Modern civilisation has achieved extraordinary success by many conventional measures: unprecedented industrial productivity, accelerating technological capability, the largest financial systems in recorded history, and now the emergence of artificial general intelligence as an economic force. Yet beneath this surface of material achievement, the lived experience of human beings within these systems tells a different story — one of chronic stress, deepening loneliness, collapsing birth rates, rising anxiety and depression, fraying social trust, and a pervasive sense that modern life, for all its conveniences, lacks meaning. This paper advances a central thesis: that civilisation has been optimised for the wrong objective function. By equating economic expansion with human progress, modern societies have constructed institutions, metrics, incentive systems, and cultural narratives that maximise output while progressively degrading the conditions necessary for human flourishing. The paper proposes a fundamental civilisational transition — from growth-centric civilisation towards what is termed a Quality of Life Civilisation: a systemic framework in which human dignity, psychological stability, meaningful contribution, social trust, time autonomy, and sustainable flourishing become the primary organising principles of collective human life. This is not a utopian document. It is a structural argument, drawing on systems theory, behavioural economics, sociology, psychology, and moral philosophy, that the next stage of civilisational development requires redesigning its foundational architecture — not merely its surface policies — around the preservation and expansion of human quality of life.
Essentia Vera (Fri,) studied this question.
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