THIS PAPER IS SO COOL!

They digitized millions of Wikipedia person-entries to create a "history of notable people." They show trends in the migration, gender ratio, industry background, geography, life expectancy, etc, of "notable people." ideas.repec.org/p/spo/wpecon/i…
So for example, here's the life of Erasmus:
Here's the history of notable people.

(It looks a lot like the history of population tbh)
(obviously "notable" here is "notable in modern databases;" arguably a lot of people believed to be notable in the past may be forgotten today, and this forgetting may be spatially correlated with e.g. colonialism or imperialism)
(OTOH, that may not matter: people notable *to the world we live in today* are an actually-interesting subset of *people ever notable to any society*)
Longevity data.

What's remarkable here is that the trend in life expectancy is not simply up, but a funnel and kinda U-shaped-ish!
Same story for gender balances as well! The "women kept totally out of public" dynamic is NOT present in the pre-1600 data! There's a lot of variability in the early periods but it really looks like "notability is for men" is a product of early modernity, not antiquity.
Though, granted, even in the recent cohorts women only make up 25% of the notable people identified, so there's nothing even approximating equality here. But the extent of inequality varies considerably.
Now THIS is a picture of cultural change! Wish I'd seen this a few months ago; I'd have used this data in a report that'll come out on Thursday discussing a closely related topic!
But folks, LOOK at that rise in sports notability! Here I've zoomed in.

I'm sure a non-trivial share of this is change in sampling, and OBVIOUSLY sports dominates *recent* cohorts because athletes become famous *at young ages*.
But while overstated.... the rise in sports fame-dom from e.g. 1950 to 1970 is not just an age thing. That's a shift in social priorities.
Notice which categories have long-term secular declines too:

Nobility
Family
Religion
However, again, this is a sort of strange sample. Here's their geographic split.

In *1800* , 30% of their notable people were in North America.

That.... is exceedingly implausible.
Sorry, here it is:
It is *exceedingly unlikely* that North America had 30x as many people in it who made notable contributions to global culture today as Asia, especially since at that time Asia had something like 80-90 TIMES as many people in it.
That implies that the average North American in 1800 was something like 2,500 times as "culturally productive" (from the viewpoint of "what is culturally notable in 2021") as the average Asian in 1800. And I just.... don't believe that.
So I think it would be wisest to do like region-population-weights or something.
Migration is increasingly important for notable people.
The authors provide a file with 100k of their notable people. I downloaded it, stripped the file down to just the US, and here's what we get for occupational history by year the notables turned 20.
So the notable people in America 1750-1890 were apparently *overwhelmingly* politicians.

They were displaced over time *primarily* by celebrities and athletes.

And that's the history of civics in America folks!
Here it is consolidated even more.

Very interested in theories of American history that explain a linear increase in the prevalence and importance of entertainment 1820-1930, but not much increase after that.
I mean basically just industrialization right?

but fwiw, that's also basically the period the US underwent its fertility transition
oh no did i just walk myself backwards into a marxist reading of us cultural history

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More from @lymanstoneky

29 Apr
Folks I am SO EXCITED for a report that I wrote for @AEI to be published TODAY! This has been a labor of love for over a year, and it is finally AVAILABLE FOR YOUR READING. aei.org/research-produ…
Why has American civic life become so divisive and impoverished in quality? Why is associational life in decline? Why are our intermediating institutions failing?

Using data from 1750-today, I argue the answer is BREAD AND CIRCUSES. aei.org/research-produ…
Basically, I argue that 19th century American life was NOT one of "dense associational life." The "nation of joiners" epithet WRONGLY attributed to de Tocqueville is also just wrong: the associations of "Democracy and America" are not Putnamesque at all!
Read 71 tweets
29 Apr
TIL that it is legal for fraternal societies to discriminate in providing services based on membership status in the group (so for example a Christian mutual-insurance benefit society can limit membership to Christians)...

but it's ILLEGAL to limit EMPLOYMENT to members!
It is apparently actually the law that you can make a "KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS ONLY" rule for selling your products, but it's illegal to limit *employment and leadership* to that *exact same class*.
Religious organizations have the right to discriminate in religious roles, but it's insane to me that it's a crime for overtly religious organizations with "secular" functions to *ask if the person actively opposes the religion*
Read 5 tweets
29 Apr
The Federal government pays a considerable share of public education costs and declines to offer those funds to support students going to non-public schools (which often reopened!) so I think it’s wrong to say the Federal government isn’t involved.
I think the argument here is not that JUST FEDERALISM will do the trick but that federalism is PART OF a push for a more pluralist government at all levels. So you’d need the Feds to say “our education dollars will go to whatever schools states deem fit to permit”
The reality is that schools which were opening were broadly less likely to be receiving Federal funds, while schools staying closed were getting Federal funds. That the federal government did not issue an explicit policy doesn’t make that imbalance irrelevant!
Read 5 tweets
29 Apr
The reason we tax the things we tax and in practice the whole political debate about tax policy is simply the intersection of ability to pay by the payer and ability to enforce by the state and that’s why all the imputed rent or taxing home production stuff is idiotic.
Economists like to say tax policy is based on idk efficiency or something but there isn’t really any evidence that’s actually what it’s based on... and also no compelling argument that it ethically *should* be based on this
But if you think it’s somehow “unfair” to tax a worker who gets paid to do something but not to tax someone who does that thing in their own home idk maybe you don’t understand the ethical intuition behind taxes
Read 5 tweets
28 Apr
How often to Republicans complain about facially neutral policies *specifically by pointing out* that they help black people?

I don’t *think* that’s common. Indeed it is the rarity of this phenomena that gives rise to the idea of “dog-whistling”!
Republicans may often oppose facially neutral policies on the grounds that they help “undeserving” people, generally meaning “nonworking,” and we know more racial diversity causes assessments of deserving ness to change.
Ie when you know the nonworking are racially other, you’re less likely to support helping them

But that’s not the point made above. The claim made above is Democrats must use explicitly racialized arguments because Republicans do so.
Read 4 tweets
28 Apr
Glad to be in @SCMPNews today talking about the recent report Laurie DeRose and I published for @FamStudies :

WORKISM explains why pro-natal policy in Asia seems to be failing. scmp.com/comment/opinio…
The fundamental problem is that while there is not *necessarily* tension between economic growth and stable fertility, there absolutely IS tension between "developmentalist states" and stable fertility (cc @Noahpinion ).
By imposing strict discipline on labor and making extremely large investments in infrastructure and education *beyond some natural rate*, developmentalist states super-charge growth.

But it has a price.
Read 29 tweets

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