Cliodynamics: can we use history to forecast the future?

Researchers have created Seshat database to systematically gather and analyse information from our past

Seshat
Sculpture at the Red Chapel in Luxor showing Ancient Egyptian female pharaoh Hatshepsut and goddess Seshat
(Image credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Could gathering data from the past help us prevent a future disaster? An evolutionary anthropologist at the University of Connecticut has dedicated his career to answering this question.

Professor Peter Turchin founded a new field of academic study called cliodynamics in 2003, and then set up a research consortium eight years later to build a huge historical database called Seshat in a bid to uncover major patterns in world history.

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