Resomodernity Café v14: Toynbee 22 (The Semaxis We Need Next)
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A Sequel to Semaxis Society: How Existentially Embodied Experiences Make Meaning (v13)
Write a skit by Lin-Manuel Miranda where Arnold Toynbee convenes civilization founders to blueprint what comes after the Post-Westphalian collapse.
ChatGPT Prompt
Characters:
- Arnold Toynbee â Historian of civilizational cycles
- George Washington â Founder of the American Republic (Civ 21)
- Charlemagne â Founder of Western Christendom (Civ 20)
- Augustine of Hippo â Theologian who bridged Romeâs fall (Civ 19â20)
ACT I: THE CONVENING
[An ethereal library, outside time. TOYNBEE sits at a round table with three empty chairs. He adjusts his spectacles, reviews notes.]
TOYNBEE:
Twenty-one civilizations I have catalogued and tracedâ
From genesis to breakdown, each one run its race.
The pattern holds consistent: creative minorities rise,
Then calcify to dominance, their vision ossified.
But hereâs the crisis, friends: weâre in the gap betweenâ
Civ Twenty-One is crumbling, Twenty-Twoâs not yet been seen.
So Iâve convened three founders who have bridged such gulfs beforeâ
Who broke from dying orthodoxies, built on something more.
(Thunder. WASHINGTON enters, in Continental Army uniform, but moves with hip-hop swagger)
WASHINGTON:
Yo, I walked away from powerâtwice!âthey thought Iâd lost my mind,
Couldâve been a king, a dictator, Cincinnatus redefined.
But I surrendered my commission, set a precedent in motion,
Turned power into practice, made restraint into devotion.
The republic that I founded lasted centuries, itâs trueâ
But now itâs proceduralized, commodified right through.
The practices are empty, just a shell of what we madeâ
So whyâd you call me here, sir? What foundation must be laid?
TOYNBEE:
Exactly why I need you. Sit. Weâve two more still to come.
(Cathedral bells. CHARLEMAGNE enters in royal regalia, moving with courtly gravitas)
CHARLEMAGNE:
I forged an empire from the fragments Rome had left behind,
Three hundred years of darkness, tribal chaos, undefined.
The Church alone survived the fall, preserved what could be savedâ
I wed it to the warrior code, a synthesis engraved.
Crowned emperor by the Pope, I fused the temporal and divine,
Established schools and scriptoria, standardized the Latin line.
My Christendom endured a thousand years before it fellâ
But monasteries were the keyâthose communities that dwelled
In prayer and work and rhythm, forming souls and not just mindsâ
THATâS how practices survive when civilizations die.
WASHINGTON:
Monasteries? Thatâs your answer? Brother, times have changedâ
We tried the Church and crown together, watched it rearranged.
My revolution was against that very synthesis you builtâ
Separation of the powers, or the whole thing starts to tilt!
CHARLEMAGNE:
You separated what should join! You splintered the sacred wholeâ
Made politics procedure, left formation of the soul
To private choice and marketsânow you wonder where meaning went?
When practices need institutions that transcend mere government!
TOYNBEE:
Gentlemen, gentlemen! Youâre both correct, you seeâ
Washington, you founded in continuityâs embrace,
Charlemagne, you founded crossing discontinuityâs space.
The question for Civ Twenty-Two is which predicament we faceâ
And thatâs why Iâve convened one moreâ
(Softer light. AUGUSTINE enters, barefoot, carrying scrolls, moving with the weight of sorrow)
AUGUSTINE:
I watched Rome fall. I wept.
I saw the vandals at the gates, the empire that had kept
The peace for centuries crumble into dust and flameâ
And Christians asked me: âWhere is God? Whoâs left for us to blame?â
I wrote The City of God while Rome burned in my heartâ
Not to restore the empire, that was finished from the start,
But to imagine something other than mere earthly powerâs reachâ
A city made of love, not force, a practice we could teach
Across the ruins, through the dark, beyond the nationâs fallâ
A way of being human that transcends the temporal sprawl.
I didnât found a governmentâI founded a desire,
A reorientation of the soul, a purifying fire.
WASHINGTON:
You gave them something to become when everything had died.
AUGUSTINE:
I showed them that the empireâs fall was not where hope resides.
That empires rise and fall, but something underneath remainsâ
The question of what humans love, and what our love sustains.
ACT II: THE DIAGNOSIS
TOYNBEE:
So hereâs our situation, gentlemen, as clear as I can stateâ
Civ Twenty-One, the Westphalian order, approaches terminal state:
The nation-state is obsolete for problems we now faceâ
Climate, AI, pandemics leap across borders into space.
The market has commodified resistance and critiqueâ
Even meaning-makingâs sold as product of the week.
