This sounds more like a conflation between the “availability” of S&T versus the “presence” of S&T.
Technology being in the public domain does not mean the remote-savannah nomad knows how to use wikipedia, has been trained in the habit of looking for more efficient production methods, is being incentivized by markets or other factors to raising his productivity, or has at his disposal an internet-connected, modern computer, another business nearby that also optimizes production of one of his raw materials / business requirements, and all the tools and practical manuals and human resources and expertise to use them.
Long story short, there’s a huge difference between “Someone invented these automated farming tools and techniques, and I know they exist” and “I have the practical ability to obtain an automated farming vehicle, construct or obtain a facility complete with tools and materials for adjustment so I can raise livestock, contacts who also have resources like trucks (who in turn have contacts with means to sell them fuel), and contacts who can transform and distribute my products.”
The former is what you have when something is “public domain” and you take the time to propagate all the information about it. The latter, and all the infrastructure and step-by-step work required to get there, is what you need before the economic growth kicks in.
I believe the latter was being referred to by “advances in science and technology”.
Could you more clearly define the “presence” of S&T? Your examples like “automated farming tools are practical to obtain” sounds like a way of restating “both the availability of S&T and the economy are strong”, which does indeed imply that the economy will be strong, but “A ⇒ B” would have been a much more useful theory than “A && B ⇒ B”.
This sounds more like a conflation between the “availability” of S&T versus the “presence” of S&T.
Technology being in the public domain does not mean the remote-savannah nomad knows how to use wikipedia, has been trained in the habit of looking for more efficient production methods, is being incentivized by markets or other factors to raising his productivity, or has at his disposal an internet-connected, modern computer, another business nearby that also optimizes production of one of his raw materials / business requirements, and all the tools and practical manuals and human resources and expertise to use them.
Long story short, there’s a huge difference between “Someone invented these automated farming tools and techniques, and I know they exist” and “I have the practical ability to obtain an automated farming vehicle, construct or obtain a facility complete with tools and materials for adjustment so I can raise livestock, contacts who also have resources like trucks (who in turn have contacts with means to sell them fuel), and contacts who can transform and distribute my products.”
The former is what you have when something is “public domain” and you take the time to propagate all the information about it. The latter, and all the infrastructure and step-by-step work required to get there, is what you need before the economic growth kicks in.
I believe the latter was being referred to by “advances in science and technology”.
Could you more clearly define the “presence” of S&T? Your examples like “automated farming tools are practical to obtain” sounds like a way of restating “both the availability of S&T and the economy are strong”, which does indeed imply that the economy will be strong, but “A ⇒ B” would have been a much more useful theory than “A && B ⇒ B”.