Media review: NYT's analysis of Gibbon and Ibn Khaldun's counterpoint
Beyond the Illusion of Imperial Crisis
As the United States marks its 250th anniversary in 2026, the specter of imperial decline has once again dominated Western intellectual discourse. In a recent reflection, historian Charles King turns to Edward Gibbon’s magnum opus, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, to interrogate the contemporary American condition. King’s analysis rightly warns against the hubris of exceptionalism and the paralysis of apocalypticism, highlighting Gibbon’s timeless insight: civilizations do not fall suddenly; they falter when they lose the capacity to perceive their own internal transformations.
However, while the Gibbonian lens offers a profound moral and historical warning about "self-deception," it remains partially constrained by a state-centric ontology. To fully comprehend the structural realities of the present moment, we must integrate Gibbon’s historical humility with the historical sociology of Ibn Khaldun, viewed through a modern systems-thinking framework. When we do, what is commonly diagnosed as an "imperial crisis" or "strategic miscalculation" is revealed to be something far more profound and structurally inevitable: systemic completion, characterized by a deep conceptual-praxeological misalignment and the exhaustion of adaptive capacity.
The Gibbonian Warning: Self-Deception and the Loss of Adaptive Vision
King’s reading of Gibbon emphasizes that the fall of Rome was not a sudden cataclysm but a gradual erosion born of "self-deception" (khida' al-dhat). This occurs when societies rigidly cling to the habits, laws, and institutions of a bygone era, long after the material and social conditions that birthed them have vanished. Consequently, they become incapable of adapting when crises inevitably materialize.
Gibbon did not view history as a repository of ready-made rules or a tool to validate preconceived political narratives—whether as a defense of tolerance or a warning against the erosion of traditional values. Rather, he saw it as a discipline for cultivating critical thinking and intellectual humility. This humility was recognized by the American founding generation. Thomas Jefferson kept Gibbon in his personal library; James Madison consulted his insights while drafting the Federalist Papers; and John Quincy Adams studied his work to understand the perennial risks of political division and concentrated power. As historian Henry Adams noted, simply replacing the word "Rome" with "America" makes Gibbon’s questions directly relevant to the present.
King rightly notes that Gibbon himself was no triumphant man of power, but a figure marked by physical frailty and personal insecurity. It was precisely this detachment that allowed him to produce a work of unparalleled analytical rigor. The core Gibbonian lesson for 2026 is not that America is destined to perfectly replicate Rome’s fate, but that all political systems undergo phases of transformation. Surviving these phases requires the humility to test our assumptions against the complex, often contradictory, realities of historical change.
The Khaldunian Correction: Beyond the State-Centric Ontological Error
While Gibbon’s framework is invaluable for diagnosing the symptoms of decline, Ibn Khaldun’s historical sociology provides the systems-level architecture to explain its mechanics. Contemporary Western decline narratives routinely commit what systems theorists call an ontological error: they treat the United States as a discrete, bounded civilizational entity whose fate rises and falls linearly with its geopolitical and economic indicators.
Ibn Khaldun fundamentally decouples the state (dawla) from the civilization (hadara). He posits that political authority is merely a temporary vessel for a broader civilizational formation, sustained by ‘asabiyya—a cohesive social energy rooted in shared purpose, mutual obligation, and collective discipline. States decay when institutional complexity and elite self-interest dilute this cohesion, but the civilizational formation itself can persist, adapting its conceptual core while shedding exhausted administrative structures.
Through this lens, "American civilization" is more accurately understood as the contemporary apex of a broader matrix that crystallized during the European Enlightenment and consolidated through global liberal-capitalist institutionalization. The United States did not invent this system; it inherited, intensified, and operationalized it, much like the British Empire did in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Therefore, analyzing "American decline" solely through the lens of US domestic policy or specific geopolitical blunders mistakes a shift in the civilizational center of gravity for the collapse of the civilization itself.
Conceptual-Praxeological Misalignment: The Mechanics of "Self-Deception"
Gibbon’s concept of "self-deception" finds its precise systemic equivalent in what Ibn Khaldun’s framework identifies as conceptual-praxeological misalignment.
