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This Is Not a Theology Argument

There’s a version of this argument that collapses on contact.

“Christian societies succeed because Christianity is true.”

That’s not serious. It’s too broad, too easy to counter, and it drags the discussion into theology. That’s not what this is.

This is narrower.

Modern successful societies appear to rely on a set of moral assumptions that did not arise randomly—and may not sustain themselves indefinitely once detached from the structures that produced them.

Not proof, not prophecy, but rather… dependence.


Name the Structure, Not the Institution

When I refer to “Judeo-Christian ethics,” I’m not talking about the historical behavior of churches or states. That record is mixed at best and often indefensible. It doesn’t need rescuing here.

I’m pointing to a moral architecture—a cluster of ideas that shaped behavior long before belief began to fade:

  • intrinsic human worth
  • moral equality beyond tribe
  • limits on power
  • individual responsibility
  • restraint
  • forgiveness over vendetta

These now feel obvious.

They weren’t.

What looks like baseline morality is often inherited structure—and inheritance has a way of disguising itself as inevitability.


Christianity Is Not the Only Path—And That Matters

If the claim were simply “Judeo-Christian societies do better,” it would fail.

There are Christian-majority countries that struggle. There are secular societies that thrive. There are atrocities carried out under religious banners that no serious reader will ignore.

And then there’s Japan.

Japan is not a counterexample. It’s a correction.

It demonstrates that similar outcomes—order, trust, cohesion—can emerge from entirely different traditions. Which means the key variable isn’t Christianity itself.

It’s something deeper.

Japan suggests the underlying requirement is not a specific doctrine, but a sufficiently internalized system of obligation—whether grounded in universal dignity or social duty. The forms differ. The function is similar: behavior is constrained before enforcement becomes necessary.

Not all structures are interchangeable. But high-functioning societies tend to converge on systems that reliably produce restraint, accountability, and continuity across generations—however they justify them.

These systems are not immune to strain. Japan’s own pressures—aging demographics, declining birth rates, and shifting social norms—suggest that even deeply internalized frameworks are not static under modern conditions.


What These Systems Actually Do

Strip away the language and look at function.

These frameworks tend to produce:

  • higher social trust
  • delayed gratification
  • stable family structures
  • informal accountability
  • expectations that limit the use of power

These are not abstract outcomes. They follow from repeated behaviors:

  • when restraint is internalized, fewer actions require enforcement
  • when accountability is expected, trust rises and transaction costs fall
  • when power is seen as limited, institutions stabilize rather than dominate

Over time, these behaviors compound into systems that rely less on coercion and more on expectation.

That sounds mundane. It isn’t. It’s what makes large, complex societies livable.

None of this requires belief.

But it does require internalization.

And internalization is slow, uneven, and difficult to rebuild once it thins out.


The Enlightenment Didn’t Start From Zero

The Enlightenment didn’t sweep this away and replace it with reason.

It reorganized it.

It challenged religious authority, formalized rights, and built institutions that still define modern life. That’s real progress and it shouldn’t be minimized.

But it did not begin from moral zero.

The assumptions were already there—about equality, dignity, and limits on power. The Enlightenment clarified and extended them. It did not generate them out of nothing.

The harder question is whether reason alone can reproduce the same depth of commitment, especially when those commitments become costly.

Reason is excellent at organizing systems. It is less reliable at compelling sacrifice—and societies eventually run into situations where something has to give.


The Problem Friedrich Nietzsche Identified

Nietzsche is often invoked carelessly. This isn’t that.

His point wasn’t that religion should be preserved. It was that removing it has consequences that don’t show up immediately.

You can discard a system and keep its language for a while.
You can keep its assumptions even longer.

What you can’t do indefinitely is treat the foundation as optional while expecting the structure to remain stable.

That process doesn’t announce itself.

It drifts—and by the time it becomes obvious, it is usually well underway.


Drift Shows Up as Substitution

Drift doesn’t look like collapse.

