civilization and Now Threatens to Destroy It

Author: Samuel Miller McDonald

Narrator: Samuel Miller McDonald

Unabridged: 12 hr 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/02/2025

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

For fans of Thomas Piketty, David Graeber, and Jared Diamond: A bold, provocative, wide-ranging argument about the human idea of progress that offers a new vision of our future

This program is read by the author.

Progress is power. Narratives of progress, the stories we tell about whether a society is moving in the right or the wrong direction, are immensely potent. Progress has built cities, flattened mountains, charted the globe, delved the oceans and space, created wealth, opportunity, and remarkable innovation, and ushered in a new epoch unique in our planet’s 4.5-billion-year history.

But the modern story of progress is also a very dangerous fiction. It shapes our sense of what progress means, and justifies what we will do to achieve it—no matter the cost. We continue to subscribe to a set of myths, about dominion, growth, extraction, and expansion, that have fueled our success, but now threaten our—and all species’—existence on a planet in crisis.

In Progress, geographer Samuel Miller McDonald offers a radical new perspective on the myths upon which the modern world is built, illuminating its destructive lineage and suggesting an urgent alternative. Drawing on interdisciplinary research across anthropology, history, philosophy and geography, McDonald argues that if humanity is to thrive, then we must dismantle, reimagine, and create anew what progress means.

A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin’s Press

About Samuel Miller McDonald

SAMUEL MILLER MCDONALD is a geographer focusing on human-ecology, theory, and history. He holds a doctorate from Brasenose College, University of Oxford and degrees from Yale University and College of the Atlantic. He has written essays and analysis for The Nation, The Guardian, The New Republic, Current Affairs, Boston Review, and elsewhere, and has contributed interviews to BBC Ideas, VICE News Tonight, and various radio and podcast programs. Progress is his first book.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Clif on July 12, 2025

This book provides a critical look at "progress," something that most of us assume to be a good thing. A second look is taken at the ways progress is measured and the book explains how progress isn’t always as positive as perceived depending on the measured parameters. The book also shows how thus f......more

Goodreads review by Frank on July 09, 2025

While given an e-copy in exchange for an honest review, gotta say this is an overlong and America-centric criticism of a very pervasive and destructive economic, philosophical, and technological mindset that is destroying our (human) capacity to be a part of the natural world. It is quite good, and......more

Goodreads review by Darya on December 03, 2025

This book, which is one of the most powerful things I read this year, is out in the world now. Original review below: The author analyzes the idea of progress as a narrative formula that has informed many stories people tell themselves and each other about the development of society and civilization......more

Goodreads review by Anna on August 14, 2025

Samuel Miller McDonald's Progress is an ambitious book making a strong case for the fact that our understanding of and emphasis of progress as positive and beneficial is actually misplaced and misguided. Pulling together evidence across various fields and across history from antiquity to the present......more

Goodreads review by Mark on November 30, 2025

I've read a fair number of these "big picture" books by authors such as Yuval Noah Harari, Steven Pinker and Hans Rosling, and this book is something of a rejoinder to the optimistic views of human "progress" displayed therein (Pinker and Rosling are explicitly called out by McDonald). I personally......more


Quotes

Praise for Samuel Miller McDonald

“Geographer McDonald debuts with a sweeping reappraisal of the notion of historical progress. … The result is a provocative interrogation of the very foundations of modern society.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“There is an idealism to this book that refreshes readers jaded by the claims of 'techno-futurism' and the aspirations of oligarchs. You read this book and want to love the earth rather than reach for stars.” —Kirkus Reviews

"This is a wise book, and hopefully its wisdom will rub off. We need somehow to take the human traits that fixated on 'more' and turn them towards 'better,' with a rich definition of that blessed state!" -- Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

"From debunking creation myths to arguing for a deeper happiness, Progress upturns shibboleths and warns of a potentially dire future. Without new understandings of our past, such as that given here, chaos may be inevitable." --Danny Dorling, author of Slowdown and Shattered Nation

"Progress explodes the great myth of our time. Spanning cultures, continents and millennia, Samuel Miller McDonald shows how the pursuit of progress has always been a zero-sum game, and dares to imagine something better might be possible. Lucid and wise." --David Farrier, author of Footprints: In Search of Future Fossils

"If you think progress will take us to the promised land, this is a must-read." --Alpa Shah, author of The Incarcerations

"This book shatters the ideological foundation of liberalism and capitalism, which is a myth that is older than both: the notion that a better future, just around the corner, justifies or even requires the atrocities of the present. Samuel Miller McDonald could not have chosen a timelier moment to reveal the violent and ecologically catastrophic underbelly of the myth we call “progress.” The rousing implication is that each and every day of our precarious lives on this precious planet must be seized for collective struggle and worldbuilding. The future will not save us." --Thea Riofrancos, author of Extraction and co-author of A Planet to Win