• T_Doug [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    This guys not a historian, and you shouldn't take these wannabe Hari Seldons seriously.

    Turchin's stuff is basically on the level of "The Chart", I mean

    Look

    At

    This

    Shit

    It's historically illiterate, Peterson level stuff, and I only know about this guy because he used to make ridiculous attacks on twitter against David Graeber (RIP)

    • science_pope [any]
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Wow. The second one is pure drivel, but the "Well-being index" in the 1st one is :chefs-kiss: for ideological bias. Pretty sure the well being of enslaved and indigenous people was not included in the index during the "Era of Good Feelings." Damn.

      • T_Doug [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        Exactly

        Also funny how it shows literally no changes on the "Political Stress Index" during: the Whiskey Rebellion, Alien and Seditions Acts, War of 1812, Presidency of Andrew Jackson/ Indian removal, or the Nat Turner rebellion. Among many other things.

        Like yeah, I'm sure the Civil War just appeared out of thin air, everything was going great before that until "the age of discord" just started for no reason at all.

        • hotcouchguy [he/him]
          ·
          4 years ago

          It didn't appear out of nowhere, the other line started declining slightly before that.

    • unperson [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      “The Chart”

      Omg imagine thinking the entire Islamic golden age never happened, and that the renaissance came out of a rejection of Christianity and had nothing to do with it.

  • Dimmer06 [he/him,comrade/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Damn if only there was some school of history that has existed for nearly 200 years based on some pretty straightforward economic models saying things are gonna get worse as a shrinking class claims an increasingly larger share of wealth.

  • read_freire [they/them]
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    1
    ·
    4 years ago

    One of Turchin’s most unwelcome conclusions is that complex societies arise through war. The effect of war is to reward communities that organize themselves to fight and survive, and it tends to wipe out ones that are simple and small-scale. “No one wants to accept that we live in the societies we do”—rich, complex ones with universities and museums and philosophy and art—“because of an ugly thing like war,” he said. But the data are clear: Darwinian processes select for complex socie­ties because they kill off simpler ones.

    oh fuck off

  • emizeko [they/them]
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    edit-2
    4 years ago

    love too talk about elites and commoners because "class" is invisible, not even the Soviet-educated dude fucking brings it up?

    god damn

    I didn't express this properly. "ruling class" and "working-class" are mentioned, but reading it it's like they are incidental features of groups not a realtionship to the means of production, it's like the author has an anti-materialist brain tumor

    • read_freire [they/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      it’s like the author has an anti-materialist brain tumor

      Turchin was born in 1957 in Obninsk, Russia, a city built by the Soviet state as a kind of nerd heaven, where scientists could collaborate and live together. His father, Valen­tin, was a physicist and political dissident, and his mother, Tatiana, had trained as a geologist. They moved to Moscow when he was 7 and in 1978 fled to New York as political refugees.

      yes

      • emizeko [they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        makes me wonder, what's the Russian equivalent of a gusano called

      • duderium [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I've heard about this guy before and I looked into him. He has "moderated" his stance on Marxism a bit, meaning that he is actually far more left-wing than the overwhelming number of people discussed in the pages of The Atlantic.

  • cilantrofellow [any]
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    1
    ·
    4 years ago

    This sucks. Not that it won’t accidentally predict the future but this is literally a justification for enforcing inequality and gate keeping power.

      • PowerUser [they/them]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I read a journal article somewhere IIRC about the tragedy of commons not actually occuring in practice as social norms for use develop.

        Certainly many people have access to certain uses of land far beyond what you get post-enclosure Britain and things have generally been fine.

          • PowerUser [they/them]
            ·
            4 years ago

            This isn't it but touches on some similar points https://mronline.org/2008/08/25/the-myth-of-the-tragedy-of-the-commons/