Category:P2P Cycles
This brand new section from March 2020 onwards will specialize in material showing evidence of historical cycles, and specifically, what I call 'The Pulsation of the Commons'.
The main sources are:
- The Pulsing Paradigm, from the school of Biophysical Economics (Howard T. Odum, etc ..)
- The work on Secular Cycles by the school of Cliodynamics by Peter Turchin et al.
- The work of Peter Pogany in Rethinking the World, i.e. the pendulum between stable systems and chaotic transitions
- The HANDY Model for Civilisational Collapse Scenarios, and the case studies provided by Mark Whitaker in: Political Origins of Environmental Degradation and the Environmental Origins of Axial Religions
- The Double Movement within capitalist society, i.e. the lib/lab pendulum identified by Karl Polanyi in the Great Transformation
However, human society is marked by 'cultural evolution' (Pogany) and like in the bio-physical world, there is an 'arrow of time', and in the case of human society, overall, an increase in social complexity and an accumulation of scientific and technical knowledge. This evolution of societal regimes involving greater and greater numbers of people, has to be coupled with the pulsation paradigm. This gives us an indication of an evolving spiral, in which thermodynamic cycles, socio-economic regimes, and human 'modes of apprehension (Gebser, Pogany), correlate to each other.
Please note:
- Our companion section dedicated to macrohistorians and overall civilizational analysis [1]
- Our own preliminary analysis of how the ebb and flow of the commons may fit in cycle-based theorizing: [2]
Timelines
Deepankar Basu:
"To identify the turning points of long waves before 1980, I draw on qualitative evidence from the historical literature summarized in Mandel (1978; 1995); for turning points after 1980, I draw on qualitative evidence presented in Kotz (2009). Together, this literature highlights the following 4 long waves since the middle of the 19th century:
• Long Wave 1 (1848-1893): composed of the upswing during 1848-1873, and the downswing from 1874 to 1893;
• Long Wave 2 (1894-1948[40]): composed of the upswing from 1894 to 1913, and the downswing from 1914 to 1948 (1940 in non-European countries);
• Long Wave 3 (1949[41]-1982: composed of the upswing from 1949(41) to 1967, and the downswing from 1968 to 1982;
Typology
Provided by Robert Conan Ryan, first draft:
"4 paradigms (Scientific, Cultural, Political, Technomic)
SCI Paradigm:
- Kuhn and Toulmin synthesis
- Kuhn: black swans (anomalies) and revolutionary periods of theory (new fields of theory)
- Toulmin: scientific instruments (scale breakthroughs) and change in the philosophy of science ( new commonsense logic)
CULTURE Paradigm:
- updated Graves spiral dynamics;
- 80 year Generational conflict historical cycles;
- Turchin secular cycles and neo-marxist class conflict cliohistory;
- Historical Grand Narratives (dialectic idealistic waves) in the formal humanities;
- educational/academic and journalistic crisis cycles (culture media wars)
POLITICAL Paradigm:
- Political Compass Cycle (Kligsberg foreign policy cycle,
- plus an updated Schleisinger Domestic Policy cycle, creates a four phase political quadrant bias cycle
TECHNOMIC Paradigm:
- Carlota Perez Paradigm shifts and 4- S curves of industrial creative destruction; sectoral models of economic progress and dematerialization; Neo-Georgist land cycle ; Neo-Austrian and Post-Keynesian credit leverage cycles.
The "Fifth Paradigm"
... is a mystery of the natural environment risk cycles ... floods,, hurricanes, climate volatility,, etc....which is an area that requires more simulation science advances before we can add it to this model."
Key Quotes
Proven Cyclicality in Agrarian Civilizations ?
"Recent comparative research shows that agrarian societies experience periods of instability about a century long every two or three centuries. These waves of instability follow periods of sustained population growth. For example, in Western Europe, rapid population growth during the thirteenth century was followed by the 'late-medieval crisis', comprising the Hundred Years War in France, the Hussite Wars in the German Empire, and the Wars of the Roses in England. Population increase in the sixteenth century was followed by the 'crisis of the seventeenth century' - the wars of religion and the Fronde in France, the Thirty Years War in Germany, and the English Civil War and Glorious Revolution. Similarly, population growth during the eighteenth century was followed by the 'age of revolutions', ranging from the French Revolution of 1789 to the pan-European revolutions of 1848.
Such oscillations between population growth and instability have been termed 'secular cycles'. Given the limitations of historical data, we need an appropriately coarse-grained method to determine the statistical significance, and the generality, of the pattern. The basic idea is to demarcate population growth and decline phases, and to count the instability incidents (such as peasant uprisings and civil wars) that occur during each phase.
With my colleagues Sergey Nefedov and Andrey Korotayev, I have collected quantitative data on demographic, social and political variables for several historical societies. Applying the above approach to eight secular cycles in medieval and early modern England, France, the Roman Empire and Russia, we find that the number of instability events per decade is always several times higher when the population was declining than when it was increasing. The probability of this happening by chance is vanishingly small. The same pattern holds for the eight dynasties that unified China, from the Western Han to the Qing, and for Egypt from the Hellenistic to the Ottoman periods."
