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July
@july
https://www.palladiummag.com/2023/11/24/you-wont-survive-as-human-capital/
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Leo
@leosn.eth
Reading this now; love Palladium found this interesting, confusing: "The reformations of Julius Caesar & Augustus saved the institutional Roman state & its power" but I'd say the ultimate judge of a reformer is how their reforms affect the likelihood of a subsequent reformer being able to fix the subsequent problems?
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July
@july
Yeah this Roman reference weak imo I’d say for Rome there were 3 major reforms 1) Roman Republic -> Roman Empire (Julius Caesar and Augustus) 2) Switch from Pagan -> Christianity, Rome -> Constantinople (Constantine) 3) Corpus Juris Civilis (The Justinian Code) especially the unification of Church and State
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Leo
@leosn.eth
As for Rome, thanks, this is interesting. Empire defo sustained the civ; embrace of Christianity sort of did, but today looks like the beginning of the end (idk?), and Justinian code feels like it came after the writing was already on the wall, but maybe that's a marker of how ineffectual it was
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Leo
@leosn.eth
I watched a brief video on Odoacer and Theodoric, and was interested to learn how much Roman practices were sustained. I feel like a successful reformer would have made Roman culture even more competitive, such that history would read as if the goths became roman, even after 476
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