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@[email protected]M to [email protected]English • 1 year ago

History’s crisis detectives: how we’re using maths and data to reveal why societies collapse – and clues about the future

theconversation.com

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History’s crisis detectives: how we’re using maths and data to reveal why societies collapse – and clues about the future

theconversation.com

@[email protected]M to [email protected]English • 1 year ago
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Historian and complexity scientist, Dan Hoyer, examines why past societies collapsed when faced with crisis, while others founds ways to survive and flourish.
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  • @[email protected]
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    10•1 year ago

    What we see time and again is that wealthy and powerful people try to grab bigger shares of the pie to maintain their positions. Rich families become desperate to secure prestigious posts for their children, while those aspiring to join the ranks of the elite scratch and claw their way up. And typically, wealth is related to power, as elites try to secure top positions in political office.

    How, if it’s even possible, can we stop this endless competition? Can we ever learn to live equally with each other?

    • Lath
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      5•1 year ago

      When there isn’t a need for it, attempts at grasping power shall be rebuked or ignored.
      The key strategy is therefore to remove the need for power.

      • @[email protected]
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        1•1 year ago

        How? I can’t imagine how there could never be a need or at least a want for power for some people.

        • @[email protected]OPM
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          1•1 year ago

          https://archive.org/details/graeber-wengrow-dawn/David Graeber%2C David Wengrow - The Dawn of Everything_ A New History of Humanity-Farrar%2C Straus and Giroux (2021)/page/n13/mode/2up

        • Jaytreeman
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          1•1 year ago

          There’s ways. The indigenous on Canada’s west coast used to hold potlatches. That was an important way for society to maintain a level of material equity.

          The only limit is imagination

          • @[email protected]
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            2•1 year ago

            So a form of socialism.

            • @[email protected]OPM
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              1 year ago

              We’ve done it many different ways under many different labels. I find labels rather limiting. I linked a book below, I encourage you to paruse through it if you have time.

            • Jaytreeman
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              1•1 year ago

              Most society structures have some form of socialism built in

  • @[email protected]
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    7•1 year ago

    This sounds a bit like Psychohistory from the Foundation series

    • @[email protected]
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      1•1 year ago

      Definitely.

  • plinky [he/him]
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    1•1 year ago

    seems mainly repeating turchin’s thesis, where is the math

  • Track_Shovel
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    3•1 year ago

    Great article, Fossil

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