- Peter Turchin [3]
Key Resources
Key Articles
- Lene Rachel Andersen on the Five Phases in the Evolution of Human Cultural Sensibilities. By Gregg Henriques.
See also:
- Gebser’s Five Structural Mutations of Consciousness and the Role of Dark Ages
- Giambattista Vico's Stages in World History
- Sri Aurobindo's Four Stage Cycle of Society
- Viconian Civilizational Cycles
- William Irwin Thompson on the Four Cultural Ecologies of the West
- William Irwin Thompson’s Five Stages of Human Evolution
Key Books
Before Capitalism
- Secular Cycles. By Peter Turchin and Sergey A. Nefedov. Princeton University Press, 2009 [4]. Focuses on cycles with agriculture-centric societies up to industrialization.
- Anand Veeraraj. The Green History of Religion.
""Our findings showed that from about 12,000 BCE, the planet went through a warming trend causing extreme climate changes all across the globe. It disrupted primal societies and their ways of life and successively displaced ancient pastoral and agrarian communities. The warming trend intensified rapidly quickening the rise and fall of ancient civilizations at the core centers. The tumultuous social and ecological ethos of the pre-axial times became conducive for the formation of world-denying motifs that became the bedrock of all post-axial religions and philosophies. This, in a nutshell, is the thesis of Green History of Religion."
- Ecological Revolution: The Political Origins of Environmental Degradation and the Environmental Origins of Axial Religions; China, Japan, Europe. by Mark D. Whitaker: This book describes the ebb and flow of slow ecological degradation and the period uprisings of anti-systemic movements throughout human history, across continents.
- The Recurring Dark Ages: Ecological Stress, Climate Changes and System Transformation. By Sing C. Chew. Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press, 2006 pdf. See: Recurring Dark Ages, Ecological Stress and System Transformation
After the Emergence of Capitalist Modernity
- Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital. The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages. Carlota Perez. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, 2002
[5]; for cycles within capitalism, see also Karl Polanyi's Great Transformation
- Long Waves of Capitalist Development. A Marxist Interpretation. by Ernest Mandel. Verso (Penguin/Random House), 1995 [6]
- The Great Transformation. Karl Polanyi: the lib-lab cycle within capitalism, associated to the Kondratieff waves, i.e.the periodic dis-embedding and re-embedding of markets in society.
Quotes
On Riding Cycles and the Distribution of Power
"Two American historians – George Modelski and William Thompson – explored the question of how the rise of great powers can be explained. They concluded that the most important prerequisite for the development of a great power is the leading mastery of a Kondratieff cycle. The reasons for this are easy to understand. Those who lead in commanding the basic innovation of a Kondratieff cycle, develop the most highly productive economy; those who have the most highly productive economy are able to finance the largest armies and fleets and the most modern weapons; those who own the most modern weapons and most powerful militaries can force their way on other countries and sooner or later become a political superpower."
- Leo and Simone Nefiodow [7]
Pages in category "P2P Cycles"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 277 total.
(previous page) (next page)A
C
- Capitalism of Finitude
- Carlota Perez on Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital
- Catastrophe Bifurcation
- Catastrophism
- Cenozoic Era
- Centralization vs Decentralization Historic Cycle
- Changes and Cycles in the Scale of Settlements and Polities Since the Bronze Age
- Chronobiology
- Chronomacropolitics
- Circulation of Elites
- Civilizational Collapse
- Clare Graves and His Three Scenarios for the Future of Humanity
- Clare Graves on the Alternating Stages of Expressing the Self vs Sacrificing the Self
- Cliodynamics
- Collapse of Bronze Age Civilization
- Collapsology
- Comparative History of the Cycles of Intellectual and Philosophical Ideas in Eight Civilizational Spheres
- Conflict and the Progress of Civilization from Primates to Robots
- Conjuncture
- Connections Between Energy Use and Leadership Transitions
- Constraint as an Essential Element of Evolutionary Development
- Constraints
- Core, Peripheral, Semiperipheral as Relational Concepts in World Systems Theory
- Cosmos, Chaos, and the World to Come
- Craig Dilworth on the Vicious Circle Principle of the Evolution of Humankind
- Creation of Inequality
- Crisis
- CS Holling’s Four Stages of a System’s Growth and Decline
- Cultural Multilevel Selection Theory
- Cycle of Civilization
- Cycles
- Cycles of Accumulation and Hegemony Between Private Accumulating Classes and State Accumulating Classes
- Cycles of Violence in the United States
- Cycles Research Institute
- Cycles Within Capitalism
- Cyclical Civilizational Change and Shifts in Centers of Space
- Cyclical Historians
- Cyclical Theory of Elite Competition, Extraction and Exhaustion
- Cyclical Theory of Market Emergence, Dominance and Decline
- Cycliclal Theory for US History
D
- D-Place
- Dark Ages
- Dark Ages in World System History
- David Ronfeldt on the Historical Phases of Evolutionary Decontrol
- David Ronfeldt on Transition Dynamics in the Context of Changes in Dominant Institutional Forms
- Disaster Geoarchaeology and Natural Cataclysms in World Cultural Evolution
- Distinguishing Family-Based Generations from Social Historical Generations
- Documentation on Economic and Societal Cycles
- Double Movement
- Drought-Related Economic Cycle
- Duration of Civilizations
- Dynamics of Political Instability
E
- Ecocene
- Ecological Succession Theory
- Ecozoic Era
- Ecozoic vs Technozoic
- Elite Overproduction
- Elites, Counter-Elites and the Path of Political Disintegration
- Elites, Counter-Elites, and the Path of Political Disintegration
- Empirical Evidence for Cycles within Capitalism
- End Times
- Environment, Power, and Society
- Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy’s Civilizational Cycle of Imperative, Conjunctive, Participative, and Indicative Phases
- Evolution of the Conceptions of Time Across History
- Evolution of the Global System
- Evolutionary Economics
- Evolutionary Laws
- Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society
- Evolutionary Pathways to Statehood
- Examples of Inequality Trend Reversals
F
- Fathers and Son Cycle
- Fluctuations in the Intensity of War
- Four Post-Capitalist Scenarios Inspired by Shrii Sarkar’s Cyclical Theory of Change
- Four Power Networks Theory of Michael Mann
- Fourfold World Hypotheses Model of Stephen Pepper
- Fourth Turning
- Fourth Turning Is Here
- Fourth Turning Theory
- Fractal Evolution of the World System
G
- Garbage Time of History
- Gebser’s Five Structural Mutations of Consciousness and the Role of Dark Ages
- Generation
- Generational Theory
- Geokinetic Epochs
- Geokinetics
- George Modelski on the Leadership Cycle
- George Modelski's Cycle of World Leadership
- Giambattista Vico's Cyclical View of History
- Giambattista Vico's Stages in World History
- Giovanni Arrighi's Systemic Cycles of Accumulation
H
- HANDY Model for Civilisational Collapse Scenarios
- Hanzi Freinacht on Metamemetic Epochs
- Hard vs Soft Metamemes
- Hegemonic Cycle
- Hegemonic Cycles
- Hegemonic Stability Theory
- Heliodependent Societal Cycles
- Hierarchy of Energy
- Historic Food Transitions Enabling Growth in Human Intelligence
- Historical Cycles
- Historical Importance of the Precession of the Equinoxes
- Historical Origins of Inequality
- Historical Oscillation Between Marcher States and Empires
- History and Repetition
- History of the Cycle-Based Interpretations of Human Evolution
- Homer-Dixon’s Synchronous Failure Framing
- How 10,000 Years of War Made Humans the Greatest Cooperators on Earth
- How Hegemonic Leadership Transitions Are Linked to Kondratieff Wave Technology Innovation Clusters
- Howard Odum
I
K
L
- Law of Techno-Humanitarian Balance
- Learning Cycle
- Lene Rachel Andersen on the Five Phases in the Evolution of Human Cultural Sensibilities
- Life Cycle Model of Empire
- Life Cycles of Imperial Nations
- Lineages of Empire
- Literature Review on Societal Collapse
- Lonergan on Economic Cycles and the Communal Promise
- Long Cycle of Global Politics and the Nation-State
- Long Cycle Theory
- Long Cycles
- Long Cycles in World Politics
- Long Waves
- Long Waves of Capitalist Development
- Long-Term Pulsations in Social Behavior
- Ludwig Dehio's Theory of War Cycles
M
- Macrohistory of Lawrence Taub
- Main Phases of the Afroeurasian World-System’s Evolution
- Major Phases in the Emergence of the World System
- Major Transitions in Big History
- Major Transitions in Evolution
- Mathematical Models to Calculate the Acceleration of Innovation Across Time
- Mathematics of History
- McLuhan's Phases of Media History
- Measuring Evolution
- Mega-Evolution and Big History
- Michael Haupt's Synthesis of the Phases of Civilization
- Milankovitch Cycles
- Modelski’s World Leadership Cycle
- Mutation of Economics into the Fifth Integral-Arational Structure of Consciousness
N
P
- P.R. Sarkar on Escaping the Degenerative Cycles of History
- P.R. Sarkar's Law of Social Cycle
- P.R. Sarkar's Theory of Cycles
- Pareto's Theory on Cycles of Elite Succession
- Pattern Dynamics
- Pattern of the Pulse
- Peak Everything
- Perezian’ Theory of Techno-Economic Paradigms as the Analytical Framework
- Periodicity of Philosophical Revolutions
- Periodization of the History of Globalization
- Periodization of the Techno-Economic Phases of Capitalism
- Periods in World System Time
- Periods of Historical Globalization
- Peter Pogany
- Peter Turchin on Ultrasociality
- Physical Factors of the Historical Process
- Pitirim Sorokin on Cultural Recurrences
- Place of Peer Production in the Next Long Wave
- Placing the Commons in a Temporal Framework
- Planetary Phase Shift Framework
- Political Origins of Environmental Degradation and the Environmental Origins of Axial Religions
- Politically and Economically Synchronized Societies
- Power Transition School of Hegemonic Studies
- Price Revolutions and the Rhythm of History
- Production Principles and Production Revolutions
- Production Revolution
- Prosperity and War in the Modern Age