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单词 progress
释义

progress


prog·ress

P0586700 (prŏg′rĕs′, -rəs, prō′grĕs′)n.1. Forward or onward movement, as toward a destination: We made little progress on our way home because of the traffic.2. Development, advancement, or improvement, as toward a goal: The math students have shown great progress.3. A ceremonial journey made by a sovereign through his or her realm.intr.v. pro·gress (prə-grĕs′) pro·gressed, pro·gress·ing, pro·gress·es 1. To move forward or onward: The ship progressed toward the equator.2. To develop, advance, or improve: Research progressed on the new vaccine.3. To increase in scope or severity, as a disease taking an unfavorable course.Idiom: in progress Going on; under way: a work in progress.
[Middle English progresse, from Latin prōgressus, from past participle of prōgredī, to advance : prō-, forward; see pro-1 + gradī, to go, walk; see ghredh- in Indo-European roots.]

progress

n 1. movement forwards, esp towards a place or objective 2. satisfactory development, growth, or advance: she is making progress in maths. 3. advance towards completion, maturity, or perfection: the steady onward march of progress. 4. (modifier) of or relating to progress: a progress report. 5. (Biology) biology increasing complexity, adaptation, etc, during the development of an individual or evolution of a group 6. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) Brit a stately royal journey 7. in progress taking place; under way vb 8. (intr) to move forwards or onwards, as towards a place or objective 9. to move towards or bring nearer to completion, maturity, or perfection [C15: from Latin prōgressus a going forwards, from prōgredī to advance, from pro-1 + gradī to step]

prog•ress

(n. ˈprɒg rɛs, -rəs; esp. Brit. ˈproʊ grɛs; v. prəˈgrɛs)

n., v. n. 1. advancement toward a goal or to a further or higher stage. 2. the development of an individual or society in a direction considered superior to the previous level. 3. growth or development; continuous improvement: to show progress in muscular coordination. 4. forward or onward movement: the progress of the planets. 5. an official tour or procession, as by a sovereign or dignitary. v.i. 6. to go forward or onward in space or time. 7. to grow or develop; advance: a disease progressing slowly. Idioms: in progress, going on; under way. pro•gress [1400–50; late Middle English progresse (n.) < Latin prōgressus going forward =prōgred-, s. of prōgredī to advance (prō- pro-1 + -gredī, comb. form of gradī to step; see grade) + -tus suffix of v. action]

progress

You say that there is progress when something improves gradually, or when someone gets nearer to achieving or completing something.

Many things are now possible due to technological progress.His doctors are very pleased with his progress.

Progress is an uncountable noun. Don't talk about 'progresses' or 'a progress'.

You can say that someone or something makes progress.

She is making good progress with her studies.We haven't solved the problem yet, but we are making progress.

Be Careful!
Don't use 'do'. Don't say, for example, 'She is doing good progress.

