fundamental and rapid transformation of political power, social structures, or technological paradigms

political revolutions

  • American Revolution (1776): colonial independence, constitutional republic, sovereignty from empire
  • French Revolution (1789): overthrow of monarchy, declaration of human rights, rise of republicanism
  • Russian Revolution (1917): collapse of tsarism, Bolshevik seizure, communist state
  • Iranian Revolution (1979): theocratic transformation, popular uprising

technological revolutions: agricultural, industrial, information, cryptographic

the cryptographic revolution: public-key cryptography, Bitcoin, programmable money, self-sovereign identity

revolutions emerge when the gap between institutional legitimacy and lived reality becomes unbridgeable

cyber as a quiet revolution: replacing centralized information intermediaries with a decentralized knowledge graph

network state as revolution through exit rather than voice: building parallel institutions instead of capturing existing ones

see also democracy, social contract, propaganda, censorship, decentralization

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