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Show how he's retarded and his work is bad. That's all I'm asking.That’s because he was a retard and his work was bad.
I'm rereading, but I don't know that he gives a simple, one line answer, it's more the cycle and the shared characteristics. Not every state is an empire. The Swiss, for example.What is his definition than? I've looked a little at the essay and he doesn't seem to give a clear definition of what an empire is. Only that there is a period of expansion, defense (or stabilization) and eventually decline. The stages are roughly age of pioneers, conquest, commerce, affluence, intellect, and finally decadence. Even by these stages I still don't see how America follows this pattern. Pioneering (take over of the natives) didn't finish till about the 1900s. Which at that point America had fought three major powers (some several times), and fought other new world nations. Maybe I'm trying to find a hard definition, when it simply isn't what he's talking about.
Doesn't really fit for them. Rome, Macedonia, America. Compare the US and Canada, or to break down further, Quebec. Similar situations and opportunities, but the US took them.V Characteristics of the outburst
These sudden outbursts are usually characterised by an extraordinary display of energy and courage. The new conquerors are normally poor, hardy and enterprising and above all aggressive.
We may not have finished off the Indians until the 1900s, but we'd effectively controlled the land much earlier.IX U.S.A. in the stage of the pioneers
In the case of the United States of America, the pioneering period did not consist of a barbarian conquest of an effete civilisation, but of the conquest of barbarian peoples. Thus, viewed from the outside, every example seems to be different. But viewed from the standpoint of the great nation, every example seems to be similar. The United States arose suddenly as a new nation, and its period of pioneering was spent in the conquest of a vast continent, not an ancient empire. Yet the subsequent life history of the United States has followed the standard pattern which we shall attempt to trace—the periods of the pioneers, of commerce, of affluence, of intellectualism and of decadence.
We were using the rivers and building the transcontinental railway well before we'd beaten the Indians, but also during conquering them.XIII The Age of Commerce
Let us now, however, return to the lifestory of our typical empire. We have already considered the age of outburst, when a littleregarded people suddenly bursts on to the world stage with a wild courage and energy. Let us call it the Age of the Pioneers. Then we saw that these new conquerors acquired the sophisticated weapons of the old empires, and adopted their regular systems of military organisation and training. A great period of military expansion ensued, which we may call the Age of Conquests. The conquests resulted in the acquisition of vast territories under one government, thereby automatically giving rise to commercial prosperity. We may call this the Age of Commerce. The Age of Conquests, of course, overlaps the Age of Commerce. The proud military traditions still hold sway and the great armies guard the frontiers, but gradually the desire to make money seems to gain hold of the public. During the military period, glory and honour were the principal objects of ambition. To the merchant, such ideas are but empty words, which add nothing to the bank balance.
XV The Age of Affluence
There does not appear to be any doubt that money is the agent which causes the decline of this strong, brave and self-confident people. The decline in courage, enterprise and a sense of duty is, however, gradual. The first direction in which wealth injures the nation is a moral one. Money replaces honour and adventure as the objective of the best young men. Moreover, men do not normally seek to make money for their country or their community, but for themselves. Gradually, and almost imperceptibly, the Age of Affluence silences the voice of duty. The object of the young and the ambitious is no longer fame, honour or service, but cash. Education undergoes the same gradual transformation. No longer do schools aim at producing brave patriots ready to serve their country. Parents and students alike seek the educational qualifications which will command the highest salaries. The Arab moralist, Ghazali (1058-1111), complains in these very same words of the lowering of objectives in the declining Arab world of his time. Students, he says, no longer attend college to acquire learning and virtue, but to obtain those qualifications which will enable them to grow rich. The same situation is everywhere evident among us in the West today.
XVIII The Age of Intellect
We have now, perhaps arbitrarily, divided the life-story of our great nation into four ages. The Age of the Pioneers (or the Outburst), the Age of Conquests, the Age of Commerce, and the Age of Affluence. The great wealth of the nation is no longer needed to supply the mere necessities, or even the luxuries of life. Ample funds are available also for the pursuit of knowledge. The merchant princes of the Age of Commerce seek fame and praise, not only by endowing works of art or patronising music and literature. They also found and endow colleges and universities. It is remarkable with what regularity this phase follows on that of wealth, in empire after empire, divided by many centuries. In the eleventh century, the former Arab Empire, then in complete political decline, was ruled by the Seljuk sultan, Malik Shah. The Arabs, no longer soldiers, were still the intellectual leaders of the world. During the reign of Malik Shah, the building of universities and colleges became a passion. Whereas a small number of universities in the great cities had sufficed the years of Arab glory, now a university sprang up in every town. In our own lifetime, we have witnessed the same phenomenon in the U.S.A. and Britain. When these nations were at the height of their glory, Harvard, Yale, Oxford and Cambridge seemed to meet their needs. Now almost every city has its university. The ambition of the young, once engaged in the pursuit of adventure and military glory, and then in the desire for the accumulation of wealth, now turns to the acquisition of academic honours. It is useful here to take note that almost all the pursuits followed with such passion throughout the ages were in themselves good. The manly cult of hardihood, frankness and truthfulness, which characterised the Age of Conquests, produced many really splendid heroes. The opening up of natural resources, and the peaceful accumulation of wealth, which marked the age of commercialism, appeared to introduce new triumphs in civilisation, in culture and in the arts. In the same way, the vast expansion of the field of knowledge achieved by the Age of Intellect seemed to mark a new high-water mark of human progress. We cannot say that any of these changes were ‘good’ or ‘bad’. The striking features in the pageant of empire are:
(a) the extraordinary exactitude with which these stages have followed one another, in empire after empire, over centuries or even millennia;
and
(b) the fact that the successive changes seem to represent mere changes in popular fashion—new fads and fancies which sweep away public opinion without logical reason.