It looks like substitution.

As informal norms weaken, societies compensate with formal mechanisms:

  • more regulation
  • more surveillance
  • more litigation
  • more explicit enforcement of what was once assumed

That shift isn’t inherently catastrophic. In many cases it works.

But it changes how order is maintained. It replaces internal constraint with external management—and that trade is rarely free.

You can see it at the margins: rising regulatory density, increased reliance on formal compliance systems in workplaces and institutions, growing legal mediation of disputes that were once handled informally. These trends have multiple causes, but they share a common feature—behavior that once required little enforcement now requires more of it.


The Secular Case—and Its Limit

A secular answer exists.

We can justify these norms through reason, reciprocity, and shared interest. We don’t need theology to understand cooperation or stability.

And in many cases, this works. High-trust secular societies demonstrate that norms can be transmitted without widespread religious belief.

The question is not whether this is possible.

It clearly is.

The question is whether these systems are fully self-sustaining over long time horizons, or whether they depend—quietly—on inherited assumptions that become harder to justify as those assumptions lose coherence.

That dependency is easy to miss because it feels like common sense.

It isn’t. It’s memory.

If these systems are fully self-sustaining, we would expect high-trust, high-restraint behavior to remain stable even as the underlying moral frameworks continue to thin. If they are not, the pressure will show up first at the margins—in declining informal trust, rising enforcement costs, and increasing reliance on explicit rules to maintain baseline order.


What This Argument Is—and Is Not

This is not an argument for belief.

It’s an argument against pretending we’re starting from nothing.

Societies that function well do not run on law and incentives alone. They rely on internalized limits—on what people will not do, even when they can.

Judeo-Christian ethics provided one version of that in the West. Other civilizations developed their own.

The open question is not whether we can discard those frameworks.

We already have.

The question is whether we understand what they were doing well enough to replace them—or whether we are still relying on them while insisting we are not.


The Uncomfortable Conclusion

Removing a foundation does not collapse a structure immediately.

It exposes, slowly, what the structure depended on—and whether we’ve mistaken inheritance for design.

There’s a low-grade feeling in the background of a lot of conversations right now that something isn’t quite working the way it used to.

Not broken. Not collapsing. Just… off.

The rules still exist. The institutions still function. On paper, everything is in place. But the sense that things are moving in the direction they claim to be moving has started to thin, and people tend to notice that long before they can explain it.

It’s difficult to point to a single cause. That’s part of why the feeling lingers. When something breaks, you can name it. When something drifts, you feel it first and only understand it later.

That unease tends to show up when the quiet constraints that keep systems stable begin to weaken.

In law, it looks like uneven enforcement. In politics, it shows up when power stops feeling like something that will eventually change hands. More generally, it appears whenever positions begin to feel fixed rather than contingent.

Most of the time, these constraints operate in the background. They don’t need to be defended constantly because they are demonstrated often enough that people take them for granted. You see rules applied. You see consequences land. You see people leave positions they once held.

That’s usually enough.

When those patterns become less consistent, the system doesn’t collapse. It adjusts. Power becomes a little less exposed, a little more predictable, but not in a reassuring way. Access narrows, not through explicit barriers, but through familiarity and repetition.

You start to see the same outcomes, or at least the same kinds of outcomes, and they become easier to anticipate.

At first, most people adapt without thinking much about it. Systems can absorb a surprising amount of this kind of drift. But the adjustment isn’t free. It changes how people relate to the system itself.

They rely on it less. They work around it more. And eventually, they stop assuming that the rules being stated are the rules that actually matter.

That shift is quiet, but it matters.

This is not an argument that the past was fair, pure, or evenly experienced. Many people never experienced the old constraints as neutral. The point is narrower. When the public no longer believes the operative rules match the stated rules, trust begins to thin.

Analysts of collapse tend to focus on endpoints. Resource exhaustion. Rising complexity. External shock. Those accounts are valuable, and they explain why systems eventually fail.