The conceptual domain encompasses the values, norms, and teleological orientations that legitimize a social order (e.g., rule of law, human rights, procedural legitimacy). The praxeological domain consists of the organized fields of human action—bureaucracies, financial architectures, military doctrines, and logistical networks—that enact those values. In a healthy, cohesive system, these domains are mutually reinforcing.
However, as a system matures, its praxeological mechanisms become increasingly complex and technically efficient. They develop tight feedback loops that reward immediate, measurable outputs over long-term purpose. Bureaucracies optimize for procedure rather than justice; financial systems prioritize liquidity over productive investment; military doctrines emphasize relentless readiness over credible deterrence. Eventually, these praxeological systems achieve operational autonomy from the conceptual framework that originally legitimized them.
This decoupling is the structural definition of "empire." It is not defined by territorial expansion, but by the erosion of normative credibility and the compensatory reliance on coercive and extractive power. What Gibbon observed as societies clinging to outdated institutions is, in systems terms, a praxeological apparatus continuing to reproduce established patterns of action long after the ‘asabiyya that guided them has evaporated. The conceptual system becomes merely decorative, a rhetorical shell masking an extractive reality.
Systemic Completion and the Trap of Maximalism
This misalignment leads to the phenomenon of systemic completion, articulated by the modern interpreter of Ibn Khaldun in this work: Systemic Completion, Civilizational Misalignment, and the Illusion of Imperial Crisis. Prevailing commentary often points to episodic events—fiscal thresholds, diplomatic ruptures, or specific military engagements—as the triggers of decline. A systems-based Khaldunian view, as reconstructed by Souaiaia, inverts this causality. These events are not the cause of decline; they are the legible outputs of a configuration that has already reached its functional limits.
As institutions refine their coordination of work and energy, they achieve maximal efficiency. However, efficiency carries a severe structural consequence: it compresses adaptive bandwidth. The system becomes exceptionally proficient at doing what it was designed to do, but increasingly incapable of doing anything else. Slack—the structural prerequisite for adaptation and innovation—is systematically eliminated because it appears wasteful under conditions of growth.
Consequently, the pursuit of maximal deterrence, maximal financialization, and maximal proceduralism creates a structural trap. The system continues to generate impressive, large-scale outputs, creating the illusion of enduring power. Coherence has eroded. Policymakers mistake capacity for resilience, and commentators mistake volatility for sudden collapse. In reality, the system has not failed; it has completed its developmental arc. It has optimized itself to the point of adaptive exhaustion.
Reframing Transformation Beyond the Decline Paradigm
Charles King’s invocation of Gibbon serves as a vital corrective to the twin delusions of our time: the belief that the present is an unparalleled golden age, or the fear that it is an unprecedented, irreversible collapse. Both are forms of historical arrogance that prevent genuine adaptation. Gibbon teaches us that history offers no guarantees, but it does grant us the humility to recognize our errors and the complexity of reality.
When we layer Ibn Khaldun’s systems framework over this Gibbonian humility, a clearer picture emerges. The contemporary geopolitical strain is not a simple story of an American empire making strategic errors. It is the saturation of a broader civilizational configuration whose mechanisms have reached maximal functional output. The increasing reliance on praxeological systems of power (coercion, financialization, technocratic insulation) is not a temporary deviation, but a structural rebalancing compensating for diminished normative integration.
The analytical question, therefore, is not how to "save" the American empire or prevent a Rome-like collapse. The question is whether the alignment between conceptual and praxeological systems can be restored, or if we must prepare for a post-completion reconfiguration. New civilizational orders will not simply inherit the old system; they will emerge from the peripheries, reconfiguring residual elements under new conditions of cohesion, resource distribution, and normative credibility. They may be less centralized and less exportable, but they will endure because they will possess what the current system has lost: systemic coherence.
In the end, Gibbon and Ibn Khaldun converge on a profound truth: civilizations do not die from external blows alone. They transition when they lose the ability to see themselves clearly, when their institutions outpace their cohesion, and when they mistake the relentless machinery of their own maximalism for the enduring vitality of their soul.