At first, popular enthusiasm is devoted to military glory, then to the accumulation of wealth and later to the acquisition of academic fame. Why could not all these legitimate, and indeed beneficent, activities be carried on simultaneously, each of them in due moderation? Yet this never seemed to happen.
Read the thread, I not only did it, I managed to define his work better than you did and posted it before you did.Show how he's retarded and his work is bad. That's all I'm asking.
What with this?Read the thread, I not only did it, I managed to define his work better than you did and posted it before you did.
Go back to your shitty college professor who couldn’t make it as a real “intellectual” and decided to teach philosophy instead
Glubb's essay is full of examples from history, especially from the Eastern Med, which would be his area of expertise.he problem is this whole system doesn’t really apply to any of the empires that had existed before Glubb and didn’t apply to the few after.
They’re not correct examples and don’t even fit his own logic when looked at with any a scrutiny.Glubb's essay is full of examples from history, especially from the Eastern Med, which would be his area of expertise.
Explain how the Mameluke example doesn't fit.They’re not correct examples and don’t even fit his own logic when looked at with any a scrutiny.
Given that politics and history would fall under the liberal arts, which kind of degree should I have?I’m not butthurt about a literal nobody from history. I’m tired of you shitting up the thread with your liberal arts degree take on politics
Hopefully it's not just America's liberals that are the dying breed.You niggas need to stop dooming about America. The libshits are a dying breed they are just throwing death spasms right now.
I'm very nervous about 2028. Donald Trump is a tough act to follow, especially considering his political heir has yet to be decided.A cornered animal is at its most dangerous. Until they accept reality they will resort to anything. And they have no intention of accepting reality.
Because he was mediocre in every way and his theory is mediocre generalist bullshit that doesn't match literally dozens of empires throughout history, his definition of empire is retarded, and you're fucking obsessed with this mediocre British officer and his mediocre theoryNot entirely sure why you're all so damn butthurt about Glubb.
The "I was left behind" types. The Trumps, the Gabbards, the Kennedy Jrs, the Vances of the world. This is a large group of people mind you. With varying degrees of beliefs, but they all amount to yesterday's liberals. When yesterday was: 2010s, 2000s, 1990s, 1980s, so on, is a matter for them to express. Some of these people may even be yesterday's progressives. The types who express support for gay marriage, but are concerned with teaching gay sex-ed to middle schoolers, while they refuse to admit the one inevitably leads to the other, for example. A type that favors their preferred end of history. For Donald J. Trump, that was the 1990s. A period of global peace and prosperity. The cold war was officially over. America was at the height of its power. Of course, what came after in the 2000s, 2010s and now the 2020s was only possible from the fruits sowed in the 90s or before. I support Trump, I've voted for him three times now. I prefer 90s over now even if I didn't exist then. However I also understand the fault/issues of the 90s. All the SJW shit we deal with now, the racial stuff, the gay stuff, the illegal stuff, the communism stuff was all present and growing then. Going back without getting rid of that is just going to bring us right back here.What do you mean by speed limit liberal exactly?
I agree this is all maps really well onto America. I disagree we are at that stage. Maybe I'm just too optimistic of a motherfucker. Or I'm old stock American whose willing to sacrifice to keep it all going. I'm not sure.Tell me if all of that doesn't start sounding a lot like what we're seeing these days.
Imagine trying to stiff people out of money for a killer of a bastard everyone cheered on getting killed. Lmao, Petal needs to clean house bad.
