Refactor high-complexity React components in Dify frontend. Use when `pnpm analyze-component...
npx skills add defi-naly/skillbank --skill "fourth-turning"
Install specific skill from multi-skill repository
# Description
Apply Strauss-Howe generational theory for understanding historical cycles, anticipating social/political shifts, and positioning for macro changes. Use when analyzing generational dynamics, planning long-term strategy in changing social climates, understanding why institutions are failing, or preparing for periods of crisis and transformation. Also use when building products/services for specific generational cohorts.
# SKILL.md
name: fourth-turning
description: Apply Strauss-Howe generational theory for understanding historical cycles, anticipating social/political shifts, and positioning for macro changes. Use when analyzing generational dynamics, planning long-term strategy in changing social climates, understanding why institutions are failing, or preparing for periods of crisis and transformation. Also use when building products/services for specific generational cohorts.
tags: [macro]
The Fourth Turning
Cyclical theory of history based on generational archetypes.
The Cycle
History moves in ~80-year cycles (a "saeculum"), divided into four "turnings" of ~20 years each.
High β Awakening β Unraveling β Crisis β [repeat]
β β
βββββββββββββββ ~80 years ββββββββββββ
Each turning has a distinct mood, and each generation plays a different role based on their life stage during each turning.
The Four Turnings
1. High (Spring)
Mood: Optimism, institution-building, conformity
Characteristics:
- Strong institutions, weak individualism
- Civic order and collective purpose
- Conformity valued over self-expression
- "We" over "I"
Example: Post-WWII America (1946-1964)
Opportunities: Build institutions, join organizations, collective projects
2. Awakening (Summer)
Mood: Spiritual upheaval, attack on institutions, individualism rises
Characteristics:
- Youth reject institutional conformity
- Cultural and religious renewal
- Individual meaning over collective purpose
- "I" asserts against "we"
Example: Consciousness Revolution (1964-1984), counterculture, Watergate
Opportunities: Cultural movements, new ideologies, spiritual/personal development
3. Unraveling (Autumn)
Mood: Cynicism, weak institutions, strong individualism
Characteristics:
- Institutions distrusted and decaying
- Culture wars, fragmentation
- Individualism peaks
- Society feels like it's drifting
Example: Culture Wars era (1984-2008), political polarization
Opportunities: Individual entrepreneurship, niche communities, hedging against institutional failure
4. Crisis (Winter)
Mood: Emergency, institutional destruction/rebirth, collectivism returns
Characteristics:
- Existential threat (real or perceived)
- Old institutions destroyed or rebuilt
- Collective action, sacrifice demanded
- Fourth Turnings end with a new order
Examples: Great Depression/WWII (1929-1946), American Revolution, Civil War
Current: Approximately 2008-present (began with financial crisis)
Opportunities: Crisis leadership, building new institutions, solutions to collective problems
The Four Generational Archetypes
Each generation is shaped by which turning they experience in childhood, and plays a specific role.
| Archetype | Childhood In | Midlife Role | Current Generation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prophet | High | Moralistic elders, vision | Boomers |
| Nomad | Awakening | Pragmatic, skeptical leaders | Gen X |
| Hero | Unraveling | Institution builders, doers | Millennials |
| Artist | Crisis | Flexible, process-oriented | Gen Z |
Prophet (Idealist)
- Raised during High (indulged childhood)
- Come of age during Awakening (lead it)
- Moralistic, values-driven
- In Crisis: elder statesmen providing vision
- Example: Boomers
Nomad (Reactive)
- Raised during Awakening (under-protected)
- Pragmatic, cynical, self-reliant
- Distrust institutions
- In Crisis: midlife pragmatic leaders
- Example: Gen X
Hero (Civic)
- Raised during Unraveling (protected childhood)
- Team-oriented, institution-trusting
- In Crisis: young adult soldiers/builders
- Example: Millennials, GI Generation
Artist (Adaptive)
- Raised during Crisis (overprotected)
- Flexible, seek consensus
- Refine what Heroes build
- Example: Gen Z, Silent Generation
We Are in a Fourth Turning
Started: ~2008 (financial crisis catalyst)
Characteristics we're seeing:
- Institutional distrust at all-time highs
- Political polarization intensifying
- Sense of existential challenges (climate, inequality, pandemic, AI)
- Calls for fundamental change
- "Old order" feeling unstable
Historical pattern: Fourth Turnings culminate in a climaxβa decisive conflict or transformation that resolves the crisis and establishes a new order.
Timeline: If pattern holds, climax period roughly 2025-2035.
Implications for Strategy
During a Fourth Turning
Expect:
- Institutions to fail or transform
- Increased volatility and conflict
- Collective demands overriding individual preferences
- Old rules becoming obsolete
- New rules being written
Opportunities:
- Building new institutions
- Solutions to collective problems
- Leadership during crisis
- Being positioned for the new order
Risks:
- Clinging to old institutions
- Assuming stability returns
- Individualist strategies in collectivist mood
- Missing the new order being built
Generational Strategy
Working with Boomers (Prophets):
- Appeal to values, vision, meaning
- They see themselves as moral leaders
- Respect their experience but recognize their blind spots
Working with Gen X (Nomads):
- Pragmatic, results-focused
- Skeptical of institutions and ideology
- Value self-reliance and competence
Working with Millennials (Heroes):
- Team-oriented, want to build
- Idealistic but practical
- Want to be part of something bigger
Working with Gen Z (Artists):
- Adaptive, consensus-seeking
- Digital natives, different relationship with institutions
- Will refine and humanize what gets built
Pattern Recognition
Signs of turning transition:
- Old solutions stop working
- Mood shift across generations
- New vocabulary emerges
- Events that "feel" like turning points
Fourth Turning markers:
- 2008: Financial crisis (catalyst)
- 2016: Political upheaval (acceleration)
- 2020: Pandemic (intensification)
- 202X: Climax (resolution, new order)
Building for the Cycle
In Crisis turnings, build:
- Solutions to collective problems
- New institutions (old ones failing)
- Tools for coordination and cooperation
- Infrastructure for the next High
Don't build:
- Products for stability (it won't return soon)
- Individual luxury (collective mood)
- Things that depend on old institutions
Position for the next High:
- What will people need when order returns?
- What institutions will emerge?
- Who will lead the new era?
Application Checklist
When planning long-term strategy:
- [ ] What turning are we in? What's the mood?
- [ ] What generational dynamics are at play?
- [ ] Which institutions are failing? Which are emerging?
- [ ] Am I building for the current mood or the past?
- [ ] How does this position me for the next turning?
- [ ] What collective problems need solving?
- [ ] Who are the rising generations and what do they need?
- [ ] What would this look like in 10-20 years when the cycle shifts?
Anti-Patterns
- "Things will return to normal" β Normal is changing; the cycle moves
- "Institutions are permanent" β They're destroyed and rebuilt each cycle
- "This generation is the problem" β Each archetype has a role; blame is misplaced
- "Individual solutions in Crisis" β Mood is collective; adapt or be irrelevant
- "History doesn't repeat" β It rhymes; patterns recur
- "We can avoid the climax" β Fourth Turnings culminate; prepare accordingly
# Supported AI Coding Agents
This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:
Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.