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Performative Bafflement's avatar

> For well over a century now, our environment has changed quite fast, with the world economy doubling faster than every twenty years. Our greatest heroes have been cultural activists who push for big culture changes mostly unrelated to adaptive pressures, thus causing high rates of cultural drift. Our hundred of thousands of diverse peasant cultures were first crushed into a few hundred national cultures, and then into a single dominant elite world monoculture, vastly reducing variety. And our great health, wealth, and peace have greatly reduced selection pressures; cultures hardly ever die anymore. Differential fertility, which takes centuries to impose its discipline, is our main remaining cultural selection pressure.

This was the cleanest and most cogent top-level explanation of the "cultural drift" problem I've seen yet, kudos.

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Stephen Lindsay's avatar

I think a religious revival (anticipated, for example, by Ross Douthat’s new book) might have the power to kick-start a new and more adaptive culture without waiting for a small fertile sub-group to emerge for whom contact with the broader world doesn’t dampen the inertia.

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