progress


Past participle: progressed
Gerund: progressing
Imperative
progress
progress
Present
I progress
you progress
he/she/it progresses
we progress
you progress
they progress
Preterite
I progressed
you progressed
he/she/it progressed
we progressed
you progressed
they progressed
Present Continuous
I am progressing
you are progressing
he/she/it is progressing
we are progressing
you are progressing
they are progressing
Present Perfect
I have progressed
you have progressed
he/she/it has progressed
we have progressed
you have progressed
they have progressed
Past Continuous
I was progressing
you were progressing
he/she/it was progressing
we were progressing
you were progressing
they were progressing
Past Perfect
I had progressed
you had progressed
he/she/it had progressed
we had progressed
you had progressed
they had progressed
Future
I will progress
you will progress
he/she/it will progress
we will progress
you will progress
they will progress
Future Perfect
I will have progressed
you will have progressed
he/she/it will have progressed
we will have progressed
you will have progressed
they will have progressed
Future Continuous
I will be progressing
you will be progressing
he/she/it will be progressing
we will be progressing
you will be progressing
they will be progressing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been progressing
you have been progressing
he/she/it has been progressing
we have been progressing
you have been progressing
they have been progressing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been progressing
you will have been progressing
he/she/it will have been progressing
we will have been progressing
you will have been progressing
they will have been progressing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been progressing
you had been progressing
he/she/it had been progressing
we had been progressing
you had been progressing
they had been progressing
Conditional
I would progress
you would progress
he/she/it would progress
we would progress
you would progress
they would progress
Past Conditional
I would have progressed
you would have progressed
he/she/it would have progressed
we would have progressed
you would have progressed
they would have progressed
Thesaurus
Noun1.progress - gradual improvement or growth or developmentprogress - gradual improvement or growth or development; "advancement of knowledge"; "great progress in the arts"advancementforwarding, furtherance, promotion - the advancement of some enterprise; "his experience in marketing resulted in the forwarding of his career"stride - significant progress (especially in the phrase "make strides"); "they made big strides in productivity"work flow, workflow - progress (or rate of progress) in work being donedevelopment - act of improving by expanding or enlarging or refining; "he congratulated them on their development of a plan to meet the emergency"; "they funded research and development"
2.progress - the act of moving forward (as toward a goal)progress - the act of moving forward (as toward a goal)forward motion, onward motion, advancement, procession, progression, advancemovement, move, motion - the act of changing location from one place to another; "police controlled the motion of the crowd"; "the movement of people from the farms to the cities"; "his move put him directly in my path"push - an effort to advance; "the army made a push toward the sea"career, life history - the general progression of your working or professional life; "the general had had a distinguished career"; "he had a long career in the law"march - a steady advance; "the march of science"; "the march of time"clear sailing, easy going, plain sailing - easy unobstructed progress; "after we solved that problem the rest was plain sailing"leapfrog - advancing as if in the child's game, by leaping over obstacles or competitors; "the company still believes the chip is a leapfrog in integration and will pay huge dividends"
3.progress - a movement forwardprogress - a movement forward; "he listened for the progress of the troops"advance, progressionchange of location, travel - a movement through space that changes the location of somethingheadway, head - forward movement; "the ship made little headway against the gale"
Verb1.progress - develop in a positive wayprogress - develop in a positive way; "He progressed well in school"; "My plants are coming along"; "Plans are shaping up"shape up, come along, come on, get along, get on, advanceclimb - improve one's social status; "This young man knows how to climb the social ladder"leapfrog - progress by large jumps instead of small incrementsdevelop - grow, progress, unfold, or evolve through a process of evolution, natural growth, differentiation, or a conducive environment; "A flower developed on the branch"; "The country developed into a mighty superpower"; "The embryo develops into a fetus"; "This situation has developed over a long time"retrogress, regress, retrograde - get worse or fall back to a previous condition
2.progress - move forward, also in the metaphorical senseprogress - move forward, also in the metaphorical sense; "Time marches on"advance, march on, move on, pass on, go ongo, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"forge - move ahead steadily; "He forged ahead"penetrate - make one's way deeper into or through; "The hikers did not manage to penetrate the dense forest"creep up, sneak up - advance stealthily or unnoticed; "Age creeps up on you"encroach, impinge, infringe - advance beyond the usual limitplough on, press on, push on - continue moving forwardstring along, string - move or come alongoverhaul, overtake, pass - travel past; "The sports car passed all the trucks"close in, draw in - advance or converge on; "The police were closing in on him"edge, inch - advance slowly, as if by inches; "He edged towards the car"rachet up, ratchet, ratchet down - move by degrees in one direction only; "a ratcheting lopping tool"elapse, glide by, go by, slide by, slip by, slip away, go along, pass, lapse - pass by; "three years elapsed"
3.progress - form or accumulate steadily; "Resistance to the manager's plan built up quickly"; "Pressure is building up at the Indian-Pakistani border"work up, build, build upbuild - develop and grow; "Suspense was building right from the beginning of the opera"develop - grow, progress, unfold, or evolve through a process of evolution, natural growth, differentiation, or a conducive environment; "A flower developed on the branch"; "The country developed into a mighty superpower"; "The embryo develops into a fetus"; "This situation has developed over a long time"ramp up, work up, build up, build - bolster or strengthen; "We worked up courage"; "build up confidence"; "ramp up security in the airports"

progress

noun1. development, increase, growth, advance, gain, improvement, promotion, breakthrough, step forward, advancement, progression, headway, betterment, amelioration The two sides made little progress towards agreement. The doctors say they are pleased with her progress.
development decline, failure, recession, relapse, regression, retrogression
2. movement forward, passage, advancement, progression, course, advance, headway, onward movement The road was too rough for further progress in the car.
movement forward movement backward, regression, retrogression
verb1. move on, continue, travel, advance, proceed, go forward, gain ground, forge ahead, make inroads (into), make headway, make your way, cover ground, make strides, gather way He progressed slowly along the coast in an easterly direction.
move on move back, recede, get behind, regress, retrogress
2. develop, improve, advance, better, increase, grow, gain, get on, come on, mature, blossom, roll up, ameliorate He came round to see how our work was progressing.
develop get behind, lose ground, regress, retrogressin progress going on, happening, continuing, being done, occurring, taking place, proceeding, under way, ongoing, being performed, in operation The game was already in progress when we took our seats.Quotations
"Printing, gunpowder, and the magnet... these three have changed the whole face and state of things throughout the world" [Francis Bacon Essays]
"What we call progress is the exchange of one nuisance for another nuisance" [Havelock Ellis Impressions and Comments]
"Perhaps the best definition of progress would be the continuing efforts of men and women to narrow the gap between the convenience of the powers that be and the unwritten charter" [Nadine Gordimer Speak Out: The Necessity of Protest]
"Is it progress if a cannibal uses a knife and fork?" [Stanislaw Lec Unkempt Thoughts]
"That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind" [Neil Armstrong on his first steps on the moon's surface]
Proverbs
"one step at a time"