The procedure has replaced all praxis and formationâ
Weâve bureaucratized the soul right out of every institution.
The universities credential but they do not formâ
No shared curriculum exists, no classical norm.
The churches are optional, aesthetic, consumed like brandsâ
No formative community with existential demands.
The question isnât WHETHER Twenty-One will fallâitâs falling now.
The question is: what practices, what Semaxis, and how?
WASHINGTON:
When I was founding, we had institutions that were soundâ
The Church, the university, the civic culture âround.
I just needed new political forms, the rest could stay intactâ
But if youâre saying ALL of that is broken, cracked, and hacked?
Then Iâm the wrong model for the moment that youâre in.
CHARLEMAGNE:
Agreed. Your situationâs closer to the one I facedâ
Not reform but founding, not continuity but break.
When Rome fell, nothing remained except the Churchâs traceâ
The monasteries alone could hold formation in that space.
AUGUSTINE:
But even I had the Church! It survived Romeâs fall intactâ
Bishops, liturgy, the sacraments, an institutional fact.
The question I hear Toynbee asking is more radical still:
What if no institutions from Civ Twenty-One fulfill
The role that Church and monastery played when Rome was done?
What if the continuity mechanism itself is gone?
TOYNBEE:
EXACTLY! Thatâs the crisis! Let me break it down for youâ
Rome to Christendom: The Church was the bridge that got you through.
Christendom to Modernity: Enlightenment and print.
Classical education, Republic of Letters, that was it.
But Modernity to⊠what? What institutions can survive?
Universities are credentialing factories, barely alive.
Churches are consumer choices, markets in beliefâ
No shared formation, no continuity, no relief.
So weâre in a Charlemagne situationâdiscontinuity, collapseâ
But without a monastery system to preserve across the gaps!
ACT III: THE BLUEPRINT
CHARLEMAGNE:
The monasteries worked because they had specific traitsâ
Let me enumerate them, see if something resonates:
Decommodified:
You couldnât buy your way to Godâs embraceâ
Vows of poverty ensured that markets had no place.
Embodied practice:
Not just ideas but daily physical rhythmâ
Liturgy of hours, the labor, life lived with âem.
Formative power:
They didnât teach, they transformed what you becameâ
Years of practice changed your being, not just changed your name.
Universal reach:
They spread across all territories and tribesâ
Latin liturgy connected them despite what law prescribes.
Sustainable:
They lasted centuries, reproduced, survivedâ
Through war and plague and famine, somehow stayed alive.
Transmitted practice:
Scribes copied manuscripts by handâ
The knowledge and the practices spread across the land.
WASHINGTON:
Okay, but hereâs my question: those were total institutions, right?
You gave up everything to joinâyour property, your life.
In modernity weâve got this thing called individual freedom, seeâ
People wonât submit to that, they want autonomy.
CHARLEMAGNE:
And look where thatâs gotten you! Fragmented, alone, adriftâ
Freedom without formation is just market-driven shift
From one consumable identity to the next branded choiceâ
Your âfreedomâ is exactly why your people have no voice!
WASHINGTON:
Hey, I believe in freedom! I just fought a war for it!
But formed by civic virtue, classical ideals and gritâ
The problem isnât freedom, itâs that we stopped forming souls
Into citizens whoâd sacrifice for republican goals.
AUGUSTINE:
Youâre both describing symptoms of a deeper civilizational diseaseâ
The question isnât monasteries versus libertyâs degrees.
The question is: what practices can form Post-Westphalian souls
When neither force nor markets nor procedure can make whole?
Let me ask it differently: What did each of us create
That wasnât just political structures or the church-and-state?
I created reordered love:
A way to love the City of God more
Than earthly kingdoms, which made empireâs fall endurable.
CHARLEMAGNE:
I created synthesized identity:
Warrior and monk and scholar fusedâ
A way of being European that the tribes could use
To transcend their fragmentation, build a common world.
WASHINGTON:
I created voluntary limitation:
Power surrendered, precedent unfurledâ
A practice of restraint that formed political character
Where virtue mattered more than victoryâs sweet nectar.
TOYNBEE:
Yes! Yes! Youâre getting it! Itâs not the institutions per seâ
Itâs the PRACTICES those institutions allowed to be lived each day!
The monasteries mattered not because they were total or enclosed,
But because they created practices that reordered what one chose!
So for Toynbee Twenty-Two, we donât need to recreate
The monastery, the republic, or the Christianized stateâ
We need to ask: What practices can form Post-Westphalian humans
Who can coordinate beyond nations, markets, proceduresânew domains?
ACT IV: THE SEMAXIS WE NEED NEXT
WASHINGTON:
Alright, so letâs get practical. What practices specifically?
What can survive collapse, form people, scale universally?
