Last Updated on March 10, 2026 by Jack
The Fourth Turning is a book written by Neil Howe and William Strauss discussing their generational theory of four recurring cycles of society each of which lasts between 80 to 100 years. I asked ChatGPT to explain. Note: I added an arrow pointing to where I am on the chart. It seems we are tracking pretty close and in a transitional period.
You said:
explain the fourth turning
ChatGPT said:
The Fourth Turning — explained clearly


The Fourth Turning is part of a generational theory developed by William Strauss and Neil Howe. They argue that Anglo-American history moves in a recurring cycle of four “turnings,” each lasting about 20–25 years, for a full cycle of roughly 80–100 years (about the length of a long human life).
Each turning has a distinct social mood and role for different generations.
The Four Turnings (quick overview)
1️⃣ High
- Mood: Confident, orderly, institution-focused
- Society: Strong trust in government, churches, corporations
- Example: Post-WWII America (late 1940s–early 1960s)
2️⃣ Awakening
- Mood: Spiritual or cultural rebellion
- Society: People challenge institutions and demand personal freedom
- Example: 1960s–1970s (civil rights, counterculture)
3️⃣ Unraveling
- Mood: Cynical, individualistic
- Society: Institutions weaken; polarization rises
- Example: 1980s–2000s (culture wars, deregulation, mistrust)
4️⃣ Crisis — The Fourth Turning
- Mood: Urgent, dangerous, decisive
- Society: Institutions either collapse or are rebuilt
- Outcome: A new order emerges, resetting society for the next High
This is the make-or-break phase of the cycle.
What defines a Fourth Turning?
A Fourth Turning is marked by:
- Major institutional failure (economic, political, military, or social)
- National or civilizational emergencies
- Collective action overriding individualism
- Hard choices and sacrifices
- A clear resolution that reshapes the future
Think wars, depressions, revolutions, or foundational resets.
Historical examples often cited
| Crisis | Approx. Dates | Result |
| American Revolution | 1773–1794 | Independence & Constitution |
| Civil War | 1860–1865 | Union preserved, slavery ended |
| Great Depression + WWII | 1929–1946 | Modern global order, U.S. superpower |
| Current era (debated) | ~2008–2030s | Still unfolding |
The current Fourth Turning (according to the theory)
Strauss & Howe suggested the next Fourth Turning would begin around 2005–2008. Many point to:
- 2008 financial crisis
- Political polarization
- Declining trust in institutions
- Pandemic disruption
- Geopolitical conflict
- Technological upheaval
Under the theory, we are in the storm, not yet at the resolution.
Generational roles during a Fourth Turning
Each generation behaves differently during crisis:
- Elders (Silent Generation / Boomers): Provide moral authority or leadership
- Midlife (Gen X): Pragmatic crisis managers
- Young adults (Millennials): Collective, institution-building role
- Children (Gen Z): Protected, shaped by crisis environment
The theory emphasizes that generations don’t choose their role — history assigns it.
Key takeaway
The Fourth Turning is not about doom — it’s about reset.
Institutions are torn down or reforged so society can function again.
Whether one fully accepts the theory or not, it’s widely referenced because it offers a framework for understanding why periods of intense instability tend to cluster — and why they are often followed by long eras of rebuilding and stability.