CONCEPT
The Mediterranean Model
Braudel's paradigm of a civilization whose geography — mountains, winds, seasons, distances — constrained economic and social life for millennia, providing the structural template for reading which features of the AI transition are durable and which are ephemeral.
The Mediterranean Model is the analytical template Braudel developed in his 1949 masterwork: a civilization understood as the product of geographical constraints operating over centuries, persisting through political revolutions and technological changes. The mountains channeled trade routes. The winds determined shipping seasons. The crop cycle governed labor rhythms. Empires rose and fell; the structural constraints remained. Applied to AI, the model asks: what are the mountains and winds of the current transition? The cognitive limits of human attention, the social need for belonging, the material infrastructure of compute, the institutional tempo of adaptation — these are the durable constraints within which events and conjunctures play out.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Braudel's insight was that civilizations are not primarily political or cultural constructs — they are responses to geographical constraints elaborated over long durations. The Mediterranean produced a particular kind of civilization because it had particular seas, particular mountains, particular seasonal rhythms. Change the physical base,
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