progress

noun1. Forward movement:advance, advancement, furtherance, headway, march, progression.2. A progression from a simple form to a more complex one:development, evolution, evolvement, growth, unfolding.3. Steady improvement, as of an individual or a society:amelioration, betterment, development, improvement, melioration.verbTo go forward, especially toward a conclusion:advance, come (along), get along, march, move, proceed.
Translations
上进前进进展进步

progress

(ˈprəugres) , ((American) ˈpro-) noun1. movement forward; advance. the progress of civilization. 前進 前进2. improvement. The students are making (good) progress. 進步,上進 进步,上进 (prəˈgres) verb1. to go forward. We had progressed only a few miles when the car broke down. 前進 前进2. to improve. Your French is progressing. 進步 进步proˈgressive (-siv) adjective1. developing and advancing by stages. a progressive illness. 漸進的,累進的 渐进的,累进的 2. using, or favouring, new methods. progressive education; The new headmaster is very progressive. 先進的,進步的 先进的,进步的 3. (grammar) (also continuous) (of a verb tense or form) indicating an activity that is, was, or will be continuing at some period of time. The progressive form of a verb is be + verb-ing (= be + present participle) (eg is working, was waiting, have been dancing). 進行式(文法) 进行式的(文法) nounthe progressive (tense) (also the continuous tense). The sentence `They were watching TV'. is in the progressive. 進行式 进行式proˈgressively adverb 漸進地 渐进地proˈgressiveness noun 漸進 渐进in progress happening; taking place. There is a meeting in progress. 正在進行中 正在进行中

progress

进展zhCN

progress


in progress

Under way or in development; currently happening. When we arrived, the movie was already in progress, so we decided to wait for a later viewing. Negotiations to end the strike are still in progress, with both sides hoping to reach a deal by the end of the week. The story is still a work in progress, but let me know what you think of it so far.See also: progress

progress to (something)

To reach a particular destination or outcome. We've finally progressed to the approval stage for our application. Fingers crossed! The opioid problem has progressed to a nationwide epidemic.See also: progress

progress toward (something)

To be in the process of reaching a particular destination, outcome, or goal. (Usually used in the continuous tense.) With the game progressing toward its conclusion, it seems like the reigning champions will walk away with another victory. The committee is progressing toward the end of its investigation.See also: progress, toward

progress with (something)

To be in the process of doing something. (Usually used in the continuous tense.) How are you progressing with the report? He's having trouble progressing with his studies. Would you mind tutoring him?See also: progress

a rake's progress

old-fashioned A journey of self-indulgence, hedonism, and moral deterioration. The young man, free to explore Europe with a sizable sum of money in his pocket, was eager to embark on a rake's progress and see what pleasures he could find.See also: progress

in progress

under way; happening; developing or moving right now. Don't enter the studio. There's a show in progress. We now return you to the regularly scheduled show in progress.See also: progress

progress to something

to reach all the way to something or some place. The crisis has progressed to its final stage. Things had progressed to a serious stage where nothing more could be done for him.See also: progress

progress toward something

to move partway toward some goal. Nancy is progressing toward her degree quite nicely. We are progressing toward the end of the project.See also: progress, toward

progress with something

to continue to move toward something or completing something. I can't seem to progress with this project. How are you progressing with the building of your model ship?See also: progress

in progress

Going on, under way, happening, as in She's got another book in progress, or The game was already in progress when I tuned in. [c. 1600] See also: progress

a rake's progress

a progressive deterioration, especially through self-indulgence. A rake is a fashionable or wealthy man with dissolute or promiscuous habits. A Rake's Progress was the title of a series of engravings by William Hogarth ( 1697–1764 ). They depicted the rake's life progressing from wealthy and privileged origins to debt, despair, and death on the gallows.See also: progress

in progress

Going on; under way: a work in progress.See also: progress

Progress


progress

1. Biology increasing complexity, adaptation, etc., during the development of an individual or evolution of a group 2. Brit a stately royal journey

progress

  1. a movement towards a desired objective; a development or advance, which is favourably regarded.
  2. the result of social development, involving the enhancement of scientific and technological knowledge, economic productivity and the complexity of social organization.
Two main viewpoints in sociology on the idea of progress can be noticed:
  1. theories which embrace the concept in identifying the main historical route taken by progress, 20th-century theories such as Parsons’ conception of EVOLUTIONARY UNIVERSALS, as well as 19th-century theories (see EVOLUTIONARY THEORY);
  2. theories, especially since the end of the 19th-century and the early 20th-century which for a variety of reasons reject the idea of progress.

