The Ten Biggest Names In The Rabbi Inspiration Industry

Grok says: This is the specialized world of Jews teaching rabbis how to inspire — focusing on homiletics (sermon coaching), rabbinic leadership development, pulpit presence, spiritual communication, and congregational inspiration. Rankings combine program scale (fellowships, master classes, certifications), reach among working rabbis (especially in North America), commercial footprint (coaching retainers, online courses), and influence on rabbinic practice.
Rabbi Shira Koch Epstein
Executive Director of Atra: Center for Rabbinic Innovation. Runs sermon-coaching labs, rabbinic fellowships, and one-on-one coaching that have trained over 1,000 rabbis. The most hands-on “rabbi whisperer” operation in the field.
Yehuda Kurtzer
President of the Shalom Hartman Institute. Leads the flagship Rabbinic Leadership Initiative (RLI) and Rabbinic Torah Seminar — the premier pluralistic, high-level training for North American rabbis on inspirational thought leadership and public communication.
Rabbi Daniel Smokler
CEO of Assembly and senior faculty at Atra. Specializes in catalytic rabbinic coaching and visioning; widely sought for helping rabbis craft inspiring, community-transforming messages.
Dr. Erica Brown
Leading Jewish educator and author who runs high-impact rabbinic leadership programs and sermon workshops. Frequently invited to coach rabbis across denominations on powerful, resonant preaching.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz
Veteran innovator (founder of PANIM and long-time leader in rabbinic training). Continues to shape clergy-inspiration programs focused on visionary, engaging Jewish leadership.
David Trietsch
Founder of Hevruta Coaching. Provides individualized, confidential coaching to rabbis on communication, boundaries, and inspirational presence; one of the most respected private coaches in the Jewish clergy space.
Rabbi Marc Margolius
Senior Programs Director at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality. Directs the Clergy Leadership Program and mindfulness-based training that helps rabbis preach and lead with greater authenticity and impact.
Michele Lowe
The “Rabbi Whisperer” — a playwright-turned-sermon coach featured in The New York Times. Works one-on-one with dozens of rabbis on crafting compelling, voice-driven sermons.
Rabbi Irwin Kula
Long-time leader at CLAL (National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership). Runs Rabbis Without Borders and innovative programs that train rabbis to communicate Jewish wisdom in inspiring, accessible ways.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies. Trains and coaches rabbis in dynamic, heart-centered preaching and modern Jewish leadership through the American Jewish University network.

Honorable mentions / strong runners-up Rabbi Ron Wolfson (synagogue leadership and relational inspiration training)
Rabbi Laura Geller (pioneering work in rabbinic voice and community engagement)
Rabbi Tirzah Firestone (spiritual leadership and renewal-focused coaching)
The Rabbinic Training Institute (JTS) faculty collective (Conservative-focused continuing education)

This niche is smaller and more relational than the broader self-help or Christian clergy-coaching worlds, but it is highly influential: the rabbis trained by these figures shape what tens of thousands of congregants hear from the pulpit every Shabbat. Demand has grown sharply since 2022 as synagogues face attendance challenges and seek fresh tools for inspiration.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Self-Help Authority

Gurus, coaches, authors, and influencers in the self-help industry do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking transformational and empowerment languages that frame their claims as fidelity to personal growth, loyalty to mindset mastery, or responsibility for unlocking human potential inside a hyper-competitive, post-pandemic wellness-and-productivity market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, online courses, mastermind groups, certification programs, book launches, speaking circuits, apps, podcasts, and the invisible networks of affiliate commissions and corporate training contracts. The key language is not only psychological. It is also practical and social. Doing the inner work. Rewiring your mindset. Stepping into your highest self. Building atomic habits. Choosing to be brave. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of self-help the industry can sustain, how demanding that transformation should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The coach who stays up until 1 a.m. preparing a client session is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of empowerment life she genuinely values. The core values, growth mindset, resilience, authenticity, abundance consciousness, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the self-help industry. It is not the whole picture.
The self-help industry is best understood as a distinct case within this series because it occupies an unusual position between the spirituality business and the professional knowledge economy. Unlike the spirituality business, which makes openly non-empirical claims about vibration, transmission, and source alignment, the self-help industry wraps itself in the authority of science. James Clear cites habit research. Brené Brown cites her own qualitative studies. Adam Grant draws on organizational psychology. Joe Dispenza invokes neuroscience. Simon Sinek grounds Start With Why in evolutionary biology. These citations are real enough to pass casual inspection and thin enough to serve primarily as coalition markers rather than genuine epistemic constraints. The self-help industry is not anti-science. It is science-adjacent, borrowing the authority of the research enterprise while operating largely outside its accountability structures. No peer review committee vets a mastermind curriculum. No replication crisis threatens a certification program. The scientific wrapper does the work that science itself would do if it were actually present.
This creates a distinctive epistemological closure. The spirituality business pathologizes scrutiny as resistance to higher consciousness or operation from a scarcity frequency. The self-help industry pathologizes it as fixed mindset, resistance to growth, or self-limiting belief. The mechanism is identical. The costume differs. In both cases, the framework pre-emptively converts the tools of scrutiny into symptoms of the problem the framework claims to solve.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings construct hero systems to manage existential anxiety. The self-help industry is such a system, but it targets a specific demographic at a specific moment of vulnerability. Its primary market is not the catastrophically broken, as the spirituality business often is, but the functionally adequate who sense that something is missing. The suburban professional who reads Atomic Habits at 6 a.m. is not in crisis. She is managing a low-grade anxiety about whether her life is adding up to something. The self-help hero system tells her that it can, if she optimizes the right variables. Every habit tracked, every morning routine completed, every limiting belief identified and reframed: these are acts of fidelity to a post-1960s heritage of personal development that promises individual lives can be continuously improved toward a version of themselves worth living. That is a hero system. It promises participation in something larger than daily routine, the project of becoming, which neither death nor stagnation can fully dissolve.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons explains how the system sustains itself. The self-help industry is not simply a place where coaches happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as growth-oriented leaders through podcasts, group calls, live events, certification programs, and the continuous stream of content that interrupts private drift before it can settle into the question of whether the framework is actually working. Every email from James Clear, every Brené Brown TED talk clip, every Mel Robbins five-second challenge: these are micro-interruptions of the moment when the individual might otherwise notice that the hero system is a construction. The battle for authority in this industry is a battle for the right to be the one who does the interrupting.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The coach who questions a colleague’s ten-thousand-dollar mastermind or who begins softening rigorous accountability to keep client retention up when her circle holds firm is not merely making a business adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the anxiety that true self-actualization was built to contain.
What most distinguishes the self-help industry from the spirituality business in this series is corporate capture. The spirituality business remains largely outside formal institutional structures. Sadhguru does not appear in mandatory HR training. Eckhart Tolle is not embedded in performance review language. The self-help industry has been absorbed into corporate life at scale. Growth mindset, a concept drawn from Carol Dweck’s research, now appears in Microsoft’s management philosophy and Google’s leadership training. Psychological safety, drawn from Amy Edmondson’s work, structures team meetings at companies whose actual culture bears little relationship to the concept. Radical candor, from Kim Scott’s book, has become a standard framework for feedback conversations that are often neither radical nor candid. The self-help vocabulary has colonized corporate HR, leadership development, and organizational culture programs, which means the summons mechanism now operates through institutional channels with genuine coercive power. Participation in the framework is no longer merely voluntary. In many workplaces it is a condition of professional standing.
This corporate capture creates the industry’s most distinctive enforcement mechanism. The spirituality business enforces through social exclusion and the withdrawal of the summons. The self-help industry enforces through those channels and through the formal structures of professional life. A manager who refuses to engage with the growth mindset framework in a performance review is not merely coded as spiritually blocked. She is coded as not a culture fit, which has material consequences for promotion, assignment quality, and career trajectory.
The three-tier structure of the industry maps onto this corporate dimension in a specific way. At the retail layer you have content creators, podcasters, and social media coaches selling low-ticket courses, books, and online challenges. James Clear’s Atomic Habits, Mel Robbins’s five-second rule, and Glennon Doyle’s memoir-driven empowerment model all operate primarily at this layer, reaching mass audiences through publishing and platform distribution. At the mid-tier you have established coaches and thought leaders running high-ticket masterminds, certification programs, and corporate keynote circuits. Brené Brown’s Dare to Lead corporate training program, Simon Sinek’s leadership consulting, and Adam Grant’s organizational psychology speaking engagements operate here, where the corporate channel adds institutional credibility that pure consumer self-help cannot claim. At the wholesale layer you have the figures whose pedigree is so established that they no longer need moral clearance from anyone. Tony Robbins operates at this level, having long since transcended the need to justify his authority through research citations or institutional affiliation. Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club and Super Soul Sunday function as the industry’s wholesale layer in its purest form: a platform so authoritative that appearing on it confers legitimacy regardless of the content being endorsed.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that prize clinical depth, evidence-based psychology, and uncompromising accountability, uses the language of rigorous standards and separation from performative positivity or quick-fix hacks. Figures like Adam Grant, who critiques much popular self-help from an organizational psychology standpoint, and the various therapist-turned-coaches who emphasize the difference between genuine psychological work and mindset manipulation, occupy this coalition. Its claim is that the industry’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding transformation against the pressures of social media and algorithmic attention. Every softening of the summons is experienced as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among newer influencers and more flexible platforms trying to build sustainable scale in a saturated, algorithm-driven global market. Their language is workability, livable empowerment, and sustainable growth. Their claim is not that depth should be abandoned. It is that self-help cannot be governed as though it were still a 1970s encounter group or a pure clinical practice. Mel Robbins’s approach, which strips psychological complexity down to a single countable intervention, represents the pragmatic coalition’s most commercially successful expression. The five-second rule is not clinically rigorous. It is extraordinarily deployable, and deployability is the pragmatic coalition’s primary value.
Each coalition has predictable failure modes. Traditionalism can harden into a credentialed priesthood that mistakes academic pedigree for practical effectiveness and uses research citations as jurisdictional weapons rather than genuine epistemic constraints. Pragmatism can slide into what the industry’s critics call toxic positivity, where the demand for continuous growth pathologizes normal human limitation and converts genuine difficulty into a personal failure of mindset. The system oscillates between these poles without resolving the tension because both are rooted in real constraints.
Stephen Turner’s critique of essentialism explains why the fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic self-help being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. The traditionalist faction reconstructs the industry around psychological density and evidence-based practice. The pragmatic faction reconstructs it around accessible intervention and scalable impact. Both claim continuity with the original humanistic psychology tradition of Maslow, Rogers, and the human potential movement. Both select from the same dense world of research, clinical history, and transformation practice to support present positions. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages that authorize its current stance.
Authority in this context is atmospheric. It lives in who gets the TED main stage, who secures the corporate keynote contracts, which coaches are quietly recommended for Fortune 500 leadership programs, and which ones are spoken of with hesitation in professional circles. The science wrapper does specific atmospheric work here that the spirituality business cannot replicate. A self-help figure with a PhD or a Harvard Business Review byline occupies a different jurisdictional position than one with only a personal transformation story, because the academic credential signals prior submission to a vetting process that the corporate buyer recognizes as legitimate. The credential does not guarantee quality. It provides cover for the purchasing decision.
Across all three tiers and both coalitions, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to evidence and genuine psychological depth. Pragmatists claim fidelity to accessible transformation under actual market conditions. Corporate HR departments claim fidelity to organizational health and employee development. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic personal growth requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
The jurisdictional war in the self-help industry is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the anxiety contained. The industry’s corporate capture means that this struggle now plays out not only in the marketplace of consumer attention but inside the formal institutions of professional life, where the vocabulary of growth, mindset, and potential has become the official language of how organizations talk about human beings. The question that the industry has been unable to answer, and that its critics keep raising from outside, is whether a hero system built around continuous self-improvement can ever declare the project complete, or whether its deepest commercial interest lies in ensuring that it never does.

