Why Civilizations Fall (and Why Ours Will Too)
Why do great societies collapse—suddenly, completely, and often without understanding the forces that erased them?
From the Maya and the Romans to the Mongols, Byzantium, and the once-dominant empires of Europe, history shows a clear pattern: civilizations do not die of natural causes. They implode from the inside.
This book is a deep, sweeping journey into the hidden laws that govern the rise and fall of human societies. Drawing on history, anthropology, economics, and political psychology, Why Civilizations Fall (and Why Ours Will Too) argues that collapse is never an accident. It is a predictable outcome of rising complexity, social fragmentation, elite overproduction, and the erosion of shared meaning.
Through vivid case studies and modern parallels, the book examines:
This is not a book of despair. It is a book of clarity.
By understanding the past, we gain insight into the future—or at least the chance to prepare for it.
For readers of Jared Diamond, Niall Ferguson, Oswald Spengler, Arnold Toynbee, and Peter Turchin, this is a powerful, unsettling look at what happens when civilizations grow too confident to see the forces pulling them apart.
History does not repeat—but civilizations do. And ours is no exception.