jprussell: (Default)
Jeff Russell ([personal profile] jprussell) wrote 2023-05-02 08:12 pm (UTC)

Thank you! Well, as we'll cover in a later post, Spengler would claim that folks raised outside of a Culture's heartland and direct influence, who seem to be a part of that culture are really undergoing a "pseudomorphosis," which is Greek for "false shaping." It's a term from geology. Imagine you have a rock formation of, say, limestone that is eroded away, leaving a hollow shell like a sculptor's mold. Now, lava flows into the hollow. Later, when examined, the lava will have the outer shape and details of a limestone formation, but will be made of igneous rock.

That's what Spengler thinks is happening when you have folks from, say, India or China wearing Western clothes, using Western models of government, making Western kinds of art. For historical examples, Spengler believed that the late Roman Empire and early Medieval period were actually the early Faustian culture undergoing a pseudomorphosis of Middle Eastern culture (the Church, mostly). Spengler assumed Americans were just far-flung Faustians, but he had some notion that the land was shaping us differently, and JMG believes that we are better understood as a proto-Culture of our own undergoing a Faustian pseudomorphosis.

Now, as for what happens when one Culture has a seemingly global reach and command of resources? In Spengler's theory, a Culture would only get to that level of material dominance after hardening into a Civilization. Once a Culture becomes a Civilization, there is less (or no) innovation, less connection with the something special that motivated this Culture to do great things (what Spengler calls the "World Symbol", more on that coming soon as well!), and so over time will grow senile, decrepit, corrupt, and so forth - but it can have a good few centuries of running the show in the meantime!

Personally, I think that current global events are showing that the Faustian/American Civilization is already showing some of the cracks in the foundation that will eventually let other cultures displace an ailing Civilization. Recent attempts to sanction Russia and the resulting shifts in trade arrangements have shown that the West doesn't have quite the monopolistic command on important resources it once did. So, basically, I think short term we'll see China resurgent, and longer-term maybe powers like Russia, India, or Brazil.

Spengler viewed the whole lifecycle as a "one and done" thing - Cultures rise, mature into Civilizations, grow old, and disperse into "felaheen peoples." I agree with JMG that he didn't give enough credit to Cultures that seem to have undergone multiple cycles from young, vibrant Cultures to mature, static Civilizations, down to a dark age, and back again. China and ancient Egypt come to mind especially.

All of which is a very long way to say that I don't really see a single, unified "World Culture" happening, at least not in the sense Spengler meant - and interestingly, the idea that all Cultures might merge into one and then proceed forever from there is a pretty Faustian conception.

Post a comment in response:

(will be screened)
(will be screened if not validated)
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting