I am not arguing that the distinction between absolute and per capita is pedantic. I am addressing your seeming insistence that "progress" cannot be measured in per capita terms, and instead can only be measured absolutely. Measuring poverty alleviation is a major example where progress is best measured in per capita growth.No it certainly is not pedantic.
For every output there is a difference between per capita vs absolute, and distinguishing between the two is very important because it massively changes the argument one is trying to make.
If I described China as the largest absolute greenhouse gas emitter relative to other nations in the world in absolute terms it is very different to if I described China's greenhouse gas emissions ranking in the world in per capita terms. That is just one example. There are many others one can come up with.
There is no reason why a discussion of "national," "overall" progress cannot include per capita/proportional increases.The same principle applies for R&D and innovation.
There is nothing in the article which talked about comparing "per capita" R&D and innovation.
Instead, it only talked about R&D and innovation in China at a national, overall manner.
Again, if you want this information, there is the Science article I linked a few pages back. You are too restrictive with your interpretations of "overall progress" or "overall potential." The CPC uses comprehensive terms in their rhetoric all the time. There is no need to be so narrow-minded, especially with a topic as broad as Chinese development.The article attempts to use indicators to measure the overall progress and overall potential of Chinese R&D and innovation.
Some of the indicators it uses are logical and correct.
However, some of them are wrong, namely "researchers as a share of total workforce" and "R&D expenditure as a share of GDP" -- because those indicators only tell us about the per capita and structural nature of China's R&D and innovation, but they do not tell us anything about overall progress or overall potential.
"never sought to"The problem is that they never made an argument about comparing the US and China on per capita terms!
Using proportions makes sense if you're comparing per capita or structural differences, but the article never sought to compare those domains of R&D or innovation in a per capita or structural way.
If this continues to be the crux of your argument, I have little interest in debating further.
There is nothing subjective at all.
The article doesn't mention anything about comparing per capita R&D or per capita innovation or structural differences between China and the US, yet you are forcing yourself to interpret their incorrect variables in a way to make it seem like it is the case.
Given all of the above, doesn't it make more sense to conclude that the article's authors have simply made a few mistakes, instead of trying to shoehorn variables that are incompatible with the outcome they are trying to measure?
Again, you only see them as incorrect since you are disappointed that they are not measuring the outcome you (probably subconsciously) wanted, and now you are trying to force the wording of the article to fit your preconception that the authors were only trying to uncover quantitative indicators all along.