The concept of’progress’ lay at the core of early sociological thinking and is especially evident in the work of the discipline's founding trinity For MARX, progress lay in the development of the forces of production and their eventual use, after revolutionary struggle, in the satisfaction of human need rather than private accumulation; for WEBER, somewhat more ambivalently, it lay in the RATIONALIZATION of economic, organizational, legal and scientific life; and for DURKHEIM in the enhanced possibilities for individual freedom in forms of organic solidarity (see MECHANICAL AND ORGANIC SOLIDARITY).

Much earlier 19th-century EVOLUTIONARY THEORY, however, had tended to see development as also involving a civilizing process, i.e. a transition from simple SAVAGERY and barbarism to the ‘enlightenment’ achieved by the European ruling, capitalist and Christian classes. Paleoevolutionism attempted to avoid this problem of value-laden definitions of progress by speaking of an increase in the ‘general adaptive capacity of society’ or the ‘all round capability of culture’ (M. Sahlins and E. Service, 1960).

A continuing characteristic of advanced and especially capitalist industrial societies is the rapidity of technological progress, with particular reference to the new technologies. The impact of these developments on economic and social life are a continuing source of debate, and are intimately connected with contemporary theories of SOCIAL CHANGE. See also MODERNIZATION, FORDISM AND POST-FORDISM, POSTINDUSTRIAL SOCIETY.

The alternative, more pessimistic, view of progress, however, includes:

  1. pessimism, especially associated with conservative thinking, e.g. from NEOMACHIAVELLIAN political theorists (e.g. PARETO, MICHELS) and NIETZSCHE, over the implications of’mass democracy’, MASS SOCIETY, etc.;
  2. pessimism associated with concrete political events, especially the end of the long peace’ of the 19th century (which had led earlier theorists, e.g. SPENCER, to believe this would usher in a new ‘pacific’ age), including World War I, the rise of FASCISM in the interwar years culminating in World War II, and the threat of nuclear holocaust of the postwar era of COLD WAR. Added to this, there have arisen concerns about new threats to the environment, and questions have been raised about the sustainability of current patterns of economic growth.

The 20th-century retreat from POSITIVISM and EMPIRICISM, and the undermining of most forms of philosophical ESSENTIALISM, has been a further dimension questioning any simple assumptions about progress (see POSTMODERNITY AND POSTMODERNISM, DECONSTRUCTION).

Progress

 

a type, or direction, of development characterized by a transition from the lower to the higher, from the less perfect to the more perfect. One may speak of progress with reference to an entire system, to certain elements thereof, or to the structure and other parameters of a developing object. The concept of progress is a correlate of the concept of regression.

The idea that changes in the world proceed in a certain direction arose in remote antiquity. It was initially a purely interpretative concept and was developed chiefly with respect to the history of society. In the development of precapitalist formations, varied and intense political events were combined with extremely slow change in the socioeconomic foundations of social life. For most of the classical writers history was a simple sequence of events, behind which stood something unchanging. On the whole, history was viewed either as a regressive decline from an ancient “golden age” (Hesiod, Seneca) or as cyclical recurrence of the same stages (Plato, Aristotle, Polybius). Nor did Christianity perceive progress in society. Although Christian historiography views history as a process having a certain direction, the process is not an immanent one, but a movement toward some providential aim that lies outside the scope of actual history. The idea of historical progress was born not out of Christian eschatology, but out of a rejection of it.

The social philosophy of the rising bourgeoisie, reflecting an acceleration of social development, was imbued with optimism and the conviction that the “reign of reason” lay not in the past but in the future. Initially, progress was perceived in the sphere of scientific knowledge. F. Bacon and Descartes taught that one need not look back to the ancients and that the scientific cognition of the world was advancing. Later, the idea of progress was extended to the realm of social relationships by A. R. J. Turgot and Condorcet.

The Enlightenment theories of progress justified the destruction of the feudal order and gave rise to many systems of Utopian socialism. However, historicism was absent from the rationalist theories of progress, which emphasized the onward direction of historical development but ignored its contradictions, its variety of forms, and the necessity of the preceding stages of development. The Enlightenment thinkers held that social progress stemmed from progress in human reason. Their theories were teleological inasmuch as they made the transient ideals and illusions of the rising bourgeoisie the ultimate goal of history. Even at this time G. Vico and especially J.-J. Rousseau were pointing out the contradictory nature of historical development.

The romantic historiography of the early 19th century, opposing the rationalism of the Enlightenment, advanced the idea of slow organic evolution that did not allow interference from without. The romantic historians also asserted the individuality and uniqueness of historical epochs. But this historicism was one-sidedly turned toward the past and often served as an apologia for archaic social relations.

