Brutalism with a Human Face: The National Library of Argentina - Leonard Benardo

“Discrete Revolutions” in economics and democracy

December 8, 2023

“The fate of humanity does not depend upon the foolish moves of its politicians but upon revolutions so discrete that scarcely anyone perceives them,” wrote Czesław Miłosz in his 1959 memoir Native Realm. The foolish moves of politicians do matter: they can start or end wars, and they decide how to engage with—or ignore—the existential challenges of the moment. But here at The Ideas Letter we are not primarily interested in the moves of politicians, foolish or otherwise; you’ll notice we don’t offer hot takes on the headlines. Rather, we want to discern those discrete tectonic shifts that are genuinely shaping our fate—shifts which are just beginning to come into view, for which we may still be lacking the frameworks and vocabulary with which to grasp them.

Among the “discrete revolutions” unfolding in this time between worlds are fundamental shifts in how we think about economics and democracy. In this edition of the Letter, Claudius Graebner surveys the literature that questions the premise of limitless growth, exploring how the idea of “degrowth” could be reconciled with the needs of the majority of the world’s population. Lars Cornelissen unearths the genealogical ties between neoliberal economics and the eugenics movement of a century ago. And Nicholas Gruen, Claire Mellier and Martin Wolf debate alternatives to our senescent models of representative democracy, especially burgeoning experimentation with citizens’ assemblies.

In a searching reflection on the “model minority myth” among Asian Americans, Amy R. Wong applies a psychoanalytic lens to the intergenerational dynamics of the Chinese diaspora. And more than decade after Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens became a global bestseller, Javier Sampedro rounds up critiques of the pseudoscience the book was based on and asks why Harari’s simplistic storytelling has such broad appeal.

In lieu of a music recommendation, we offer this wide-ranging conversation about music between Edward Saïd and Daniel Barenboim recorded in 1999.

—Darius Cuplinskas Director of the Ideas Workshop at the Open Society Foundations