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The Fictions We Live By

“Social life depends on these kinds of shared fictions. When an agreed-upon story appears, people often accept it even when they have doubts.” (Rob K. Henderson)

American social life runs on stories that are treated as real enough to organize behavior even when privately doubted. Yuval Noah Harari called these imagined orders in Sapiens, arguing that large-scale human cooperation depends not on shared biology or face-to-face trust but on collective fictions that strangers agree to treat as binding. The American Dream, blind justice, the college credential, the neutrality of expertise: none of these descriptions fully matches reality, and most participants sense the gap. They comply anyway, because the cost of refusing the story is exclusion from the coalition that controls jobs, status, and belonging. The mechanism is not stupidity. It is coordination.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory sharpens Harari’s insight considerably. Shared fictions are not merely coordination devices. They are jurisdictional claims. The moral vocabulary attached to a fiction determines who gets to speak, who gets access, and whose arguments count before any argument is made. You clear the moral bar first. Then you reason. This is why the fictions feel so resistant to factual correction. They are not primarily descriptive. They are organizational. Correcting the description without displacing the coalition changes nothing, because the coalition was never really defending the description.
The dollar is the purest case. Currency has no intrinsic value. It consists of paper or digital ledger entries. Americans accept it as payment for labor and goods because they believe others will do the same, and that belief is self-fulfilling as long as it holds. The Federal Reserve reports that as of early 2026, the M2 money supply sits close to twenty-one trillion dollars, most of it existing only as accounting entries. Private skeptics buy gold or cryptocurrency. They still use dollars for coffee and rent, because the alternative is barter or collapse. The fiction requires no enforcement beyond the shared understanding that everyone else is also acting as if it is true. This is pluralistic ignorance in its most economically consequential form.
The meritocracy story works through the same mechanism but requires more active maintenance. Elite institutions repeat it constantly. Admissions offices speak of holistic excellence. Corporations speak of top talent pipelines. Everyone inside the system knows, at some level, that legacy admissions, donor pressure, networking, and credential filtering do heavy lifting alongside genuine ability. The fiction persists because it serves multiple functions simultaneously. It tells winners they deserve their position. It tells losers the system is legitimate rather than rigged. It reduces open conflict by converting a distributional struggle into a narrative about individual character. Inside the game, people reason very well. They optimize credentials and signaling with real sophistication. The reasoning is genuine. The frame within which it operates is carefully managed.
Blind justice follows the same pattern with starker data. The statues wear blindfolds. The courtroom rituals, rising when the judge enters, the formal address, the procedural language, all perform the fiction of equal treatment under law. Most participants in the legal system are aware, at some level, that outcomes track resources, forum, and leverage as much as law. The fiction of neutrality persists anyway, because it stabilizes the system. If the story collapsed entirely, the authority of every verdict would be contestable. The shared fiction is doing load-bearing structural work.
The college credential operates as what the earlier essays in this series called moral laundering. Once an individual passes through the right institution, their views inherit its legitimacy. The credential signals prior submission to the right protocols under sufficient pressure. Employers use degrees to filter applicants not primarily because the degree certifies relevant skill but because it certifies socialization into a particular kind of person. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that 33 percent of college graduates work in jobs that do not require a degree. The credential fiction persists because it serves the institutions that issue credentials, the employers who use them as a sorting device, and the graduates who need the signal to enter the coalition that controls professional life. All three parties have a stake in maintaining the story even when they privately recognize its limits.
The same pattern holds across every licensed profession. In law, the moral vocabulary of rule of law, due process, and professional independence frames every move as principled rather than strategic. In medicine, patient safety and evidence-based practice stabilize decision-making and liability while practitioners navigate guidelines that lag behind evidence and vary widely by local culture and financial incentive. In journalism, objectivity and public interest present coverage as neutral discovery rather than coalition-aligned selection, while story assignment, framing, and source access shape outcomes as powerfully as facts. In each domain, the vocabulary does the same work. It grants legitimacy before any technical claim is made. It is enforced mostly through informal channels, the drying up of referrals, the loss of access, the quiet coding of someone as not serious or not safe. And it operates differently at different altitudes. At the middle levels, people perform the vocabulary carefully because their status is fragile. At the top, decisions track power, risk, and timing, while the public language is maintained because it keeps the machine running.
Stephen Turner’s observation about expert consensus adds the missing piece. What looks like independent judgment often reflects training pipelines and funding dependencies. People learn, through graduate education, professional socialization, and early career experience, what can be said without losing grants, jobs, or access. Over time, that constraint becomes tacit knowledge. It feels like professional judgment. It is also a map of where the landmines are. The two-party political system illustrates this at the electoral level. Many voters feel neither party reflects their views. A Pew Research Center study in late 2024 found that 63 percent of Americans feel dissatisfied with candidates. People pick a side anyway, because the system is partly structural, a product of first-past-the-post voting that makes third parties difficult to sustain, and partly a maintained fiction that these two coalitions represent the full range of legitimate political thought. Conformity is enforced not by belief but by the calculation that the alternative costs more than compliance.
The fictions Harari described assumed a relatively unified narrative space. One large shared story, amplified by mass media, national holidays, and educational systems, could coordinate a diverse population of strangers. That assumption is now structurally compromised in ways that change the analysis considerably.
Algorithmic fragmentation has replaced the unified narrative space with a proliferation of competing micro-fictions, each internally coherent, each equipped with its own moral vocabulary, its own summons mechanism, and its own enforcement of who counts. People no longer leave one large shared story and enter skepticism. They leave one large story and enter a smaller one with more intense internal discipline. The shift is from mass coordination through a single fiction to coalition coordination through many competing fictions. Each coalition has a fully operational hero system in Ernest Becker’s sense. Each offers participants symbolic participation in something larger than themselves. None of them share enough common ground to negotiate with the others, because the moral vocabularies are not just different. They are mutually delegitimizing. To accept the other coalition’s vocabulary is to accept its jurisdictional claims, and those claims are zero-sum.
Generative AI accelerates this process in a specific way that deserves its own analysis. The problem is not primarily that people cannot distinguish real content from synthetic content, though that is real. The deeper problem is that synthetic content industrializes the production of moral vocabulary at a scale that was previously impossible. Coalition technologies that once required human effort to produce and distribute can now be generated and targeted automatically. The summons mechanism, the continuous interruption of private drift that keeps individuals identified with their hero system, gets faster, more precise, and cheaper. What Iddo Tavory described as the repeated hailing of the individual into a particular kind of man can now happen continuously, algorithmically, and at industrial scale. The jurisdictional wars accelerate because the tools of coalition maintenance become available to anyone with access to the platforms.
The result is not the end of shared fiction but its multiplication into competing fictions that increasingly cannot coordinate with each other. This is the coordination crisis of American public life in 2026. It is not a deficit of values. Every coalition has values, rigorously maintained and internally enforced. It is not a deficit of commitment. The summons mechanisms are working better than ever at the coalition level. The crisis is that the shared fiction large enough to coordinate strangers across coalition lines has fragmented, and the tools being built to replace it are optimized for within-coalition cohesion rather than cross-coalition cooperation.
Harari argued that shared fictions make large-scale cooperation possible. That insight remains correct. The American coordination problem is that the fictions are now operating at a scale too small for the cooperation required. Every coalition believes it is defending civilization. No coalition can recognize the others as legitimate participants in a shared project. The moral vocabularies that once coordinated a continental nation are now doing the work of tribal maintenance, and the institutions that once enforced a common enough story have either fragmented along coalition lines or lost the authority needed to hold the center.
The forward-looking implication follows directly. As alternative platforms and funding paths multiply, each domain faces pressure from outsiders who reject parts of the established vocabulary. The incumbents respond by tightening definitions of standard, safety, and independence, or by absorbing the challengers and relabeling their practices. The shared fiction does not disappear. It gets updated to keep control of the pipeline and the brand of legitimacy. But the update cycle is now faster than the enforcement mechanisms can handle, and the competing fictions are better resourced than they have ever been. The jurisdictional wars continue. The names change. The function does not. What has changed is that the battlefield is now the whole of American public life, and the question of which fiction is large enough and credible enough to coordinate it remains, for the first time in generations, open.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for CEO Coaching Authority