The most profound treatment of progress in pre-Marxist thought was provided by Hegel, who criticized both the Enlightenment’s neglect of the past and the false historicism of the romantic “school of history.” According to Hegel, history is not simply change, but progress in the consciousness of freedom, in which the old serves as the necessary foundation for the new. Each nation, having fulfilled its historical mission as the temporary bearer of an absolute idea, yields its place to another. However, in interpreting historical progress as the self-development of the “world spirit,” Hegel failed to explain the transition from one stage of social development to another. He believed that social progress culminated in the Prussian monarchy, and his philosophy became a theodicy, a justification of god in history.

Proceeding from a materialist view of history, the Marxist-Leninist conception of progress is characterized by a dialectical-materialist approach to the problem of progress and an emphasis on its objective criteria. Marx stressed that “in general, the concept of progress should not be taken in its usual abstract form” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 12, p. 736). “It is undialectical, unscientific and theoretically wrong to regard the course of world history as smooth and always in a forward direction, without occasional gigantic leaps back” (V. I. Lenin, Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed., vol. 30, p. 6). Progress is not an independent essence or transcendent aim of historical development. The concept of progress has meaning only when applied to a specific historical process or phenomenon: it is always progress with reference to something. People’s aims, aspirations, and ideals—in terms of which people evaluate historical development—themselves change in the course of history, and therefore such evaluations inevitably suffer from subjectivity and are nonhistorical. Marx wrote that “so-called historical development rests in general on the fact that the newest form regards the preceding ones as stages leading to itself and always interprets them one-sidedly, since it is capable of self-criticism only very rarely and only under strictly defined conditions” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 12, p. 732).

The objective criterion of social progress must be sought in the material basis of society. Production relations reflect the discontinuity, the discreteness of the historical process and the specific nature of its concrete forms. Productive forces, on the other hand, develop more or less continuously and cumulatively, although here there is also some regressive movement. Moreover, this is the main, determining aspect of social development. For this reason, Lenin considered the interests of the development of the productive forces to be the “highest criterion of social progress” (Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed., vol. 16, p. 220).

Improvement of the means and organization of labor assures the growth of labor productivity, which in turn leads to an improvement in the human element in the productive forces—the work force. It engenders new production skills and knowledge and changes the existing social division of labor. Technological progress occurs simultaneously with scientific development. Finally, growth in labor productivity means an increase in the surplus product. Under such conditions, the composition and volume of man’s basic needs expand and changes occur in the way these needs are met, as well as in man’s way of life, culture, and daily living habits. A more complex form of production relations and social organization as a whole corresponds to a higher level of development of productive forces.

The most general criteria of historical progress are the degree of society’s mastery over the elemental forces of nature, expressed in the growth of labor productivity, and the degree of its liberation from the tyranny of elemental social forces, sociopolitical inequality, and human spiritual underdevelopment. In the light of these criteria, the primitive-communal, slaveholding, feudal, capitalist, and communist formations represent lawlike stages in the progressive development of humanity.

However, the process of development is contradictory, and there are differences in the type and rate of development. For primitive-communal, slaveholding, and feudal societies, an extremely slow rate of development is characteristic. Capitalism signifies an enormous acceleration of tempo, but the antagonisms inherent in the development of an exploitative society also increase and intensify. In any process of development, there is an interconnection between the leading, developing elements of the system and its structure as a whole. Certain elements outstrip others, the remaining elements trail behind them, and only then does the structure of the whole change.

In presocialist formations some elements within the social whole systematically progress at the expense of others, initially because of the low level of development of production and later also because of the private ownership of the means of production. This makes the progress of the society as a whole antagonistic, uneven, zigzag (F. Engels, in K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 21, p. 177). Technological progress and the development of the social division of labor enormously increase labor productivity. But the reverse side of this is the transformation of the individual into a detail laborer and the growth of alienation and exploitation. The relatively high living standard of a few developed capitalist countries is achieved in part through the merciless exploitation of colonies. Disproportions may be seen not only in the development of different countries and peoples, but in the development of different spheres and elements of social life. Marx observed that “capitalist production is hostile to certain spheres of nonmaterial production, such as art and poetry” (ibid., vol. 26, part 1, p. 280).

The disparity between the material wealth of capitalist society and the level of its nonmaterial culture is especially noticeable in the period of the general crisis of capitalism. It is reflected in the growth of social pessimism and in the rise of numerous philosophical and sociological theories in the 20th century that directly or indirectly reject progress and suggest replacing this concept either with the idea of cyclical repetition (O. Spengler, A. J. Toynbee, P. Sorokin) or with the “neutral” concept of social change (the American sociologist W. F. Ogburn). Also popular are various eschatological conceptions of the “end of history” and pessimistic anti-utopias, of which A. Huxley’s Brave New World and G. Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-four may be cited as examples. Alongside these views flourish banal optimistic theories of progress, such as W. Rostow’s “stages of economic growth.”

