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OverviewModern society increasingly treats civilization as something that can be designed, managed, optimized, or repaired through policy and systems. Governments promise solutions, markets promise efficiency, and technologies promise control. Yet across nations and cultures, the same symptoms appear: social hollowing, declining independence, collapsing middle layers, and growing dependence on centralized management. This book approaches civilization not as a belief system, political project, or moral aspiration, but as a civilizational integration unit-a living structure composed of survival loops, compartmental mechanisms, middle layers, and long-term coherence. Civilization, in this view, is not created by intention. It is carried through repetition, constraint, responsibility, and labor embedded in daily life. At the foundation of the analysis is a simple but often overlooked reality: civilization cannot rest directly on individuals, nor can it be sustained solely by centralized authority. Between these two lies a critical middle layer-professions, communities, vocational hierarchies, and informal norms-that absorbs risk, transmits skills, and maintains continuity across generations. When this middle layer erodes, civilization may continue to function, but it no longer reproduces itself reliably. The book traces the historical origins of modern civilization through feudal Europe, not as a political system to be revived, but as a complete civilizational template-one that made structural constraints explicit, contained collective emotion, and enforced boundaries through compartmentalization. These constraints, often misunderstood as inefficiencies or injustices, are shown to be essential to civilizational durability. From this foundation, World General Theory examines globalization-not as an economic phenomenon, but as a structural disassembly process. What was once framed as cost reduction and efficiency gains functioned instead as an emotional reward mechanism, drawing societies into choices that transferred risk downward and dismantled the civilizational integration unit piece by piece. Production relocation, educational detachment, and supply-chain fragmentation are analyzed as structural decisions, not market accidents. The book shows how breached compartments allow instability to travel from global systems directly into households, education, and personal life. The result is not immediate collapse, but hollow societies: institutions remain, credentials persist, and systems operate, yet independence, skill continuity, and responsibility steadily weaken. Even ordinary high-school students experience this collapse as a loss of real capacity rather than motivation or morality. Crucially, this work does not argue for redistribution, policy repair, or systemic redesign as solutions. It explains why governance, no matter how capable, cannot substitute for civilization's generative structures. Governments can manage behavior and distribute resources, but they cannot recreate survival loops, middle layers, or lived responsibility once these have been structurally removed. Throughout the book, boundaries are carefully drawn: between governance and civilization, scale and coherence, design and reality. The analysis culminates in a central conclusion-civilization cannot be outsourced. Not to governments. Not to markets. Not to systems. And not to design. World General Theory: Labor in the Promised Land is written for readers who sense that something fundamental has been misidentified in modern life, and who are willing to look at civilization not as an ideal to be proclaimed, but as a condition that must be carried-locally, continuously, or not at all. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lucien HartPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.195kg ISBN: 9798244596069Pages: 140 Publication Date: 19 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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