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2026 Kadish Lecture: Daniel Markovits
Thursday, April 2, 2026 @ 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
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Join the Kadish Center for the 2026 Kadish Lecture on April 2, 2026, from 4-6 pm in the Goldberg Room, featuring Daniel Markovits as our guest speaker, with commenters David Singh Grewal (Berkeley Law) and Daniela Cammack (UCB Political Science).
The Good Life after the Age of Growth:
The most important stylized fact of economic history is that there was effectively no economic growth anywhere before 1600 +/- 200 years, and that there has been enormous economic growth everywhere since. There are two common views of this phenomenon, both about the origins of growth and about its future. A dominant romantic view attributes the invention of growth to innovations in natural science (Bacon and his circle) or social/legal science (the replacement of the predatory state with the rule of law). This view thinks of growth as a blessing from the start and proposes that if we can only be innovative and virtuous enough, we can keep growing forever. A second, cynical view has long been recessive but is gathering steam now. This view understands growth as a malign force from the beginning, associated with colonial oppression and extractive abuse of nature. This view thinks that growth must end soon and can’t end soon enough, under a crushing weight of inequality and ecological degradation.
The lecture will begin by developing a third view, namely that growth was a remarkable and salutary virtue, but that it’s a virtue with a shelf life, and that growth is now approaching its best-before date. The first part of the lecture will develop a related account of the origins of Age of Growth. This will propose that growth isn’t just an economic fact; it’s also a moral ideal, indeed, the organizing ideal for our civilization. The growth ideal, moreover, helped to cause the economic fact, specifically by solving a trio of problems—economic, social, and spiritual—that pre-growth civilization was unable to manage, yielding economic prosperity, social solidarity, and spiritual comfort. The second part of the lecture will argue that growth in fact has inverted the relation of the growth ideal to our problems. Under the circumstances that Age of Growth has produced, the growth ideal now exacerbates the economic, social, and spiritual problems that it once helped to solve. Where the growth ideal once brought prosperity, it now brings destruction; where the growth ideal once brought solidarity, it now brings discord; and where the growth ideal once brought comfort, it now brings despair. Growth will therefore end, not today or tomorrow, but soon and for a long time. The third part of the lecture will observe that if growth is our civilization’s defining moral ideal, and growth in fact ends, this will leave an enormous imaginative hole in our civilization. The lecture will speculate on the economic, social, and spiritual values that might be developed to fill the hole.
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