The transition from capitalism to socialism on a world scale is the general line of social progress in the modern era. Greatly accelerating the rate of social development, the communist formation is gradually overcoming the disproportions, inherited from the past, between the development of the city and the countryside, between the advanced and economically backward countries, between mental and physical labor, and between the productive forces and the spiritual culture of society. Thus, a new, communist type of progress is coming into being, free of the antagonistic contradictions of previous formations. However, this process is by no means automatic. The great number of tasks to be accomplished and an insufficient knowledge of the mechanism of the laws of development of socialist society (which may be partially explained by the limitations of historical experience) may cause elements of subjectivism and voluntarism to appear, resulting in disproportions. Complex problems arise owing to differences in the level of development of the countries of the socialist system and to the distinctiveness of their historical traditions.

In eliminating social antagonism, socialist society does not abolish the contradictory nature of development as such. The cognition of the laws of social development is essentially an endless process, and it is the degree of cognition and mastery of such laws that determines the measure of social freedom.

Having arisen within the framework of social history, the concept of progress was transferred to the natural sciences in the 19th century. Here, as in social life, the concept of progress is not absolute but relative. The concept is not applicable to the universe as a whole, which does not have a univocally determined direction of development, and the postulation of such a direction of development inevitably leads to idealism and religion. The concept of progress is also inapplicable to many processes in inorganic nature, which are cyclical. For this reason, the problem of the criteria of progress in living nature has provoked disputes among scientists.

REFERENCES

Davitashvili, L. Sh. Ocherki po istorii ucheniia ob evoliutsionnom progresse. Moscow, 1956.
Problemy razvitiia v prirode i obshchestve: Sb. st. Moscow-Leningrad, 1958.
Semenov, Iu. N. Obshchestvennyi progress i sotsial’naia filosofiia sovremennoi burzhuazii. Moscow, 1965.
Nisbet, R. A. Social Change and History: Aspects of the Western Theory of Development. New York, 1969.
Sklair, L. The Sociology of Progress. London [1970].

I. S. KON


Progress

 

an urban-type settlement in Amur Oblast, RSFSR, under the jurisdiction of the Raichikhinsk city soviet. Railroad station on a branch line of the Trans-Siberian Railroad. The settlement has a glassworks and plants that manufacture road machinery and reinforced-concrete products. The Raichikhinsk State Regional Electric Power Plant and the Amur Lighting Engineering Plant are also located in Progress.


Progress

 

in nature, the improvement of organisms or supraorganismic systems in the course of evolution. Previously, the term “progress” designated the tendency in evolution toward structural complexity.

C. Darwin understood progress as an expression of both the organism’s growing adaptability to environmental conditions and its successful struggle for life, which is manifested either by the achievement of structural complexity or structural simplification (as in parasitic and sessile organisms).

A. N. Severtsov clarified the meaning of progress (1914,1925, 1939). He proposed differentiating morphophysiological progress (aromorphosis) from biological progess. He described biological progress as an increase in the population of a given group (species, genus) that is caused by the acquisition of a new adaptation, the group’s resettlement beyond its natural habitat, and the division of the group into new groups by an increase in the number of populations, races, and subspecies in a species and the number of species in a genus (adaptive radiation). Just as biological progress may result from aromorphoses (fundamental organizational improvements) and idioadaptations (specific structural adaptive changes), it may also result from organizational simplifications.

Morphophysiological progress is the accumulation and harmonious combination of adaptations that have a very broad and often universal significance; examples of morphophysiological progress are the evolution of the skeleton, brain, and heart in vertebrates and the development of thermoregulation. Morphophysiological progress results in an increased survival rate and the evolutionary flexibility of a species. It also results in the increased integrity and adaptability of individuals, species, or other evolving organisms.

Severtsov’s ideas on morphophysiological progress were subsequently developed by other biologists, including the Soviet scientists I. I. Shmal’gauzen, G. A. Shmidt, and A. L. Takhtadzhian, and the foreign biologists J. Huxley, V. Franz, and B. Rensch. Morphophysiological evolutionary progress is divided into unlimited progress, which encompasses the range of evolution from the simplest living beings to the highest form of matter movement—man—and limited progress, which is characteristic of the development of definite large groups in the organic world. From the standpoint of ecology, there are two types of progress: general progress, when adaptive possibilities expand, and specific progress (specialization), when an adaptation occurs for a specific purpose. General progress is characterized by the harmonious evolution of organs by means of the increasing number of organic functions and the intensification of the old, as well as the new, functions, for example, the evolution of the pentadactyl extremity of the stegocephalian into the human hand. Specific progress is primarily characterized by an intensification of functions at the same time that the number of functions decreases, for example, the evolution of the tetradac-tyl extremity of ungulate ancestors into the extremity of extant artiodactyls and perissodactyls.

