Research on differential technological development seems much less crowded than the sorts of interventions advocated by proponents of the “progress and prosperity” argument that Paul criticizes. So unless one regards that area of research as singularly intractable, it seems its scoring much more highly on both the importance and crowdedness dimensions should make it a more promising cause overall.
Research on differential technological development seems much less crowded than the sorts of interventions advocated by proponents of the “progress and prosperity” argument that Paul criticizes. So unless one regards that area of research as singularly intractable, it seems its scoring much more highly on both the importance and crowdedness dimensions should make it a more promising cause overall.