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Why Do Societies Give Up?

AmilamtheAmicable Wrote: Feb 14, 2013 2:10 AM
This article? Seriously? I thought it was well written from a historical standpoint while still being light and readable, but if you're putting this forward to college students in an economics class then you're really failing in your responsibilities as a teacher. If you want a Conservative slant feel free to give them some Sowell, but a short opinion piece that was written without any pretense of deep economic expertise?

Why do once-successful societies ossify and decline?

Hundreds of reasons have been adduced for the fall of Rome and the end of the Old Regime in 18th-century France. Reasons run from inflation and excessive spending to resource depletion and enemy invasion, as historians attempt to understand the sudden collapse of the Mycenaeans, the Aztecs and, apparently, the modern Greeks. In literature from Catullus to Edward Gibbon, wealth and leisure -- and who gets the most of both -- more often than poverty and exhaustion implode civilization.

One recurring theme seems consistent in Athenian literature on the eve of the city's takeover...

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