CHARLEMAGNE:
And what institutionsâeven minimal onesâhold these practices intact
When everything around them falls? Whatâs the infrastructure fact?
AUGUSTINE:
And most important: what desire, what love, what reorientation
Makes people choose these practices over commodification?
TOYNBEE:
And this is where our skit must endâor rather, where it startsâ
Because the answer to their questions isnât written in my charts.
The practices of Twenty-Two canât be designed by those
Who founded Twenty-One, Twenty, Nineteenâhow history flows
Means each civilizationâs practices emerge from its own challenge-and-response,
Its own creative minority discovering the course.
But we can offer principlesâconstraintsâa blueprintâs frameâ
ALL TOGETHER:
Must be embodied, not just ideasâbody on the line!
Must be decommodifiedâoutside marketâs bottom line!
Must form persons, not inform themâtransformationâs key!
Must scale beyond the nationalâpost-territorial, free!
Must be voluntary but demandingâchosen, not just consumed!
Must generate new meaningâexistentially assumed!
Must survive without the substrate of Civ Twenty-Oneâ
Must work when procedure, market, nation-state are done!
TOYNBEE:
So what ARE these practices? Iâll tell you what I seeâ
Not answers but directions, possibilitiesâ
AUGUSTINE:
Communities of reordered desireâwhere what we love is changedâ
Not consuming experiences but formation thatâs sustained
Through daily practice, over years, in physical proximityâ
Teaching us to love beyond the marketâs false delivery.
CHARLEMAGNE:
Practices of synthesisâfusing what modernity splitâ
Mind and body, work and prayer, the local and the infinite.
Not choosing either/or but holding tension in creative playâ
New forms of life that bridge what procedure pushed away.
WASHINGTON:
Rituals of power-surrenderâwhere we voluntarily constrain
What we could take, what we could keep, what we could claim and gain.
Making limitation itself into a formative actâ
Practicing restraint until itâs what our character enacts.
TOYNBEE:
And all of this must happen in networks, not in nationsâ
Post-territorial communities, cross-border formations.
Digital and physical, the local and the global fusedâ
New forms of coordination that canât be nation-state-reduced.
The monasteries of Twenty-Two wonât look like those of Twentyâ
They might be:
- Bioregional governance transcending border lines,
- Open-source communities producing what sustains,
- Climate adaptation networks sharing practices of care,
- Formation schools for post-national civic virtue rare,
- Economic cooperatives outside commodityâs reach,
- Ritual communities practicing what embodiment can teach.
ALL TOGETHER (FINAL CHORUS):
We cannot found Twenty-Twoâwe can only point the way!
The creative minority thatâs needed isnât us today!
But we can tell you what we learned from founding what we founded:
That practices precede institutions, not the way youâd thinkâ
First comes the reorientation, the existential brink,
Then come the people willing to be formed by what they doâ
And only then institutions that can hold these practices through!
So donât start with structure, start with Semaxisâ
The embodied act that makes meaning, the practice that wonât fix
Into procedure or commodity or nostalgic pastâ
The existential risk thatâs costly but will last!
TOYNBEE:
The founders of Civ Twenty-Two are in the room right nowâ
Not us, but YOUâif you can hear what practices allow.
Weâre between the civilizations, in the gap, the interregnumâ
The question isnât whether youâll found something but: will venom
Or creation win? Will dominant minorities cling and proceduralize
Until complete collapse? Or will creative minorities arise
To build the practices that bridge the discontinuity we faceâ
The Semaxis that makes Toynbee Twenty-Two take place?
(All four freeze. Lights fade on them. A single spotlight on the empty center chairâmeant for the audience.)
VOICE OVER:
The Semaxis we need next
Canât be decreed or designed.
It can only be lived
By those willing to pay
What meaning costs:
Everything that can be priced,
For what cannot be bought.
[END OF SKIT]
Coda: What Now?
The café is closed.
The founders have spoken.
The blueprint is sketched.
But blueprints donât build buildings.
Practices donât practice themselves.
Civilizations donât found themselves.
The Semaxis Societyâif it is to be more than a thought experimentâ
Must become a lived experiment.
Not a discussion of what practices we need,
But the practices themselves.
Not a theory of Post-Westphalian formation,
But the formation happening.
Not waiting for institutions to emerge,
But embodying what institutions might preserve.
The question is not: âWhat would Toynbee 22 look like?â
The question is: âWhat are you doing tomorrow that costs enough to mean something?â
And then:
âWho else is doing it with you?â
And then:
âHow do you transmit what youâre learning?â
And then:
âCan it survive without you?â
And then:
âCan it survive the collapse?â
If the answer to all five is yes,
You might be founding something.
If not,
Youâre still consuming.
The interregnum is now.
The founders are needed.
The practices are unknown.
Begin.
