Lots of good stuff in this reading. The beginning is largely a fast summary of his thesis in Evolution of Civilizations, which I also really liked. It’s a good macro-orientation. I found this overall accurate and helpful, but I’m gonna comment on some relatively smaller points I disagreed with:
I’m not persuaded that Western Civilization’s periods of international conflict follow from the cycles between Age of Expansion and Age of Conflict that Quigley describes. It seems like his “ages of conflict” are marked by greater *class* conflict, as he says, but the intensity of *wars* conflicts seems totally decoupled to me. The Thirty Years’ War falls outside of his Ages of Conflict, and that by itself makes the category useless for analyzing international war.
It looks to me like Western Civilization is still in its third Age of Conflict. This isn’t surprising—even accepting Quigley’s early start of 1893, it’s still lasted less time than the other two. Mr. Burja’s “First World Government” argument (
https://www.palladiummag.com/2024/03/01/the-first-world-government/) might suggest that we’ve passed through history’s briefest Universal Empire, but I’m not convinced—empire isn’t the same as mere hegemony. Throughout the 20th century and continuing through today, we’ve seen the gradual intensification of the hallmarks of the Age of Conflict—declining rate of expansion, class conflict, and irrationality.
I don’t think that “Soviet civilization” is as separate from Western civilization as Quigley presents it here. In different civilizational classifications, they tend to agree about where to draw most of the divisions, but there’s often disagreement about whether you class Russia and Latin America as part of the West or as separate civilizations.
It reminds me of Quigley’s parable of the quartz crystals, from the opening to Evolution:
> During the summer that I was twelve years old, I walked four or five times a week to fish from Hingham Bridge. The distance was about five miles, part of it along a high railroad embankment that had been ballasted with crushed quartz. In this ballast were hundreds of quartz crystals. Each day I stopped awhile to look for a perfect crystal. I found some excellent ones, but never one that could be called perfect. The books I consulted told me that a quartz crystal should be a hexagonal prism with a regular hexagonal pyramid at the end. The ones I found were invariably irregular in some way, with sides of varying sizes, frequently with several crystals jammed together so that, in seeking to share the same material, they mutually distorted each other's hexagonal regularity. … The fact that ninety-nine percent are distorted does not deter the scientist from forming in his mind an idealized picture of an undistorted crystal, or from stating, in books, that quartz crystals occur in that idealized form.”The West and Russia are like two quartz crystals jammed together and somewhat overlapping. Between them they form about 1.3 different civilizations—they’re different to an extent that Europe and the U.S. are not different, but the West and Russia are far, far more similar to each other than they are to, say, Islamic civilization, which is also descended substantially from Classical civilization. Quigley is overestimating the difference in part because of the Cold War. At the time people really did expect the capitalism-communism division to persist for generations, if not centuries.