Progress is biotechnical from the standpoint of bioenergetics and the structural development of organs and organisms; biotechnical progress is measured by such indexes as economy, effectiveness, and reliability.

REFERENCES

Severtsov, A. N. Glavnye napravleniia evoliutsionnogo protsessa, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1967.
Severtsov, A. N. Morfologicheskie zakonomernosti evoliutsii. Moscow-Leningrad, 1939.
Shmal’gauzen, I. I. Puti i zakonomernosti evoliutsionnogo protsessa. Moscow-Leningrad, 1939.
Shmal’gauzen, I. I. Problemy darvinizma, 2nd ed. Leningrad, 1969.
Zakonomernosti progressivnoi evoliutsii: Sb. st. Leningrad, 1972.
Huxley, J. Evolution: The Modern Synthesis. London, 1963.

K. M. ZAVADSKII


Progress

 

the central publishing house of the State Committee of the Council of Ministers of the USSR on Publishing, Printing, and the Book Trade.

Progress publishes works in the humanities in various foreign languages as well as translated materials in Russian. Located in Moscow, it was founded in 1931 as the Publishing House of Foreign Workers in the USSR. In 1939 it was renamed the Publishing House of Foreign-language Literature, and in 1963, after the reorganization of this house and the Foreign Literature Publishing House, it was called Progress.

In 1974, Progress published works in 40 foreign languages, including English, French, German, Spanish, and Arabic. Among these works were classics by the founders of Marxism-Leninism, scholarly works in the humanities and the social and political sciences, the classics and best works of the writers of the USSR, children’s works, art books, literature in foreign languages for students of those languages, guidebooks, and books of photographs. Progress issues in Russian translation the most important works published abroad in the social sciences, international relations, art studies, linguistics, and modern literature; particular attention is devoted to the works of writers from socialist countries.

In 1974, Progress published 950 books and pamphlets in more than 24.1 million copies, representing more than 382.2 million printer’s sheets.

IU. V. TORSUEV

progress


pro·gress

1. An advance; the course of a disease. 2. To advance; to go forward; said of a disease, especially, when unqualified, of one taking an unfavorable course. [L. pro-gredior, pp. -gressus, to go forth, fr. gradior, to step, go, fr. gradus, a step]

progress

(prə-grĕs′)v.1. To move forward; advance.2. To increase in scope or severity, as of a disease taking an unfavorable course.

progress

[L. progressus, a going forward] The ongoing sequence of events of an illness.

pro·gress

(progres, prŏ-gres) 1. An advance; disease course. 2. To advance; go forward; said of a disease, especially, when unqualified, of one taking an unfavorable course. [L. pro-gredior, pp. -gressus, to go forth, fr. gradior, to step, go, fr. gradus, a step]

Patient discussion about progress

Q. Is there a way stopping caries progress? I'm 17 and I've recently noticed I have chalky white spots on the back of two of my teeth at the bottom. I go to the dentist regularly (I have braces at the minute) and I'm assuming he's seen them but he hasn't mentioned them. I'm just curious as to weather caries are treatable? Is there anything my dentist can do to stop it progressing into something worse?A. Caries starts by demineralization of the enamel. The enamel is the hardest material in our body. The bacteria gets the mineral out of it and it becomes weak. Start as white color and continues to a black unpleasant color as it progresses into the tooth. If you rinse your mouth often with fluoride and brush your teeth properly- it will stop the demineralization and the fluoride will take the place of other minerals in the enamel. This will stop the caries and the white spot will slowly becomes black. This is a good situation- it’ll be harder then before.

Q. My friend has Progressive MS, he is bound to a wheelchair, Prognosis? How can I help? He must be moved by a Hoyer Lift, he has caregivers. He has a beautiful voice and does have enough ability to move in his chair around local community. He has some bad days with spacicity, I want to help but am unsure as to how? He is 60? or so and lives on his own, he has had MS for many years and a number of complications, such as pneumonia and decubitus. Please help me to help him!A. There are a number of ideas and resources for social and recreational activities (i.e. wheelchair sports, dancing, travel, aviation, etc.) that may be helpful, which can be found at www.mobility-advisor.com.

