But I’m not so sure, there was this change from working jobs like being a blacksmith or other job where you learned skills and owned the lifecycle, contrasted with the types of soul crushing factory jobs that came after.
So in curious if there’s a certain time period that people look to and make an argument that the change wasn’t worth it.
And perhaps populations that we now call "primitive" had a much greater sense of well-being than we do.
We should go slower, not accelerate.
We should enjoy what we have, not build new cravings out of thin air, just for the sake of consumption and GDP growth
± Sweden, 1750-80: https://ourworldindata.org/child-mortality-in-the-past
Not trying to be a smart-ass, but probably every generation as far back as one can imagine (adjusting for exceptional conditions, such as war, famine etc.).
Also that might have been "peak" from a colonist perspective, but remember that millions lived in colonies then. Plenty of people with relaxed lives ended up being colonized by those with the tech.
Now it's our turn to enjoy progression.
I think that right now it's the best time to be alive, however from the perspective of political systems I think the ultimate solution is model dictated by the original American Constitution with limited government and division of powers. Economically free-markets, lack of central bank, gold standard so that we don't have perpetual inflation that steals our savings and purchasing power. This and of course amendments for equal rights for men, women, all skin colors.