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Interesting threat, h/t @sonyasupposedly
FWIW, I read an essay in Analog or maybe Asimov's maybe c. 1995 or so, maybe by Greg Bear, pointing out that every age adopts as hobbies the lifestyle of the former age.
Sohttps://twitter.com/arcalinea/status/1156618189972725760 …
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6/ Yes, I think we're rebundling (great scene in
@nealstephenson 's Dodge is Corvus the Roman LARPer waking up in tent to answer cell phone), but I also think rebundling has ALWAYS taken place One should read up on medieval peasant rebellions and heresies. Nothing new under sunShow this thread -
7/ You think 1968 was the first "Summer of Love"? There were a half dozen rebellions in Europe back in Ye Olden Days when some peasant would start preaching about how the Old Testament but also Group Marriages and then on the gripping hand ...
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8/ The reason we think that old lifestyle construction was monolithic and new lifestyle construction is highly detailed is just Near / Far issues. (Most of) us don't actually know crap about lifestyle construction in 1500, or 50 AD. So it's smooth. http://www.overcomingbias.com/2010/06/near-far-summary.html …
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9/ I'm a slight bit of technological determinist. I think high societal wealth / high information means that we're going to create more lifestyles, more often, more fractaly, with more resources. No particular thesis to this; just addressing
@sonyasupposedly 's ask of the oldsShow this thread -
10/ Oh, one last note: for the essays in the Farm Book I'm working on, I've been thinking a lot about the 1960s/1970s "back to the land movement" vs the current one a generation or two later. I think we see all of this: more wealth, more varieties, more sub-sub-cultures...
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i tried to tell the entire history of culture in a tweet ofc it is far too simple
it’s meant to be a rough sketch that you wink at and fill in with more nuanceThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Oh nononono. That whole "Cavaliers in America" thing is a 19th century construction.
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not according to David Hackett Fischer , who cites primary sources
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