Leaders and researchers in the AI industry do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking technical, ethical, and civilizational languages that frame their claims as fidelity to safe AGI development, loyalty to accelerating human progress, or responsibility for shaping the future of intelligence inside a hyper-competitive, post-ChatGPT global race. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, frontier labs, compute clusters, regulatory influence, talent pipelines, funding rounds, and the invisible networks of model releases and safety benchmarks. The key language is not only technical. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Building beneficial AGI. Prioritizing alignment. Accelerating responsibly. Democratizing intelligence. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of AI future the industry can sustain, how demanding the safeguards should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.

Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The engineer who stays up until 3 a.m. scaling the next model is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. He is trying to maintain a form of frontier research life he genuinely values. The core values, alignment, capability, beneficial intelligence, responsible stewardship, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the AI industry. It is not the whole picture.

Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.

The AI industry is a hero system of unusual density, and it operates at a scale of existential stakes that no other institution in this series can match. Every other domain examined here, philosophy, Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, the PMC, the spirituality business, offers participants symbolic participation in something larger than themselves. The AI industry offers something more literal. Its practitioners genuinely believe they are building the last technology humanity will need to invent, the one that invents everything else. The civilizational silence that follows a failed or misaligned transition to AGI functions in this community as the collective version of Becker’s individual death terror. The jurisdictional war is therefore not merely a struggle over institutional control. It is a struggle over who acts as gatekeeper for humanity’s transition into a post-biological era. The stakes feel existential because, in this case more than any other, they might actually be.

Every model release carefully evaluated for safety, every compute cluster built with long-term impact in mind, every refusal to chase the latest hype cycle: these are not merely professional obligations. They are acts of fidelity to a post-2012 heritage that has sustained frontier AI development through conditions far worse than the current era of geopolitical competition and trillion-dollar valuations. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of quarterly earnings can fully dissolve.

Scaling laws function as this industry’s dogma in a way that has no equivalent in any other domain examined here. They provide a quasi-religious assurance that labor, in the form of compute and data, will be rewarded with a proportional increase in intelligence. When a model fails to show expected emergent properties, it is not merely a technical setback. It is a crisis of faith. The safety coalition treats scaling laws as a warning of an approaching force that must be constrained through alignment work. The accelerationist coalition treats the same laws as a moral imperative, where withholding compute becomes ethically equivalent to withholding a cure for a fatal disease. Both sides read the same empirical pattern and reach opposite normative conclusions because the normative conclusion was never really derived from the empirical pattern. It was present before the analysis began.

Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, adds the theoretical layer that explains how the hero system reproduces itself. The AI industry is not simply a place where researchers happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as builders of the future through institutions, interactions, conferences, safety workshops, compute allocations, and ordinary Slack-side recognitions. The industry’s thickness is the product of repeated summons into frontier intelligence being. To belong here is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of pioneer.

Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or civilizational failure. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The researcher who questions the rush toward larger models or who begins softening safety protocols to ship faster when his circle holds firm is not merely making a technical adjustment. He is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that humanity’s future was built to contain. Authority in this industry is enforced through epistemic exile. A researcher who moves from a frontier lab to a commercial product team is often spoken of as having left the priesthood. The loss of seriousness is the primary punishment, and it is administered not through formal sanction but through the withdrawal of the summons itself.

Three master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority. The first is moral authority over what counts as responsible AI development. The second is the organizational structure of frontier labs, compute infrastructure, talent acquisition, and regulatory influence. The third is the everyday network through which AI distinction gets reproduced in model releases, safety evaluations, conferences, and the mundane problem of navigating the field without becoming geopolitically or commercially porous.

The hardline-safety coalition, concentrated around Anthropic under Dario Amodei and Google DeepMind under Demis Hassabis, uses the language of rigorous alignment and separation from reckless acceleration. Its claim is that the industry’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain careful, safety-first development against the pressures of geopolitical competition and market hype. In Becker’s terms, this coalition defends the integrity of the hero system against the accommodations that slowly evacuate it. Every softening of the summons is experienced not merely as a technical compromise but as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its civilizational stakes.

Against this stands the accelerationist coalition, strongest among those pushing frontier capabilities including xAI under Elon Musk and elements within OpenAI under Sam Altman, using the language of responsible speed, workable deployment, and competitive necessity. Their claim is not that safety should be abandoned. It is that AI development cannot be governed as though it were still a pure academic exercise. Once one side defines the industry’s purpose as sustaining maximal safety rigor, speed begins to look like recklessness. Once the other side defines the industry’s purpose as winning the global race under actual competitive conditions, maximal caution begins to look like strategic abdication masquerading as virtue. Neither side says it is fighting over compute contracts, talent pipelines, regulatory capture, or the trillion-dollar valuations that flow to whoever establishes the dominant narrative. Each says it is protecting the true future of intelligence.

The gap between stated values and operational reality is visible in the capital flows. In early 2026, OpenAI reportedly closed a record $110 billion round while xAI secured $20 billion, both focused primarily on infrastructure, chips, data centers, and power, to push the scaling frontier. Anthropic, the safety coalition’s standard-bearer, raised $30 billion. Philanthropic and independent funding for global coordination, treaty frameworks, and international governance sits at less than $5 million annually, a ratio of roughly twenty to one against technical safety research and far larger against frontier capability investment. The signal layer of the industry speaks constantly about alignment, stewardship, and beneficial intelligence. The cue layer speaks in compute allocations and funding rounds. Participants learn to read cues.

The open-versus-closed debate adds a further jurisdictional layer that has no equivalent in the other domains. Open-source advocates frame their work as democratizing intelligence, a moral vocabulary that recruits the public as an ally against regulatory capture by the closed labs. Closed-model labs frame their secrecy as responsible stewardship, arguing that transparency in the face of existential risk is a form of negligence. This creates a logic where even the act of hiding one’s work becomes a marker of higher fidelity to the mission. Both positions are genuine, and both are also coalition technologies. The open-source frame recruits a broad public coalition and positions the closed labs as an illegitimate guild. The closed-model frame recruits regulators and serious researchers and positions open-source advocates as naive or reckless. Neither side acknowledges that its moral vocabulary also happens to serve its competitive position.

The shift toward Sovereign AI introduces a further fracture that the original hero system was not built to handle. Nations building their own localized frontier models are importing the language of the global AI hero system while deploying it in service of national interest. The original hero system was global and implicitly universalist. The new system is Westphalian. Leaders must now balance their summons as global stewards of humanity’s future with their role as strategic assets for specific states. The accelerationist coalition frequently uses the threat of adversarial AGI development by China to justify faster domestic development, effectively merging Becker’s civilizational hero system with the older and more primal hero system of the nation-state. The safety coalition finds itself in the uncomfortable position of arguing for restraint in an environment where restraint is being redescribed as strategic surrender.