Mediocre British Officer. It's going to be generalist and broad because it's rather short essay and because it's meant to be, it was never meant as a rigorous academic analysis. It's not hard and fast holy writ or anything, it's just a slightly higher level of the Strong Men -> Good Times -> Weak Men -> Bad Times -> Strong Men cycle. Historians of all stripes have noticed that things are cyclical and history rhymes since at least the classical Greeks, so someone noticing cycles and patterns is about the least controversial thing in the field. Not sure why you're all autistically fixated on the definition of Empire anyways, since it tends to be a loose definition best summed up as a multi-ethnic state held together by force. Often autocratic, but doesn't have to be, the United States is technically one, just ask Dixie.Because he was mediocre in every way and his theory is mediocre generalist bullshit that doesn't match literally dozens of empires throughout history, his definition of empire is retarded, and you're fucking obsessed with this mediocre British officer and his mediocre theory
No, I feel you, plenty of heritage American blood flowing through my veins. I think it's separating America as a nation, the people, from America the state. The people are fine, the stock is still good, if we can get the illegals of various stripes out, we'll be fine. We're in a unique position where we don't have to seriously worry about threats from the states that border us. A "collapse" is probably just dealing with our system of government and tweaking it to deal with all the things that have popped into existence that the Founders couldn't have thought of. I'm bearish on the current state of the Republic, I'm bullish on Americans, if that makes sense.I agree this is all maps really well onto America. I disagree we are at that stage. Maybe I'm just too optimistic of a motherfucker. Or I'm old stock American whose willing to sacrifice to keep it all going. I'm not sure.
For an autodidact (surely that's the only way he could have acquired his knowledge of these historical empires, since he asserts they just didn't teach it in British schools!), he comes off very poorly with this statement. It ignores that at the time he wrote the two essays that were combined into the one titled Fate of Empires and Search For Survival, we had Gibbon's Decline and Fall, we had Britain dominating the field of Egyptology, we had Britain dominating the field of Mesopotamian studies, we had numerous commentaries like this one, all part of a Western European archaeological and historiographical tradition that started with the Renaissance and exploded in the 19th century. Glubb's conceit that you know we here in Britain just really don't study anything but our own history is plain wrong, and the essay doesn't improve much from thereThe experiences of the human race have been recorded, in more or less detail, for some four thousand years. If we attempt to study such a period of time in as many countries as possible, we seem to discover the same patterns constantly repeated under widely differing conditions of climate, culture and religion. Surely, we ask ourselves, if we studied calmly and impartially the history of human institutions and development over these four thousand years, should we not reach conclusions which would assist to solve our problems today? For everything that is occurring around us has happened again and again before. No such conception ever appears to have entered into the minds of our historians.
In general, historical teaching in schools is imited to this small island. We endlessly mull over the Tudors and the Stewarts, the Battle of Crecy, and Guy Fawkes. Perhaps this narrowness is due to our examination system, which necessitates the careful definition of a syllabus which all children must observe. I remember once visiting a school for mentally handicapped children. “Our children do not have to take examinations," the headmaster told me,” and so we are able to teach them things which will be really useful to them in life." However this may be, the thesis which I wish to propound is that priceless lessons could be learned if the history of the past four thousand years could be thoroughly and impartially studied.
I'm a little late, but I'd like to point out that the Age of Conquest is what is the majority of an empire's life cycle according to Glubb's observations (in the example of the US, that would be Manifest Destiny), and many figures from this time become historical "heroes" people look back on later on (this would be like Grant and Lee to us). Yeah, Glubb's eyes were mainly on Europe and the Muslim world (he himself was an admirer of Islamic cultures).And this is why I made comments about people not reading the essay. Glubb defines what he means by empire in the essay and if people are not going to read the essay and use that definition then there's no point in discussing this, because we're comparing apples to screwdrivers. If you're going to criticize Glubb's views of the lifecycles of Empires, then use his definition. If you're not going to do that, there's no point to this.
If you want people to engage with the whole work rather than a zingy snippet, perhaps posting only a zingy snippet isn't the best way to do that.if you haven't read the essay and don't understand how Glubb is using the term empire, I wouldn't comment on it,
Would you do the same for troons? You get roped into a gay definition war where they win because nothing makes sense. "What is a woman?"If his critics aren't willing to actually engage with his work, use his defined terms and the like, why should anyone give a single fuck what you think of it?
You should stop double posting.Doomers should throw themselves off a bridge or shut up.
Fourth degree.which kind of degree should I have?
Seconded.Can we talk about AMERICAN politics, not ancient Assyrian politics, please? I'm sure there's a history sperging thread for you reprobates.
But sir, the world belongs to America. Therefore, all of history on planet Earth prior to 1776 is relevant to the thread because it culminated in the only thing that matters, which is the USA.Can we talk about AMERICAN politics, not ancient Assyrian politics, please? I'm sure there's a history sperging thread for you reprobates.
The irony is that you, and by extension Glubb? Are the only one miss using them. You can’t create your own definition of a word just to win an argument, which is exactly what Glubb did and exactly what trannies do. So no, not apples to screw drivers. It’s calling a spade a spadeBut why do you think I give people here shit about definitions and misusing them
Anyone notice gas prices dropping lately and what it might be related to? Both me and a friend of mine noticed 20-30 cent drop per gallon on gas when it's remained stable or climbed before the election.
Its possible it's happened before and I just didn't notice but curious if I missed something.