Q. Having chronic headaches, start in base of neck and progresses to migraine, worse when lying on stomach. Why? I have been having chronic headaches for the past 2 weeks. They start in the base of my neck and become migraines. They intensify when I lay on my stomach, blood rushes and they throb. Sometimes I can give myself relief by pressing firmly on my head or keeping my neck in a certain position. Just wondering if anyone knows what might be causing them.A. Pinched nerve, bad posture is my problem anyway. I have a pinched nerve in my neck and my posture is horrible which causes me to get the worst headaches and they always start at the base of the neck and I always thought I had great posture (set up straight and all), but I was soooo wrong. Check with a Doctor and seek help from a Chiropractor if possible. They can do wonders. But for now, try lying on your back with a pillow or towel rolled up and placed under your neck only. It will support your neck and give it a nice crack too that helps a good deal too. That also helps keep the headaches away. Do you get sick to your stomach when the headaches come on?

More discussions about progress

PROGRESS


AcronymDefinition
PROGRESSPerindopril Protection Against Recurrent Stroke Study
PROGRESSProgram for Research and Outreach on Gender Equity in Society (Carnegie Mellon University; Pittsburgh, PA)
PROGRESSPolish Research on Grid Environment for Sun Servers (est. 2001)
PROGRESSPersonal Responsibility and Opportunities to Gainfully Reach Economic Self-Sufficiency

progress


Related to progress: dictionary
  • all
  • noun
  • verb
  • phrase

Synonyms for progress

noun development

Synonyms

  • development
  • increase
  • growth
  • advance
  • gain
  • improvement
  • promotion
  • breakthrough
  • step forward
  • advancement
  • progression
  • headway
  • betterment
  • amelioration

Antonyms

  • decline
  • failure
  • recession
  • relapse
  • regression
  • retrogression

noun movement forward

Synonyms

  • movement forward
  • passage
  • advancement
  • progression
  • course
  • advance
  • headway
  • onward movement

Antonyms

  • movement backward
  • regression
  • retrogression

verb move on

Synonyms

  • move on
  • continue
  • travel
  • advance
  • proceed
  • go forward
  • gain ground
  • forge ahead
  • make inroads (into)
  • make headway
  • make your way
  • cover ground
  • make strides
  • gather way

Antonyms

  • move back
  • recede
  • get behind
  • regress
  • retrogress

verb develop

Synonyms

  • develop
  • improve
  • advance
  • better
  • increase
  • grow
  • gain
  • get on
  • come on
  • mature
  • blossom
  • roll up
  • ameliorate

Antonyms

  • get behind
  • lose ground
  • regress
  • retrogress

phrase in progress

Synonyms

  • going on
  • happening
  • continuing
  • being done
  • occurring
  • taking place
  • proceeding
  • under way
  • ongoing
  • being performed
  • in operation

Synonyms for progress

noun forward movement

Synonyms

  • advance
  • advancement
  • furtherance
  • headway
  • march
  • progression

noun a progression from a simple form to a more complex one

Synonyms

  • development
  • evolution
  • evolvement
  • growth
  • unfolding

noun steady improvement, as of an individual or a society

Synonyms

  • amelioration
  • betterment
  • development
  • improvement
  • melioration

verb to go forward, especially toward a conclusion

Synonyms

  • advance
  • come
  • get along
  • march
  • move
  • proceed

Synonyms for progress

noun gradual improvement or growth or development

Synonyms

  • advancement

Related Words

  • forwarding
  • furtherance
  • promotion
  • stride
  • work flow
  • workflow
  • development

noun the act of moving forward (as toward a goal)

Synonyms

  • forward motion
  • onward motion
  • advancement
  • procession
  • progression
  • advance

Related Words

  • movement
  • move
  • motion
  • push
  • career
  • life history
  • march
  • clear sailing
  • easy going
  • plain sailing
  • leapfrog

noun a movement forward

Synonyms

  • advance
  • progression

Related Words

  • change of location
  • travel
  • headway
  • head

verb develop in a positive way

Synonyms

  • shape up
  • come along
  • come on
  • get along
  • get on
  • advance

Related Words

  • climb
  • leapfrog
  • develop

Antonyms

  • retrogress
  • regress
  • retrograde

verb move forward, also in the metaphorical sense

Synonyms

  • advance
  • march on
  • move on
  • pass on
  • go on

Related Words

  • go
  • locomote
  • move
  • travel
  • forge
  • penetrate
  • creep up
  • sneak up
  • encroach
  • impinge
  • infringe
  • plough on
  • press on
  • push on
  • string along
  • string
  • overhaul
  • overtake
  • pass
  • close in
  • draw in
  • edge
  • inch
  • rachet up
  • ratchet
  • ratchet down
  • elapse
  • glide by
  • go by
  • slide by
  • slip by
  • slip away
  • go along
  • lapse

verb form or accumulate steadily

Synonyms

  • work up
  • build
  • build up

Related Words

  • build
  • develop
  • ramp up
  • work up
  • build up
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