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They are wrong, again.
What changes from era to era is not human nature, but the pressure placed upon it. Technology accelerates. Systems scale. Institutions stretch. But the human mind—the way people make sense of the world, find meaning, and decide whether to cooperate or resist—evolves slowly.
We are now living through what we call the Sixth Great Transition. Unlike earlier transitions driven by a single force—agriculture, industry, electricity—this one is defined by convergence. Artificial intelligence, automation, digital networks, biotechnology, climate stress, and geopolitical instability are all accelerating at once. Each domain amplifies the others. The result is not simply change, but compression. Decisions arrive faster. Consequences cascade sooner. Errors compound quicker.
In such conditions, many leaders assume the central challenge is speed. It is not. The central challenge is stability under speed.
Empires, companies, and political systems rarely fail because they lack intelligence, capital, or ambition. They fail because they violate a small set of human laws—structural requirements that must be met for people to remain oriented, motivated, and willing to participate in complex systems.
These laws are not moral ideals. They are operating constraints. Technology amplifies capability. It does not negate humanity.