What they describe less clearly is the phase that comes before that.

The point where the system still functions, but no longer feels like it is working as intended.

That phase is where most people live, and it is where most systems are decided.

Because once a system reaches the point where it requires constant effort to maintain the appearance of fairness, the cost of sustaining it begins to rise. Not just in money, but in attention, coordination, and trust.

More oversight gets added. More process. More intervention. Each change is meant to correct a small imbalance. Taken together, they make the system heavier and harder to move.

At some point, the question shifts. It’s no longer just whether the system is fair or efficient. It becomes whether it is worth maintaining in its current form.

That’s where drift turns into something else.

Not collapse in the dramatic sense, but simplification. People disengage. Participation drops. Compliance becomes selective. The system doesn’t explode. It contracts.

If that is the direction of travel, then the question is not how to prevent collapse entirely. No system avoids change indefinitely.

The question is how to restore the constraints that keep drift from becoming the default condition.

The answer is less dramatic than most people expect.

It doesn’t require perfect leaders, sweeping reform, or a complete redesign of institutions. It requires something more basic, and more difficult to sustain.

The system has to demonstrate, consistently and visibly, that its constraints still hold.

That demonstration has to be more than messaging.

It has to take the form of consequences that land where they should, including on allies, insiders, and institutions themselves. It means oversight with teeth, rules applied even when politically inconvenient, and positions that remain genuinely vulnerable to replacement rather than quietly secured over time.

These are not abstract principles. They are operational ones.

A system that enforces its rules selectively teaches people to look for exceptions. A system that allows power to settle teaches people that outcomes are predetermined. A system that avoids disruption teaches people that disruption is no longer possible.

Reversing that drift doesn’t happen through messaging. It happens through action, repeated often enough that people begin to believe what they are seeing again.

Trust is not restored by argument. It is restored by demonstration.

And that demonstration has to be visible enough that people can recognize it without being told what it means.

That is the path forward.

Not a guarantee of stability. Not a return to some idealized past. But a re-establishment of the conditions under which systems remain both legible and worth participating in.

Because the alternative is not immediate collapse, it is something a little more quieter and under the radar.

A system that continues to function, but no longer convinces.

 

Suggested Further Reading

If this line of thinking resonates, these works explore different parts of the same problem from complementary angles:

  • The Collapse of Complex SocietiesJoseph Tainter
    A clear account of how increasing complexity yields diminishing returns, and why systems often simplify rather than fail dramatically.
  • CollapseJared Diamond
    Examines how societies respond—successfully or not—to environmental, political, and economic pressures over time.
  • Guns, Germs, and SteelJared Diamond
    A broader look at how geography and structural conditions shape long-term societal development and stability.
  • Rivers of Gold, Rivers of BloodAnthony Quinn
    Explores how wealth, empire, and resource flows influence power, expansion, and institutional behavior.
  • Altered Carbon — created by Laeta Kalogridis (based on the novel by Richard K. Morgan)
    A speculative take on what happens when one of society’s most fundamental constraints—biological exit—is removed entirely.

 

 

If it is true, Chloris, that you love me
(And I hear that you love me well),
I do not believe even kings themselves
Could be happier than I am.

What good is their power and sovereignty?
What good their riches and honors?
I place all my happiness
In having won your heart.

Let death come take me if it must:
I care nothing for it—
Since my soul is immortal
In the moment I behold you.

Reynaldo Hahn’s A Chloris is a quiet illusion: a Romantic love song dressed in Baroque clothing. Built over a steady, Bach-like bass line, the piece unfolds with poised restraint, letting the voice drift in long, unbroken phrases rather than pushing for overt drama. Setting a poem by Théophile de Viau, Hahn offers a simple but disarming claim—if Chloris loves him, no king could be richer, no power greater, and even death loses its sting. The result is intimate rather than grand: a confession spoken softly, where control deepens feeling instead of diminishing it.

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