Stephen Turner‘s critique of essentialism explains why the fight between these coalitions never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic AI development being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. One faction reconstructs the industry around safety and alignment density. Another reconstructs it around rapid capability growth and workable deployment. Both claim continuity with the original mission. Both select from the same dense world of research papers, scaling laws, and benchmarks to support present positions. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages and emphases that authorize its current stance.

Authority in this context is atmospheric. It lives in who gets platformed at major conferences, who secures the largest compute contracts, which labs are quietly recommended for top talent, and which ones are spoken of with hesitation. Minute variations in practice, whether a lab truly invests in alignment research or engages in safety theater, whether model releases follow internal safety commitments or are accelerated by competitive pressure, function as jurisdictional markers. They signal which authority structure a person has accepted as binding and which summons he or she is available to receive.

Across all three master domains, the same pattern holds. Safety traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising alignment standards. Accelerationists claim fidelity to sustainable progress under actual competitive conditions. Sovereign AI advocates claim fidelity to national interest framed as civilizational defense. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic AI stewardship requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.

The jurisdictional war in the AI industry is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. The expansion of AI into new labs, nations, and applications does not dissolve that internal tension. It amplifies it, because every new frontier lab or sovereign AI initiative that enters the serious coalition becomes a new arena in which the same question must be answered. How demanding must the safeguards be to remain credible? Where is the line between a field that sustains beneficial intelligence and an accommodation that hollows it out? The AI industry has been arguing over that line for years. The rest of technological civilization is now beginning to argue over it too, and unlike every other domain this series has examined, the outcome of that argument might determine whether there is a civilization left to do the arguing.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for CEO Coaching Authority

CEO coaches and executive leadership coaches do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking transformational and performance languages that frame their claims as fidelity to executive excellence, loyalty to peak leadership, or responsibility for sustaining C-suite impact inside a hyper-competitive, post-pandemic business environment. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, high-ticket retainers, mastermind groups, certification programs, board placements, corporate contracts, and the invisible networks of executive referrals and succession pipelines. The key language is not only strategic. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Doing the deep inner work of leadership. Unlocking authentic presence. Driving conscious impact. Holding the mirror for transformation. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of CEO coaching the industry can sustain, how demanding that transformation should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The psychiatrist-turned-coach who stays up until 3 a.m. preparing a bespoke session for a Fortune 500 CEO is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. He is trying to maintain a form of high-stakes advisory life he genuinely values. The core values, authenticity, presence, conscious leadership, measurable impact, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in CEO coaching. It is not the whole picture.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
CEO coaching is a hero system of unusual density. It does not offer cosmic significance in the theological register, but it offers something structurally similar. To live as a serious CEO coach is to participate in a tested tradition of elite leadership development against corporate inertia, burnout, and short-termism. Every confidential session where a CEO confronts his blind spots, every high-ticket mastermind where uncomfortable truths are spoken, every refusal to chase the latest hot AI-leadership trend: these are not merely professional obligations. They are acts of fidelity to a post-1980s heritage that has sustained elite advisory work through conditions far worse than the current era of quarterly earnings pressure and activist investors. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of short-term metrics can fully dissolve.
The high-ticket retainer functions as a sacrificial logic within this system. To pay fifty thousand dollars for a weekend retreat is a massive act of faith that anchors the executive into the framework. The expense itself makes the work feel more real and therefore more capable of containing the anxiety of irrelevance. The cost validates the transformation and ensures the executive remains available for the summons. This is identical to the commitment device logic of the spirituality business, but here it wears the language of fiduciary seriousness rather than spiritual alignment.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, adds the theoretical layer that explains how the system sustains itself. The world of CEO coaching is not simply a place where coaches happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as executive transformers through institutions, interactions, confidential off-sites, certification programs, mentorship chains, and ordinary boardroom-side recognitions. The industry’s thickness is the product of repeated summons into high-impact being. To belong here is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of leadership guide.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or professional failure. The community that summons its members reliably is the community whose hero system remains operative. That is why defection from the industry’s standards carries such disproportionate social weight. The coach who questions a colleague’s quarter-million-dollar annual retainer or who begins softening rigorous confrontation to keep a client comfortable when her circle holds firm is not merely making a business adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true leadership transformation was built to contain.
Three master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority in CEO coaching. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious executive coaching practice. The second is the organizational structure of certification programs, mastermind groups, corporate contracts, and referral networks. The third is the everyday network through which coaching distinction gets reproduced in confidential sessions, off-site dinners, LinkedIn endorsements, and the mundane problem of navigating the C-suite without becoming relationally porous.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that prize clinical rigor and deep psychological insight, often led by psychiatrists or clinical psychologists who pivoted into coaching, uses the language of evidence-based standards and separation from performative motivational work. Its claim is that the industry’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding transformation against the pressures of quick-fix culture. Marshall Goldsmith’s results-based pay model, where he receives nothing unless client performance measurably improves, is the hardline coalition’s purest institutional expression. It converts a moral claim about accountability into a structural commitment. Ram Charan and Bill George represent the same coalition’s emphasis on depth, long-horizon relationship, and genuine board-level trust built over decades.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among newer coaches and more flexible platforms trying to build sustainable scale in a retainer-driven global market. Their language is balancing, context, workability, and livable excellence. Their claim is not that depth should be abandoned. It is that CEO coaching cannot be governed as though it were still a pure clinical practice or a 1990s boutique advisory shop. Jerry Colonna’s Reboot model sits at an interesting point between the two coalitions: it prizes the inner work and emotional depth of the hardline approach while operating through group formats and a founder-specific vocabulary that the traditionalists might regard as insufficiently rigorous. Tony Robbins represents the pragmatic coalition’s outer edge, where performance psychology and commercial scale have become the primary values and clinical depth is largely decorative.
Each coalition has predictable failure modes. Traditionalism can harden into a prestige cartel where clinical pedigree substitutes for actual results and the confidentiality of the coaching relationship insulates poor practice from accountability. Pragmatism can slide into what the industry calls executive entertainment, where coaches tell CEOs what they want to hear, the summons continues, the retainer renews, and nothing changes. The system oscillates between these poles without resolving the tension because both are rooted in real constraints.
Stephen Turner’s critique of essentialism explains why the fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic CEO coaching being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. One faction reconstructs the industry around clinical seriousness and psychological density. Another reconstructs it around sustainable adaptation and workable impact under modern C-suite conditions. Both claim continuity. Both select from the same dense world of leadership literature, clinical history, and client practice to support present needs.
Authority in this context is atmospheric. It lives in who gets platformed at elite masterminds, who certifies the next wave of coaches, which practitioners are quietly recommended to Fortune 50 boards, and which ones are spoken of with hesitation. Minute variations in practice, whether a coach holds the mirror without agenda or hedges with corporate-friendly language, whether sessions push into genuine discomfort or circle back to comfort, function as jurisdictional markers. They signal which authority structure a person has accepted as binding and which summons he or she is available to receive.
As of 2026, a third coalition has entered the jurisdictional war and changed its shape entirely. AI coaching platforms, BetterUp, CoachHub, and a growing field of agentic systems, do not rely on clinical rigor or pragmatic human balancing. They use the moral vocabulary of democratization and algorithmic objectivity. They frame the elite hero system as an opaque and exclusionary guild. They argue that high-ticket human coaching is a bottleneck that prevents organizational growth, and that every employee deserves the precision and support previously reserved for the C-suite. This is not merely an efficiency argument. It is a moral claim, and it deploys the language of fairness with the same coalition-building function that authenticity and transformation serve in the human coaching world.
The AI coalition uses transparency as its primary weapon. In the traditional hero system, confidentiality is sacred. It protects the space where the CEO manages existential terror. AI platforms challenge this directly by offering boards and HR leaders real-time analytics and longitudinal data on coaching outcomes. They frame the human coach’s insistence on privacy as a lack of accountability. By converting the inner work of leadership into data points and sentiment analysis, they shift jurisdiction from the private advisory session to the corporate dashboard, and authority from the individual practitioner to the system architect.
The summons in AI coaching is constant and pervasive in a way that human coaching cannot match. It does not wait for a quarterly off-site or a scheduled call. It lives in digital nudges, real-time feedback during meetings, and automated post-session reflections. Tavory’s concept of summons still applies, but the source of the hail changes. The individual is called into being not by a prestigious peer but by the interface itself. This creates a different kind of hero system, one of perpetual optimization, where the anxiety of irrelevance is managed not through psychological insight but through the constant reassurance of the metric.
The emergence of Digital Twins sharpens this into a direct confrontation with the older hero system. Marshall Goldsmith and Tony Robbins have moved beyond static content to create interactive, agentic versions of themselves, trained on decades of proprietary data, vocal patterns, and psychological frameworks. Through Becker’s lens, the Digital Twin is the ultimate technology of symbolic immortality. It literalizes the promise that a coach’s wisdom can transcend the individual body. By licensing their intelligence into an AI agent, the elite coach ensures her hero system remains operative long after she has left the room. The traditionalists argue that true transformation requires the physical vulnerable presence of another human being, that an algorithm cannot feel the room or hold a mirror to the soul. The scaling coalition counters that a digital summons is better than no summons at all, and that their models provide a more consistent and less socially self-interested presence than any human coach could.
The conflict has now become a three-way struggle over the definition of presence itself. Jerry Colonna and the Reboot community argue that presence cannot be performed or simulated, that the AI’s approximation of empathy is a hollow accommodation that weakens the collective structure of the industry. The builders of Digital Twins argue that their models provide a more objective and consistent presence than any human whose continued income depends on client satisfaction. The pragmatic-engagement coalition finds itself in an uncomfortable position, sharing some of the traditionalists’ skepticism about AI while lacking the clinical pedigree to make the argument from depth.
Across all three coalitions, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising clinical values. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable excellence under actual market conditions. Technocratic scalers claim fidelity to democratic access and organizational health. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic CEO coaching requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
The jurisdictional war in CEO coaching is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. The expansion of the industry into AI platforms, Digital Twins, and Superworker models does not dissolve that internal tension. It amplifies it, because every CEO who consults an AI twin instead of a human advisor redraws the industry’s boundaries. The question for 2026 is whether the hero system of CEO coaching can survive its own industrialization, and whether the summons retains its power when the voice doing the hailing belongs to a machine.

