A Quantitative Framework for Civilizational Entropy, 1958–2025
David Lowe • Theophysics Institute
Between 1958 and 2025, the United States underwent a measurable transformation that no single political narrative adequately explains. This ten-part series presents the case that America experienced a civilizational phase transition beginning in the period 1968–1973 — a thermodynamic-style shift from ordered to disordered state that crossed critical thresholds in family structure, institutional trust, cognitive performance, spiritual practice, and moral accountability simultaneously. The convergence was not coincidental. It was systemic.
Using the FACTS framework — Family, Accountability, Cognitive integrity, Trust, and Spiritual grounding — we track every major social metric across seven decades. The pattern is unambiguous: every pillar peaked between 1958 and 1965, every pillar began declining between 1966 and 1975, and no pillar has recovered. The curves do not merely correlate. They follow the mathematics of entropy — second-law thermodynamics applied to civilizational coherence — where energy dissipates, complexity degrades, and recovery requires external input that the system itself cannot generate.
This is not a polemic. It is a quantitative audit. The data sources include the General Social Survey, Gallup longitudinal studies, College Board SAT archives, CDC vital statistics, Federal Reserve economic data, Pew Research Center religious landscape surveys, and Bureau of Labor Statistics records. Where the numbers lead, the analysis follows — including to the uncomfortable conclusion that the decline is not a policy failure but a structural phase change from which no civilization in recorded history has self-corrected.
"A civilization does not collapse the way a building does — all at once. It collapses the way a patient dies of cancer: slowly, then suddenly, crossing thresholds that cannot be uncrossed."
— Part 01, Introduction
In 1958, America was the most cohesive, productive, and morally ordered civilization on Earth. Families were intact. Churches were full. Schools were rigorous. Institutions were trusted. Wages rose with productivity. A single income bought a house, raised children, and funded retirement. The word prudence still appeared in newspapers. The word duty still meant something.
Then something broke. Not all at once — but in a precise, measurable sequence.
First, the language shifted. By 1962, virtue-ethics terminology — words like prudence, temperance, fortitude, conscience — had crossed a threshold of decline in American English. The linguistic scaffolding that a culture uses to praise restraint and condemn impulsivity was quietly dismantled. The semantic foundation crumbled before anyone noticed.
Next, cognition followed. SAT scores peaked in 1963 and began a 17-year unbroken decline. Grade inflation began simultaneously — falling capability masked by rising affirmation. The education system stopped filtering for competence and became a mechanism for self-esteem.
Then the spirit. Mainline Protestant churches, the pillars of American civil society for two centuries, began hemorrhaging members in 1965. Valium replaced prayer. The culture shifted from stoic endurance to pharmacological management of the self.
Between 1968 and 1973, the phase transition completed. Nixon severed the dollar from gold. No-fault divorce spread. Roe v. Wade separated moral consequence from choice by judicial decree. Watergate shattered trust in government. The productivity-wage link snapped. The nation that existed before 1968 and the nation that existed after 1973 were discontinuous systems.
Everything since has been running on inherited moral capital — the institutional habits, family structures, and civic virtues built up during the centripetal era of 1940–1968. That capital is now exhausted.
This series traces the collapse across ten chapters: through institutional truth decaying from signal to noise, through phantom economics where derivatives markets grew to eleven times global GDP, through the dissolution of individual identity into algorithmic fragments — and through the Amish proof, a living control group demonstrating that coherence is structurally achievable when you deliberately reject the forces that destroy it.
The data leads to one conclusion: America has crossed the threshold below which no civilization in recorded history has self-corrected. The mathematics of entropy does not negotiate.
The only question left is whether understanding the pattern changes anything — or whether awareness of collapse is itself part of the collapse.
Five pillars of civilizational coherence, each independently measured, each telling the same story. The framework is not arbitrary — these are the load-bearing walls of every stable society in recorded history.
Structure collapse. Fatherlessness epidemic. Out-of-wedlock births: 5% to 40%.
Institutional trust freefall across every measured American institution since 1968.
The Great SAT Score Turnover. Attention spans halved. Critical thinking in structural decline.
Social trust implosion. Media trust collapse. "Most people can be trusted" in freefall.
Church attendance halved. Prayer removed 1962. Transcendent framework abandoned.
Ten parts. One argument. Read sequentially or jump to any chapter.
The thesis, methodology, and five-pillar analytical lens.
Why civilizational collapse follows thermodynamic laws.
How language fails before institutions do.
The Great SAT Score Turnover and educational rot.
From character culture to pharmacological management.
The collapse of institutional truth, 1973–2024.
Economic extraction through monetary deception.
The dissolution of individual identity.
A control group for civilizational coherence.
Recovery physics and the conditions for restoration.
One American family. Six generations. The same data — lived instead of measured.
These narrative companions trace the FACTS framework through the lived experience of the Lowe family, from 1900 to 2025. Each story is anchored to the same metrics, the same inflection points, the same mathematics — but told through marriages, choices, meals, and prayers instead of charts and regression lines.
The premise, the family tree, and how the data becomes a story.
OverviewThe anchor generation. Maximum constraint, maximum coherence.
The AnchorThe Model T, the radio, and the first cracks in the old structure.
The ShiftPeak America. The television arrives. Everything looks perfect.
Peak CoherenceThe phase transition. P crosses Pc. The family breaks.
The BreakingThe internet generation. Fragmented identity. Inherited entropy.
The AftermathVoluntary constraint. The return. Grace as external energy input.
The ChoiceThis series applies thermodynamic modeling to social data — not as metaphor, but as structural isomorphism. When entropy increases in a closed system, it does not reverse spontaneously. The same mathematics that governs phase transitions in physics (ice to water, water to steam) maps precisely onto the observed social data: gradual degradation, acceleration past critical thresholds, and irreversibility without external energy input.
Every claim is sourced. Every metric is longitudinal. The FACTS framework was constructed to be falsifiable: if any pillar showed recovery, the thesis would weaken. None has.
Start with the Introduction for the full framework, or jump directly to any chapter.
Read Part 01: Introduction10 parts • ~45,000 words • 200+ cited data points