Great Houses

10. Chivalry Is Dead

52 min · 15. apr. 2026
episode 10. Chivalry Is Dead cover

Description

In this episode, Gregory Treat examines how chivalry—the practical military skill of mounted cavalry combat that drove wealth and power for 2,000 years—died with the invention of the firearm, leaving behind only hollow social rituals. Using Don Quixote's tilting at windmills as a metaphor for nobles trying to solve economic disruption with obsolete tools, Gregory argues that the "decadent aristocracy" people criticize from the French Revolution was already a wilted "cut flower" long severed from its original purpose. While AI may create new aristocratic social structures with larger, stable social molecules, these will have fundamentally different characteristics than the horse culture-based nobility of medieval Europe.

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17 episodes

episode 18. The Architecture of Trust: Part 1 artwork

18. The Architecture of Trust: Part 1

This episode explores trust through the lens of two Substack articles: one critiquing African funeral traditions for keeping people poor, and another on how to become trustworthy. Gregory Treat uses cryptocurrency concepts — proof of work and token burning — as an extended metaphor to argue that what looks like "wasted" wealth in kinship rituals is actually a conversion into social currency on a different ledger. Central to the discussion is the distinction between traders' games (short-term, transactional, frictionless) and farmers' games (long-term, consistent, relationship-based). Gregory argues that modern financialism has tried to convert everything into traders' games, but many of life's most important things — parenting, marriage, elder care, community — only work as farmers' games, sustained by multi-generational family structures.

Yesterday54 min