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Notes -
An attempt to summarise the decadence discourse
This has been the most interesting debate on the Motte for several months, possibly because it is only tangentially related to the main thrust of the US culture war. Given the messy debate across multiple top-level posts with various allegations of strawmanning, I thought it was worth trying to isolate what we still disagreed on.
Given that this started with a discussion of Brett Devereaux's Fremen Mirage thread I am going to call the sides broadly in favour and broadly against Devereaux's thesis pro-D and anti-D for brevity's sake. I am decidedly pro-D, but my goal in this post is to identify consensus and disagreement, not to engage in the debate.
Things both sides appear to agree on
(At least within the local Overton window)
The disagreement
Things that are peripheral to the disagreement
There is empirical evidence for 'hard times make strong men', famously collected by Turchin et al in their databank of farming civilizations.
As always, Deveraux is confidently wrong. Hard times force social and biological evolution thru inflicting pain and death. People get creative and desperate and try everything.. some of which works and leads to better adaptation to existing conditions.
The linked article said that a history of ethnic conflict made more effectively warlike societies, not material poverty. So it doesn't advance the simplistic version of "hard times make strong men" that Devereaux claims to refute and which both sides of the Motte debate agreed was wrong.
The open question is to what extent "material poverty makes strong men" is a strawman, or whether it is a problematic false belief held by large numbers of dumber decadence theorists (including online Sparta bros like Roman Helmet Guy) even if Motteposting decadence theorists are too smart for it.
I don't think anyone disagrees with "extensive experience of battle makes strong men" - we can see it happening in real time in Ukraine.
I'd quibble with that too. Today the war is really a weird sort of logistic / industrial / information contest that happens to kill large amounts of people rather than the typical front of times past.
Despite recent humorous Ukrainian claims to the contrary, no, you can't create an armored fist and punch through a front because MLRS is going to do to your tightly concentrated armored power what a Pakistani kebab show owner does to stray jailbait.
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[citation needed] re: the claim people meant 'material poverty' when they said 'hard times' and not war, endemic low-lvl war or civil war.
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