Maybe but we seem to be going backwards at an alarming rateIt is worse than the mid 20th century.
Gay rights don't appear to be going anywhere, and we're progressing on to coming to a collective understanding of how we're going to accommodate trans-rights. Women have more freedom than they ever have had, and issues of particular concern to them - domestic violence, how we frame gender in public depictions - are increasingly being considered by organisations and individuals. We appear to have slowed a little on our understanding of how people with disabilities can be given the freedom to fully join in with every day life, but we've not gone backwards on it. There's been a vocal backlash on racial equality, recently, but that backlash has been because institutions that previously turned a blind eye are no longer doing so.
No, we're not going backwards at all. It's slow, at times, it can feel like bashing your head against a wall, but we're still becoming a kinder, more open, more welcoming society, even when we take our eye off the ball and let the likes of Brexiteers shoot us in the collective foot.
Progress through secularism and enlightenment is a crock.
Because they've made the world worse how? How has giving equal protection to all religions and none been problematic? How has a pursuit of evidence-based learning and well-being for all resulted in an overall decline of society?
You have fooled yourself into believing in it unthinkingly.
Or you're lashing out at the competition because it's chipping away at the few remaining boundaries of what religion considers to be its province?
If it is right to put progress at the door of decreasing religion then it is meet and indeed right to put obvious regress at the door of increasing secularisation.
I think it's right to put progress at the door of the Enlightenment; that the consequence of that is to see that the bastions of the older eras that still rail against the coming of the light, full of sound and fury but increasingly signifying absolutely nothing of consequence has led to secularisation in the first instance, and to the perhaps inevitable end of religion as a mainstream concept at some point. Not yet, I don't think we're ready for it just yet, but the day is coming.
O.