Over the Mountains
This episode of Over the Mountains was recorded on the 21st January 2026 whilst the situation in Iran was unclear. The conversation begins with the protests in Iran and widens to include inequality, climate disruption, and AI. We explore what history suggests about how regimes actually change—often requiring both mass dissatisfaction and fractures within elites, especially around control of the military and media. We engage in a deep sensemaking dialogue about whether real systemic change is still possible in an age of authoritarian resurgence, technological acceleration, and global instability. We’re happy to share episode number ten on: Mass Protest, Elite Fracture, and the Long Arc of History: Can Authoritarian Regimes like Iran Truly Fall? Will change ever happen? Are we entering a dark renaissance [https://lexicon.secondrenaissance.net/Dark+Renaissance\]? Does history shows a long arc of progress? We grapple with cycles of progress and regression, the pressure of deep structural forces, and the fear that our technological power is outpacing our collective wisdom. Rather than offering easy answers, this conversation invites a grounded practice: stay engaged, keep thinking rigorously together, and hold faith in humanity’s long arc—even when the present moment feels like a dark age before renewal. Chapters : 00:00 Protests in Iran and Global Context 06:09 Historical Perspectives on Change 11:48 Conditions for Systemic Change 17:58 The Role of Elites in Regime Change 23:46 Navigating Darkness Towards a Renaissance 25:47 Navigating Change and Groundedness 27:30 Hope Amidst Chaos 29:55 Cultural Shifts and Democratic Progress 31:46 Historical Patterns of Change 33:12 The Dangers of Modern Technology 35:31 Inequality and Social Unrest 39:21 The Role of the Elite in Change 42:49 Cultural Norms and Freedom of Press 45:20 Intervention and Sovereignty 49:34 The Ethics of Intervention 51:25 Holding Difficult Conversations Speakers Sylvie Barbier [https://lifeitself.org/people/sylvieshiweibarbier] is a co-founder of Life Itself, a performance artist, entrepreneur, and educator. Rufus Pollock [https://lifeitself.org/people/rufuspollock] is a co-founder of Life Itself, an entrepreneur, activist, an author, as well as a long-term zen practitioner. Resources Thich Nhat Hanh - Impermanence Teachings - https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Thich+Nhat+Hanh+Impermanence [https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Thich+Nhat+Hanh+Impermanence] History of Iran’s Protest Movements - https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-63294516 [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-63294516] Jack Goldstone Regime Change Theory - https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cid/programs/building-state-capacity [https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cid/programs/building-state-capacity] Peter Turchin Historical Cycles - https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Peter+Turchin+Historical+Cycles [https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Peter+Turchin+Historical+Cycles] Iain M. Banks - Culture Series (Science Fiction) - https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Ian+M.+Banks+Culture+Series [https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Ian+M.+Banks+Culture+Series] About Over the Mountains Over The Mountains by Life Itself is a podcast and blog exploring the understandings and system shifts needed to bring forth a Second Renaissance [https://secondrenaissance.net/], to live within a metamodern reality that works for everyone. The title Over The Mountains is a metaphor for the long and often difficult journey humanity must take together. In a time when many seek shortcuts — especially through technology — this podcast reminds us that those shortcuts can lead to greater destruction. To truly reach the other side, we must climb over the mountain: facing the complexity of collective action, institutional change, and the reimagining of our shared reality. Over the Mountains focuses on the societal, political, economic, and ontological transformations required for such a world to emerge. Featuring conversations with sensemakers and the builders of tomorrow such as Rufus Pollock, Liam Kavanagh, Sylvie Barbier, Jonah Wilberg and many others, this series shares knowledge from sociology, economics, political philosophy, history, neuroscience, and ideological science, making these insights accessible to a wider audience. The ideas that we will share with you set out some of the reasoning and ideas for the creation of Life Itself and the Second Renaissance initiatives. Twitter - https://twitter.com/forlifeitself [https://twitter.com/forlifeitself] Website - https://lifeitself.org [https://lifeitself.org] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit overthemountains.substack.com [https://overthemountains.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
14 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Over the Mountains!