Konkvistador’s argument would be that it wouldn’t of been able to modernize nearly as effectively if it had come into the “Universalist” sphere before industrializing.
Maybe, I don’t know. On the other hand, maybe it would’ve avoided conquest and genocide if it had come into that sphere before industrializing.
Or maybe my premise above is wrong and its opening in the Meiji era did in fact count as contact with “Universalism”—note that America and Britain’s influence had been considerable there, and Moldbug certainly says that post-Civil War U.S. and post-Chartist Britain (well, he says post-1689, but the Chartist movement definitely was a victory for democracy[1]) were dominated by hardcore Protestant “Universalism”.
1- Although its effects were delayed by some 20 years.
Konkvistador’s argument would be that it wouldn’t of been able to modernize nearly as effectively if it had come into the “Universalist” sphere before industrializing.
Maybe, I don’t know. On the other hand, maybe it would’ve avoided conquest and genocide if it had come into that sphere before industrializing.
Or maybe my premise above is wrong and its opening in the Meiji era did in fact count as contact with “Universalism”—note that America and Britain’s influence had been considerable there, and Moldbug certainly says that post-Civil War U.S. and post-Chartist Britain (well, he says post-1689, but the Chartist movement definitely was a victory for democracy[1]) were dominated by hardcore Protestant “Universalism”.
1- Although its effects were delayed by some 20 years.