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NYT: Why Are So Many Democratic Politicians So Far Out of Touch?

Thomas B. Edsall writes in the New York Times:

In January 2025, when the U.S. House took up legislation to bar trans women’s participation on women’s sports teams, all but two Democratic representatives — Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez — voted against the bill.

When the Senate took up a similar proposal three days ago, every Democrat present voted against it.

Why don’t more Democrats explicitly moderate their stands on transFgender rights, immigration and other issues? Those who maintain far-out positions are well to the left of the electorate and its emblematic median voter. The trans issue clearly weakened Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign, leaving her open to devastating pro-Trump ads.

In the case of one of the most disputed rights claimed by some parts of the transgender activist community — transgender women’s participation on women’s sports teams — Democrats have clear liberal grounds to challenge that claim, by asserting that they are protecting a woman’s right from unfair competition.

But this phenomenon — drifting far from the median voter — is hardly limited to the left. There are many factors behind the reluctance of both Democrats and Republicans to shift to the center.

For one thing, donors, especially the growing legions of small donors, prefer more extreme candidates. Adding additional pressure, what have come to be known as “the groups” — advocacy organizations on the left and the right — demand fealty to policies that are sometimes politically costly; they threaten to support primary challengers to run against those who defy their authority. On a psychological level, Democrats and liberals are morally committed to protecting marginalized groups from harm and defending racial and sexual minorities…

Ruy Teixeira, a political analyst and senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, took a long look at this development in a March 12 posting on the Liberal Patriot Substack “The Democrats’ White Liberal Problem”:

Cast your mind back to the beginning of the century. At that point, a mere 28 percent of Democrats described themselves as liberal and two-thirds were either moderate or conservative.

Fast forward to today and the liberal share has more than doubled, to 59 percent, while the moderate/conservative share has declined drastically. It’s the liberals’ party now. And especially, it’s the white liberals’ party now.

How have white liberals changed?

In 2000, white Democrats who were moderate or conservative outnumbered white liberal Democrats by about two to one. Today that relationship has been reversed. White liberal Democrats now outnumber moderate/conservative white Democrats by about two to one.

The result: The balance of power within the party has moved in a decisively leftward direction:

From being merely a voice, albeit an important one, in the Democratic choir, white liberals are now directing the choir and imposing their culture, preferences and priorities on the party as a whole.

Any Democrat seeking the presidential nomination, Teixeira continued,

has to reckon with this enormous bloc of Democrats, whose influence is enhanced beyond their considerable numbers by their dominance of the party’s infrastructure, allied NGOs and advocacy groups, and left-leaning media, foundations and academia. Not to mention the money — ambitious Democrats need money, and white liberals are a reliable source of cash for politicians who press the right buttons.

This clarifies why it is so difficult for Democratic politicians to carve out a truly moderate path.

What else pushes Democrats to the left? Cash.

In their July 23, 2025, Wall Street Journal article, “AOC, Mamdani and Progressives Rake In Cash as Democrats Remain Divided: Far Left’s Prolific Fund-Raising Shows Appeal to Party’s Base,” John McCormick and Anthony DeBarros wrote:

Among the 10 incumbent Democrats who raised the most from individual donors this year, six are members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, a Wall Street Journal analysis of campaign finance disclosures shows. Three of the top four are progressives, with the exception of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D., N.Y.).

The financial strength among progressives presents a challenge to party leaders trying to nudge the Democratic message closer to the middle, where they might stand a better chance of winning over independent voters who decide close elections.

This is a clean application of my power framework to a concrete political problem, and the Edsall piece gives me good empirical scaffolding to climb.
Edsall identifies the structural math correctly. Safe districts remove the electoral incentive to moderate. Primary voters reward ideological intensity. The 17 percentage point advantage for extreme candidates in primaries is a striking figure, and the fact that 40 percent of state legislative races go uncontested is arguably the more damning number. Two-party competition, the mechanism supposed to force candidates toward the center, simply does not exist in a large fraction of American elections. Edsall is right about all of this. What he does not fully explain is why the actors inside these institutions experience themselves as reasonable while everyone outside experiences them as untethered from reality.
My framework supplies the missing piece. Edsall describes external incentives. What he leaves out is the internal epistemology, the fact that inside elite institutions, reasoning does not precede legitimacy. Legitimacy precedes reasoning. You signal alignment, you gain standing, and then you reason within the bounds that standing permits. The vocabulary, affirming care, harm reduction framework, centering equity, systemic inequities, is not descriptive. It is a credential. It tells other insiders that this person understands the rules and can be trusted with institutional authority. Once those signals are in place, the reasoning that follows can be quite sophisticated. People cite studies, build models, write careful memos. From the inside it feels like serious inquiry. But the constraint is already baked in. Certain conclusions are simply off the table because reaching them would violate the signaling structure that grants legitimacy in the first place.
This is why the gap with the median voter keeps widening without producing much visible distress among professionals. The median voter optimizes for outcomes: cost of living, crime rates, fairness in competition, border conditions. The professional class optimizes for coalition maintenance under moral constraints. These are different games. Edsall shows that safe districts reward ideological intensity at the electoral level. What he does not show is that institutions reward moral conformity at the professional level regardless of electoral outcomes. The double lock means that even a Democrat representing a genuinely competitive district faces institutional costs for moderating that have nothing to do with her primary electorate. Moderating might help her win in November. It might also cost her fellowships, donor relationships, media access, and speaking invitations. Those are not trivial losses.
Ruy Teixeira’s observation about white liberals is essential here and deserves more weight than Edsall gives it. White liberals now outnumber moderate and conservative Democrats by two to one, a complete reversal from 2000. This group controls the party’s infrastructure, its allied NGOs, its donor networks, its academic and media relationships. They do not merely vote. They staff, fund, and manage the institutions through which the party’s moral vocabulary gets produced and enforced. A candidate who violates that vocabulary does not just face a primary challenge. She faces a much broader and more diffuse form of exclusion from the class that runs the party’s machinery.
At the top of the hierarchy the language changes entirely, which is the most important thing Edsall misses. Senior donors and party brokers do not perform moral alignment because their status is already secured through pedigree and track record. They talk about risk exposure, institutional stability, and blowback. They manage the gatekeeping through hiring, funding, and the quiet allocation of access. By the time an argument reaches public debate, the selection has already happened. The conversation is downstream of the gatekeeping. This is why the reasoning can look polished but the conclusions feel predetermined to outsiders. The sorting happened upstream. The public argument is the retail operation. The wholesale operation already determined who gets to speak.
The transgender issue illustrates all three layers cleanly. At the retail layer, activists and mid-level professionals produce the moral vocabulary and enforce it through social pressure and institutional complaint mechanisms. At the mid-tier, Democratic politicians in safe districts calculate that violating the vocabulary costs more in institutional standing than it gains in general election votes, which for most of them never comes into question anyway. At the wholesale layer, major donors and party strategists are watching the polling on trans issues in competitive districts with considerable alarm but communicating their concerns privately rather than publicly, because public dissent would violate the norms of coalition solidarity that maintain their own standing. The result is a system where nearly every Democrat in the House votes against a bill that clear majorities of the public support, and where almost none of them experience this as a problem because the optimization problem they are solving is not the one the median voter thinks they are solving.
Mara Keisling’s call for retrenchment is interesting precisely because it comes from someone with established credentials inside the coalition. She can say what she says without losing standing because her pedigree is secure. A junior staffer or a first-term representative from a competitive district who said the same thing would face a very different reception. That asymmetry is the system working exactly as my framework predicts.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Spiritual Authority

Gurus, coaches, and teachers in the spirituality business do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking spiritual and consciousness languages that frame their claims as fidelity to awakening, loyalty to higher vibration, or responsibility for sustaining the movement’s integrity inside a hyper-competitive, post-2000s wellness market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, online academies, mastermind groups, certification programs, retreats, book deals, speaking circuits, and the invisible networks of affiliate commissions and launch funnels. The key language is not only metaphysical. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Doing the inner work. Raising your vibration. Holding sacred space. Aligning with source. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of spirituality the business can sustain, how demanding that consciousness should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.

Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The coach who stays up until 3 a.m. channeling a new transmission is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of spiritual life she genuinely values. The core values, liberation, non-attachment, abundance consciousness, heart-centered living, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the spirituality business. It is not the whole picture.

Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.

The spirituality business is a hero system that deliberately targets people at the moment when their previous hero systems have failed them. Divorce, illness, career collapse, existential crisis: these are not incidental to the market. They are the market. The summons mechanism works most powerfully on people who are most exposed, which makes the replacement hero system extraordinarily sticky. Leaving is experienced not as a consumer decision but as a spiritual crisis, which is precisely what the system requires to maintain retention. Every transmission delivered with absolute presence, every high-ticket mastermind where shadows are named, every refusal to chase the latest hot trend: these are experienced as acts of fidelity to a post-1960s heritage that has sustained elite spirituality through conditions far worse than the current era of social-media metrics and wellness capitalism. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of short-term metrics can fully dissolve.

What makes the spirituality business the most revealing case in this series is not its size but its structural purity. The signal layer, liberation, awakening, non-attachment, abundance consciousness, can be deployed with complete freedom because there is no external accrediting body, no peer review, no fiduciary duty, no bar exam. The cue layer, course revenue, list size, affiliate commissions, mastermind pricing, launch strategy, is purely commercial. The gap between the two is not a failure of the system. It is the system. Every other institution examined in this series maintains some partial alignment between stated values and operational reality. The spirituality business as a commercial sector has shed that constraint entirely.

This makes Alliance Theory especially sharp as an analytical tool here. The moral vocabulary of awakening does not merely recruit allies and define legitimacy. It actively neutralizes criticism. To question a teacher’s claims is to reveal your own resistance. To audit their revenue is to be trapped in scarcity consciousness. To demand evidence is to operate from the limited three-dimensional mind rather than higher dimensional awareness. The epistemological closure is more complete than in any other domain because the framework pre-emptively pathologizes the tools of scrutiny. This is not incidental. It is the system’s primary defensive architecture.

Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, explains how this architecture sustains itself. The spirituality business is not simply a place where teachers happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as true lightworkers through live events, online masterminds, mentorship chains, and ordinary DM-side recognitions. Every email blast, every push notification from a meditation app, every emergency transmission on Telegram is a micro-interruption of existential drift. The spirituality business has mastered the continuous summons. By keeping the individual in a state of constant inner work, the system ensures she rarely has the quiet moment of reflection where the hero system might be seen as a construction. The battle for power in this business is, at its root, a battle for the right to be the one who interrupts the silence.

Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or spiritual failure. The community that summons its members reliably is the community whose hero system remains operative. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The teacher who questions a colleague’s high-ticket launch or begins softening non-dual rigor to hit revenue targets when her circle holds firm is not merely making a business adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true embodiment was built to contain.

The system operates at three distinct tiers. At the retail layer you have content creators, podcasters, and Instagram teachers selling low-ticket courses and building audiences. This is where slogans live and where the continuous summons is cheapest to produce. At the mid-tier you have established coaches and thought leaders running high-ticket masterminds, certification programs, and live events, typically in the ten-thousand to one-hundred-thousand dollar range per participant. This is where the most intense jurisdictional battles occur, because mid-tier practitioners are certified but not yet wholesale, making them most vulnerable to market fluctuations and therefore most aggressive in using Alliance Theory maneuvers. They must constantly prove they are more tapped in than retail creators while remaining in devotion to the wholesale figures above them. At the wholesale layer you have the handful of figures, Sadhguru, Eckhart Tolle, Joe Dispenza, Deepak Chopra, Marianne Williamson, Byron Katie, whose pedigree is so established that they no longer need moral clearance from anyone. They have the power to ignore. To answer a critic is to acknowledge the critic as a peer. By maintaining silence, they signal that they exist in a different dimensional reality. This is the ultimate signal of attainment: the ability to remain visibly unaffected by the cue layer of market competition.

The wholesale layer maintains this position through what might be called transcendental passivity. At this level, the individual has become a platform that other teachers use to validate their own existence. The mid-tier and the certification economy act as a voluntary immune system for the wholesale figure. She does not need to pathologize a critic. The thousands of certified practitioners whose livelihoods depend on her sanctity will do it. If a journalist or a former student raises concerns about a wholesale leader, the mid-tier swarm interprets the critique as unprocessed shadow or unconscious projection. The wholesale figure remains pure while her subordinates handle the defense. This allows the top tier to maintain an appearance of non-attachment while enjoying the benefits of a highly attached and aggressive coalition.

The certification economy is the primary mechanism through which the mid-tier reproduces itself and generates revenue simultaneously. When a teacher certifies students to teach her method, she converts spiritual capital into recurring income while extending her jurisdictional reach. The certified practitioners then become a coalition with a material stake in defending the teacher’s authority, since their own credibility depends on hers. The system functions as a debt-based lineage. In a traditional apprenticeship, the student eventually gains independence. In the spirituality business, certification often requires ongoing licensing fees, continuing education in the teacher’s new transmissions, or a percentage of the student’s own revenue. This creates a structural incentive for the mid-tier to never truly outgrow the wholesale layer. The teacher is not just a mentor. She is a landlord of the student’s professional identity.

The transmission or channeling functions as a perfect informational monopoly. In law or medicine, authority is checked against a body of literature or a set of measurable outcomes. In the spirituality business, authority is located in the presence or frequency of the teacher during the transmission. Because this frequency is subjective and unmeasurable, it is the ultimate non-falsifiable asset. If Eckhart Tolle or Deepak Chopra says something that contradicts a previous statement, it is not a contradiction. It is a new transmission for a new collective frequency. The very subjectivity of the product insulates it from the accountability mechanisms that govern other elite domains.

The high-ticket sales call is where the signal layer is most precisely used to spring the trap of the cue layer. The salesperson, typically called an enrollment coach or alignment specialist, uses the prospect’s own spiritual vocabulary to dismantle financial resistance. The call begins by inviting the prospect to share her vision and the blocks preventing its manifestation. In Becker’s terms, the salesperson looks for the point where the prospect’s current hero system has failed. By the end of this diagnostic phase, the prospect is not merely looking for a course. She is looking for rescue from existential insignificance. When the price is revealed, the objection is handled not as a financial reality but as a spiritual test. To say I cannot afford this is diagnosed as playing small or operating from a scarcity frequency. The prospect is told that the universe responds to bold action and that investing in oneself is the ultimate act of sovereignty. The financial risk is rebranded as a spiritual initiation. If the prospect asks for time to think or consult a partner, the script neutralizes the tools of scrutiny. Taking time to think is framed as letting the ego-mind take the lead. Consulting a spouse is dismissed as giving away your power. The salesperson asks: is that your truth, or is that your fear speaking? The final move is the summons. The prospect is hailed as a leader, a wayshower, someone called to a higher mission. The transaction is no longer a purchase. It is an act of fidelity to the soul.

The high price tag of mid-tier and wholesale offerings functions as a commitment device for the hero system. To pay fifty thousand dollars for a certification is a massive act of faith that anchors the individual into the new framework. The expense itself makes the system feel more real and therefore more capable of containing the terror of insignificance. The 2026 top ten figures, Sadhguru at the clear summit through his Isha Foundation and Inner Engineering programs, followed by Tolle, Dispenza, Chopra, Vishen Lakhiani through Mindvalley, Jay Shetty, Williamson, Teal Swan, Esther Hicks through the Abraham-Hicks operation, and Gabby Bernstein, represent the most efficient managers of death anxiety in the digital marketplace. When Joe Dispenza sells a retreat, he is not selling a vacation. He is selling a biological upgrade that promises to move the participant out of the category of the perishing and into the category of the eternal. This is why the spirituality business is recession-proof. In times of personal crisis, the individual’s previous hero system has collapsed. The spirituality business is positioned precisely at that threshold.

The two dominant coalitions compete for the same anxious seeker through different vocabularies. The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that prize pure non-duality and rigorous shadow work, uses the language of depth, descent, and energetic standards. Its claim is that true authority is forged in crisis, darkness, and ego-dissolution. The hardline teacher claims her authority comes from having faced the void. She frames the pragmatic coalition’s focus on high vibration as a consumerist dilution of the path. Shadow work functions in this coalition not merely as a practice but as a jurisdictional weapon. By claiming that a competitor has unexamined shadow, a teacher can disqualify that competitor’s entire output without addressing her arguments or her business success. Any defense the target offers is immediately categorized as resistance or defensiveness, which are themselves symptoms of the shadow. The move is unfalsifiable by design. Shadow work also functions as a loyalty test within the mid-tier. To belong to the serious coalition, a practitioner must undergo shadow audits by the wholesale figure, confessing hidden agendas or egoic attachments. This ritual of submission reinforces the teacher’s jurisdiction. The practitioner who refuses to play is branded as unavailable for true transmission, which effectively excommunicates her from the elite circles of the hardline coalition.

