Integral

The global system is breaking — and it’s not the first time. In this gripping new episode of Big Picture Mind, Robb Smith unpacks what he calls a “Terminal Crisis”—a rare moment in history when the prevailing financial hegemon (today, the United States

) loses its grip on a system that is demanding reconfiguration. It’s the fourth such rupture in 700 years, following the Genoese-Iberian empire (1627), the Dutch United Provinces (1781), and the British Empire (1931). And now, in 2025, it’s America’s turn. What happens next? We enter a period of global economic anarchy—a high-stakes reordering of capital, power, and institutions. Robb traces how the system always adapts, pushing forward into a new “cycle of accumulation” that includes: In this urgent and far-reaching conversation, you’ll learn: Whether we descend into fractured blocs or step toward a new world order, one thing is clear: the system never loses — only hegemons do. Comments? Questions?

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! We live in a moment of acute and profound change, a new “Transformation

Age” witness

to world-transforming, historic, paradigmatic shifts all happening at the same time: a geopolitical “great release”, a technoeconomic “singularity”, an ecological shift into the “Anthropocene”, the rise of “metasystematic” consciousness, a pervasive existential “meaning crisis”, and an epistemological shift into “hyperreality”. New capacities of human consciousness arise with the Transformation Age, with the most advanced human cognition in history emerging and producing a new post-postmodern worldview

of nondual

evolutionary panentheism, providing a new, credible 21st century story of wholeness and spiritual liberation. The world seems to desperately need what this worldview — named variously “integrative”, “integral”, “metamodern”, “complex”, and others — can offer in the face of these co-arising seismic shifts in the human condition, which collectively represent a threatening “metacrisis”, an emergent “metaxis”, and an opportunity to prefigure the first unity-in-diversity society in human history. The Big Picture Mind aims to be an ongoing master course of integral thinking to help its participants build a mind capable of the holographic, cross-paradigmatic cognition needed in this era, and characteristic of the most advanced of the ten stages

of consciousness in the world today. Each discussion will explain real-world events and dynamics by drawing on the leading-edge of integrative models, while exploring the kinds of challenging issues that the Institute of Applied Metatheory wrestles with every day across dozens of social impact arenas. Thank you for being here.

The system never loses — only hegemons do.

The global capitalist system doesn’t collapse — it evolves. When a hegemon reaches its terminal crisis, the system reorganizes around a new cycle of accumulation, integrating more geography, people, and complexity. The fall of one power is not the end of order, but the beginning of a new one.

Trade wars are class wars.

The elites of global capitalism have benefited across borders, while productive classes have been hollowed out. What appears as a nation-to-nation trade war is often an uprising of the working and middle classes against an elite economic consensus — in both the U.S. and China.

This isn’t just geopolitics — it’s a civilizational choice.

The next hegemon will not only dominate economically — it will set the ideological container for the next global system. Whether that’s a pluralistic, integrative model or a rigid, authoritarian one depends on how we act now. The values embedded in the next system will shape the future of civilization.

Anarchy is not chaos — it’s pre-order.

We are not just losing order; we are entering a creative field of systemic renegotiation. The world is searching for its next organizing protocol — and this potential interregnum opens up space for bold experimentation, pluralism

, and integrative synthesis.

Strategy is not enough — consciousness must evolve.

The next world system won’t emerge solely from institutional power. It requires a new level of integrative awareness among leaders, capable of seeing across lines

of difference and holding long arcs of time. Spiritual

and psychological maturity are not luxuries — they are strategic assets in an age of breakdown.