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B**T
Woodstock to Animal Farm
In this exceptional book the authors take a life-cycle view of human affairs that is analogous to the four seasons. A complete cycle repeats and runs through four quarters ; Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter with each season serving a purpose.Since working together in the mid 1980's they became convinced by evidence that human societies follow a cyclical generational pattern rather than one of unbroken linear growth. The evidence is that societies grow, reach a maturity, stagnate and decline, with their particular angle being that generations can be counted from a time of major crisis with four generations (human life cycles) needed to complete the full cycle.They show that "Ever Upwards", "Always More", "Always Better" are useful political slogans that really don't apply to human affairs other than in a narrow technological sense. Societal awareness of its success/performance/happiness is not an arrow shooting ever upwards but rather an arrow that is shot upwards only to fall to earth and (usually) be fired again to follow a similar but different arc.In American terms they see the present cycle as starting with a post WWII "American High" (1946-1964)(Spring), followed by a "Consciousness Revolution" (1964-1984)(Summer) and "Culture Wars" (1984-2005?)(Autumn) with a Winter on the way that should cover the approximate period of 2005- 2025. As in nature, each season has its possibilities and they identify Crisis (Winter) as a time for societal survival, demanding a genuine gathering together in unselfish common action.Each generation interestingly defines itself in opposition to its childhood parents with "Boomer" children looking for societal order and stability rather than the splintering revolution that was forced onto them. Equally, they show each seasonality as having a dominant ethos that is almost impossible to resist, with the best example probably being the final capitulation of Conservatives under Reagan to the "me first" individualism and personal freedom of a late stage Third Turning.As they say, "Ideals become Ideologies" and an institutionalized revolution turns into a special interests power grab under the cover of a revolutionary smoke screen, i.e. Woodstock progresses to Animal Farm with some revolutionaries being more equal than others.
D**N
History now makes sense
At school history never felt right. It always felt like I was being lied to. It was far too one dimensional. It lacked something. Perspective perhaps, the other sides version of events if it was a war. Being English, history was about Kings.The book is fantastic for Americans, as many of the references are for US people. However, it gave me the correct tools for understanding history.More importantly, for understanding and anticipating future events.I can now place myself and my fellow generation x in context. I can understand the boomers, the millennial and the GI elders. The book relates these groups back through 500 years. It makes sense of history and my part in the past and the future.History does rhyme and the book explains why.
R**S
A good read
Very interesting and a worthwhile read.
M**N
5 star, how History Repeats (high's - crisis)
Excellent book , well written and relevant to modern times, through the eyes of history and psychology. We are now at our next crisis in our line of history !Would recommend reading.
Z**E
Spellbinding
Delivery was fast. A captivating and psychologically insightful read.
M**E
Three Stars
Good but a bit long winded towards the end
H**E
The Rollercoaster has already Started
All the more amazing to read this in 2013, as the Fourth Turning is reckoned by most to have started in 2008.A must read in my opinion. Hold on and get ready to start screaming!
E**Y
WOW
why history repeats, this book explains a lot.
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