The pragmatic-engagement coalition counters by shifting the jurisdictional ground from the psyche to the body. If hardline traditionalists use shadow to pathologize rivals, pragmatists use nervous system regulation to pathologize the hardliners. They frame the traditional model of breaking the ego as retraumatizing and dysregulating, invoking Polyvagal Theory and somatic experiencing to argue that the hardline approach violates the student’s window of tolerance. This allows the pragmatist to claim the higher moral ground of safety and inclusion while dismissing the hardliner as an outdated, potentially abusive relic of a pre-trauma-informed era. The pragmatist replaces the hardline concept of level of attainment with capacity. One does not reach a higher state. One expands one’s capacity to hold wealth and impact. This frames commercial success as the biological inevitability of a regulated system. The hardliner who lives more ascetically or less commercially is diagnosed as having contracted capacity or unhealed poverty consciousness. Revenue becomes the literal evidence of superior spiritual health.

The emerging synthesis in the 2026 market combines both. Figures like Thomas Hübl, who blends mystical language with the vocabulary of collective trauma and relational fields, and Nicole LePera, who moved from clinical psychology to a self-healer model that bypassed traditional licensing to create its own jurisdictional authority, represent a hybrid model that uses shadow work to maintain the signal of depth while using nervous system regulation to maintain the cue of safety and commercial scalability. This hybrid is the stickiest hero system in the current market because it pre-emptively answers both types of criticism. It promises the thrill of the descent with the safety of a trauma-informed container. Rupert Spira represents the hardline coalition’s successful commercialization: his direct path non-duality operates at the most austere end of the signal layer while his business model runs a high-frequency digital operation of webinars, retreats, and a sophisticated app. To be a student of Spira is a status marker that one is doing serious work, which then allows those students to charge higher prices in their own coaching practices.

Stephen Turner‘s critique of essentialism explains why the fight between these coalitions never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic spirituality being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. One faction reconstructs the business around energetic density and the primacy of the descent. Another reconstructs it around sustainable embodiment and the sovereignty of the nervous system. Both claim continuity with the tradition. Both select from the same dense world of teachings to support present needs. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages and emphases that authorize its current position.

Across all three tiers and both coalitions, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising adherence to the core values. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable conscious excellence under actual market conditions. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic awakening requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.

The gap between the liberation they preach and the revenue they collect is not a contradiction. It is the structural necessity of a hero system that must operate within a capitalist framework. The spirituality business is the only domain where the signal of total non-attachment is the most effective cue for total market dominance. The winner of the jurisdictional war is the one who can most reliably hail the seeker as a lightworker, a starseed, or an evolved consciousness, because in doing so they provide the symbolic immortality that makes this the most resilient franchise in human history.

These are the big players in the spirituality business based on commercial footprint (course/mastermind revenue, certifications, retreats, apps, and platforms), social-media reach, book sales, and overall market influence.

Sadhguru (Jaggi Vasudev)
The clear #1. Massive global operation through Isha Foundation, Inner Engineering programs, Save Soil campaign, and digital content. One of the highest-earning and most-followed spiritual figures worldwide.
Eckhart Tolle
Enduring powerhouse. The Power of Now and A New Earth remain perennial bestsellers; his online courses, retreats, and teachings continue to generate huge revenue with a very loyal audience.
Dr. Joe Dispenza
Extremely commercial success story. High-ticket workshops, meditation programs, and “scientific spirituality” model dominate the mind-body space.
Deepak Chopra
Veteran empire-builder. Chopra Global, multiple product lines, books, apps, and wellness collaborations keep him at the top of the mind-body-spirit business.
Vishen Lakhiani (Mindvalley)
Runs one of the largest spirituality/personal-growth course platforms in the world. Sells courses from many teachers and has built a massive direct-to-consumer empire.
Jay Shetty
Podcast-to-empire model. Books, coaching certifications, events, and mainstream appeal make him a major player in the spirituality/self-help crossover.
Marianne Williamson
Long-time commercial force. Books, speaking tours, online courses, and public visibility (including her presidential run) keep her in the top tier.
Teal Swan
Influential (and polarizing) online teacher. Direct-to-consumer courses, masterminds, and a huge social following drive strong revenue.
Esther Hicks / Abraham-Hicks
Long-running Law of Attraction empire. Workshops, cruises, books, and recordings remain a steady commercial machine.
Gabby Bernstein
Manifestation/abundance-focused courses, events, and books keep her as a top female voice in the high-ticket spirituality market.
Dr. Nicole LePera (The Holistic Psychologist)
She is an example of the “Mid-Tier to Wholesale” transition through the Certification Economy. By moving from clinical psychology to a “Self-Healer” model, she bypassed the traditional medical bar exam to create her own jurisdictional authority. Her “SelfHealers Circle” is a high-volume, subscription-based membership that functions as a continuous summons, effectively hollowing out the need for traditional therapy for her millions of followers.
Rupert Spira
Spira represents the “Hardline-Traditional” coalition’s successful commercialization. While his brand is built on “Direct Path” non-duality—the most austere end of the signal layer—his business model is a high-frequency digital operation of webinars, retreats, and a sophisticated app. He provides the “Moral Clearance” for the elite mid-tier; to be a student of Spira is a status marker that one is doing “serious” work, which then allows those students to charge higher prices in their own coaching practices.
Thomas Hübl
Hübl is the architect of the “Collective Trauma” niche. He has successfully professionalized the “Transmission” by building a massive certification infrastructure that targets the PMC (Professional Managerial Class). By blending mystical language with the vocabulary of systemic trauma and “relational fields,” he has created a hero system that feels intellectually rigorous enough for therapists and corporate leaders. His “Academy of Inner Science” is a prime example of a wholesale platform that no longer needs external accreditation because it has become its own accrediting body.

Honorable mentions:

Acharya Prashant (enormous digital reach, especially in India)
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar (Art of Living Foundation)
Iyanla Vanzant
Byron Katie
Michael Singer: His “Untethered Soul” brand has moved into the “Automated Wholesale” layer, with a permanent digital platform that generates revenue with minimal active presence from Singer himself.
Vandana Shiva: While often seen as an activist, her “Navdanya” operation functions as a spiritual-ecological hero system, summoning followers into a sacred relationship with seeds and soil that operates as a powerful alternative to the “Abundance Consciousness” model.
Gabor Maté: Though he occupies a medical/scientific signal layer, his commercial footprint in the “Compassionate Inquiry” certification space makes him a structural pillar of the spiritual mid-tier.

The spirituality business rewards scale, digital leverage, and the ability to package “awakening” into repeatable, monetizable products. These names dominate that space right now.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Esalen Institute Authority

