The conventional definition of the Mediterranean treated it as the space between nations — Italy, Spain, France, Egypt, Turkey, each with its own history. Braudel's move was to insist that the sea itself organized historical life: the winds that governed shipping, the mountains that channeled trade, the climate that set crop cycles, the distances that determined which information could travel how quickly. These operated across national borders and persisted through political transformations. The Mediterranean-as-civilization is the analytical unit within which Spanish decline and Ottoman expansion are two features of a single pattern.
Applied to AI, the move is transformative. The AI ecosystem is conventionally analyzed as a set of national competitions (US versus China), corporate rivalries (OpenAI versus Anthropic versus Google), or sectoral disruptions (software versus knowledge work versus creative industries). Each of these framings treats AI as an arena of competing actors. The Braudelian move treats AI as a civilization — a single analytical unit with shared structural features that operate across the competitions and determine what the competitions can actually produce.
The features of this AI civilization are becoming visible. Shared compute infrastructure. Shared training data, often from shared sources. Shared mathematical foundations (transformer architectures). Shared labor pools circulating between firms. Shared safety frameworks emerging through shared research communities. These are the Mediterranean's winds and seasons: structural features that persist across the surface competitions and shape what any individual actor can accomplish.
The analytical payoff is specific. Questions that are unanswerable within national or corporate framings become tractable within the civilizational one. Why do frontier labs converge on similar capabilities despite independent development? Because they share the same underlying structure. Why does AI governance stall across jurisdictions? Because the civilizational layer operates below the jurisdictional one. Why do anti-AI movements arise simultaneously in unrelated countries? Because the mentality of the AI civilization is shared, and so is the resistance to it.
Braudel's reconception is articulated in the preface and opening chapters of The Mediterranean (1949). The methodological move — from space as container to space as civilization — shaped world-systems analysis and, more recently, the 'connectivity' approach of Horden and Purcell's The Corrupting Sea (2000).
Space as civilization. A geographical unit is defined not by the actors within it but by the structural patterns that organize their interaction.
Civilization below politics. Civilizational features persist through political transformation; national and corporate narratives obscure more than they reveal.
Shared structural features. The AI ecosystem shares compute, data, architecture, labor, and safety frameworks in ways that constitute a single civilization.
The analytical payoff. Civilizational analysis answers questions that national and corporate framings cannot.