Thinkers and facilitators at the Esalen Institute do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking spiritual and consciousness languages that frame their claims as fidelity to the human potential movement, loyalty to experiential transformation, or responsibility for sustaining the Institute’s integrity inside a hyper-competitive, post-1960s wellness market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, workshops, resident programs, board decisions, online extensions, book deals, speaking circuits, and the invisible networks of donor funding and retreat bookings. At Esalen, the key language is not only metaphysical. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Doing the inner work. Expanding consciousness. Holding sacred space. Integrating body, mind, and spirit. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of Esalen the Institute can sustain, how demanding that consciousness should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The facilitator who stays up until 3 a.m. preparing a new encounter-group protocol or the resident scholar who structures her week around Gestalt sessions and hot-spring soaks years after becoming a core teacher is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of transformational life she genuinely values. The core Esalen values, presence, experiential learning, non-attachment, collective evolution, carry real internal logic and genuine authority over the people who accept them. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions inside the Esalen Institute. It is not the whole picture.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
The Esalen Institute is a hero system of unusual density. It does not offer cosmic significance in the theological register, but it offers something structurally similar. To live as a serious Esalen facilitator is to participate in a tradition of consciousness expansion against materialism, ego, and cultural sleepwalking. Every encounter group where shadows get named without flinching, every cliff-side dialogue where uncomfortable truths are spoken, every refusal to chase the latest quantum-healing trend: these are not merely professional obligations. They are acts of fidelity to a heritage that dates to 1962 and has sustained elite human potential work through conditions far worse than the current era of social-media metrics and wellness capitalism. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of short-term metrics can fully dissolve.
What gives Esalen its particular texture as a hero system is the physical site itself. The geography of Big Sur does not merely provide scenery. It does institutional work. The rugged terrain, the limited cell service, the communal baths on the cliff edge: these frame a luxury retreat as something closer to a heroic pilgrimage. The hot springs function as a ritual of initiation. Communal nudity is presented as an equalizer, but it is also a test. Those comfortable in the Esalen skin signal their belonging. Those who hesitate signal their distance from the center. The physical enclosure separates what the institution frames as sacred work from what it frames as the profane world of wellness capitalism, and that separation is a jurisdictional claim as much as an architectural one.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, adds the theoretical layer that explains how the institution reproduces itself. The world of Esalen is not simply a place where facilitators happen to gather near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as consciousness pioneers through workshops, resident programs, mentorship chains, and ordinary cliff-side recognitions. The Institute’s thickness is not just a matter of social ties. It is the product of repeated summons into enlightened being. To belong here is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of person.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or spiritual failure. The community that summons its members reliably is the community whose hero system remains operative. The community that loses that capacity leaves its members to manage existential terror through whatever substitute frameworks the wellness industry offers.
That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The facilitator who stops putting experiential transformation first, or who begins softening non-dual rigor to hit booking targets when her circle holds firm, is not merely making a lifestyle adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true embodiment was built to contain. This is not cynical. It is how hero systems function.
In a community that ostensibly rejects traditional hierarchy, status is measured not by wealth or title but by possession of specific intangible qualities: proximity to the founders, lineage in transmission, and the perceived depth of one’s process. Pierre Bourdieu would recognize this as the profit of distinction. When a traditionalist criticizes a commodified workshop, she is not only defending an ideal. She is devaluing the symbolic capital of her competitors to maintain the scarcity, and thus the value, of her own more rigorous approach. The economy of charisma here is fully operational, but it runs on embodied presence rather than credentials. A facilitator does not merely hold a certificate. She radiates a particular frequency, and that radiation is a form of capital.
Authority at Esalen is also claimed through performative vulnerability, which is unusual among the elite institutions this series has examined. At Goldman or McKinsey, authority is projected through strength and certainty. At Esalen, the person who can own her shadow most publicly, or weep most authentically in an encounter group, often gains the most social leverage. This creates a specific kind of power game. The will to institutional control hides behind the will to be seen. If you can frame your agenda as a personal breakthrough or a message from the collective unconscious, it becomes very difficult to oppose without appearing unintegrated or spiritually blocked. Pathologizing dissent as resistance to growth is not incidental to the governance structure. It is one of its primary tools.
This is also how the institution manages defection. When a long-term facilitator leaves because she disagrees with a shift toward corporate retreat models, the remaining leadership might frame her departure not as a principled stance but as a personal blockage or an inability to integrate the new energy. By converting a structural disagreement into a psychological failure, the community protects the hero system. The defector is not right. She is simply unprocessed. In communities with a strong focus on transmission, a defector may face something closer to symbolic execution. Her name disappears from future listings. Her contributions to the founding myth get quietly downplayed. She is spoken of in the past tense as someone who could not hold the vibration. This maintains the illusion of a unified body. If a master can leave, it suggests the hero system might be flawed. So the master must be retroactively framed as someone who was never truly aligned.
Some departures get managed through closing circles or clearing sessions, framed as supportive rituals designed to release the departing member’s energy. These rituals serve a vital institutional function. They allow the community to collectively digest the loss and ensure the defector’s departure does not leave an energetic hole that others might fall through. The message is: you are leaving, but the hero system remains intact without you.
Defectors often form an informal shadow network. Former facilitators and residents, living in the surrounding Big Sur area or online, claim to hold the true flame of the 1960s while viewing the current Institute as a hollowed-out shell. This creates a secondary jurisdictional war between the official institution, which holds the land and the brand, and the exiled lineage, which claims to hold the spirit. The exiled lineage uses digital platforms to build a decentralized counter-jurisdiction. Long-form essays decode current Esalen programming and frame new workshops as energetic dilutions. Archival materials from the 1960s and 1970s get published to position the exiles as the true librarians of the human potential movement. Private webinars and intensive online courses replicate the Esalen summons without the overhead of the physical site.
The digital shift changes the logic of the jurisdictional war in ways that matter beyond Esalen specifically. When a seeker searches for Gestalt practice or holotropic breathwork, she might find the personal website of an exiled master before she finds the Esalen booking page. If the digital underground successfully frames the physical Institute as energetically porous, it devalues the Esalen brand. The Institute must then either ignore the critique or re-absorb the exile through guest appearances, which acknowledges the exile’s lingering authority. The physical institution responds not through open conflict but through a strategy of re-absorption and digital enclosure.
Esalen’s current digital strategy uses online courses as an introductory summons, framing its online content as the official archive and converting digital space from a site of potential defection into a funnel toward the Big Sur experience. By offering online modules on Gestalt awareness or Esalen history, the Institute attempts to standardize the source code before a seeker ever encounters the decentralized exiled lineage. The Global Certification Network extends this logic further. Through professional training programs that now span from Germany to China, the Institute exerts authority far beyond its physical borders. An exiled teacher might claim spiritual authority, but she cannot grant a certified Esalen title. This creates a powerful economic incentive to remain within the official jurisdictional umbrella.
The Institute has also responded to the accusation of corporate capture by deliberately leaning into edgy and experimental programming, booking workshops on somatic sexology, post-activism, and the human potential in the age of artificial intelligence. This is a tactical move to reclaim counter-cultural credibility. By hosting topics that thrive in the digital underground, the Institute signals that the most radical work still happens here, in the lodge and the baths, not in anyone’s inbox. And it maintains strict digital detox zones, turning the notorious lack of cell service from a technical limitation into a luxury spiritual commodity. In a world of digital fragmentation, the physical site becomes the only place where true presence is possible, which effectively devalues the digital offerings of exiled teachers. If genuine transformation requires the cliff-side and the communal bath, then a Substack subscription is, by definition, a second-class experience.
Three master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority at Esalen. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious practice. The second is the organizational structure of workshops, resident programs, board decisions, and certification tracks. The third is the everyday network through which Esalen distinction gets reproduced in group sessions, cliff-side conversations, and the mundane problem of navigating the spiritual marketplace without becoming energetically porous.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that still prize pure experiential encounter, rigorous shadow work, and body-mind integration, uses the language of full summons and energetic standards. Its claim is that the Institute’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding consciousness against the pressures of social media and wellness capitalism. The pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among newer facilitators and more flexible programs, emphasizes sustainability, context, and livable awakening. Their claim is not that the core teachings should be abandoned. It is that Esalen cannot be governed as though it were still a 1960s Big Sur encounter laboratory. Each side redescribes the other as betrayal. Neither acknowledges that it is fighting over workshop revenue, donor influence, program control, and the right to define the true Esalen Way.
The interpretive conflict mirrors what legal theorists call the battle between originalism and living constitutionalism. The hardline coalition claims it can access the pure, unmediated intent of the 1962 founding vision of Michael Murphy and Richard Price. The pragmatic coalition argues that the spirit of the human potential movement requires evolution to stay relevant. This creates a permanent interpretive crisis because the founding text was intentionally open-ended and experimental. There is no canonical passage to settle the dispute. Both sides select from the same body of founding materials to authorize present positions, which is precisely what Turner’s critique of essentialism predicts.
Esalen is not alone in this struggle. The Findhorn Foundation in Scotland, founded the same year as Esalen, began with a hero system grounded in direct revelation, specifically the claim to co-create with nature spirits. By the 1970s it had shifted from inner listening as the sole governance tool to a structured educational curriculum. Facing financial crisis after the pandemic, Findhorn has moved toward a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation model, selling non-core assets to residents to preserve the educational mission. Bureaucratic reorganization gets framed as spiritual evolution. The jurisdictional language adjusts to cover the institutional necessity. The Farm in Tennessee, founded in 1971 as a pure commune, hit a hard economic wall in 1983 and abandoned total communalism for a cooperative model. It survived by professionalizing its heroic outputs, most notably through Ina May Gaskin’s midwifery practice, which became a global brand providing the community with a legitimate jurisdiction in the outside world while maintaining internal status as a pioneer of conscious birth. Auroville in India shows the darkest version of these wars. Achieving international acclaim as a model for sustainable living, it has been in governance crisis since 2021, with a government-appointed administration attempting to impose a master plan that contradicts the residents’ tradition of self-organization. Both sides claim to be the true heirs of the founder’s vision. The pattern across all three cases follows the same logic: the founder’s departure forces the community to convert charisma into procedure, external validation through the United Nations or UNESCO provides a new hero system that justifies pragmatic shifts, and success attracts seekers who do not share the original rigor, forcing the hardline coalition to become gatekeepers of vibration.
Across all three master domains, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to the core Esalen values. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable conscious excellence under actual cultural conditions. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic Esalen requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
The jurisdictional war at Esalen is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. The expansion of Esalen into digital extensions, corporate leadership retreats, and global certification programs does not dissolve that internal tension. It amplifies it, because every new program or platform that enters the serious coalition becomes a new arena in which the same question must be answered. How demanding must the summons be to remain credible?

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for New Age Authority

Elite New Age thinkers do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking spiritual and consciousness languages that frame their claims as fidelity to awakening, loyalty to higher vibration, or responsibility for sustaining the movement’s integrity inside a hyper-competitive, post-2000s wellness market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, retreats, online platforms, mastermind groups, book deals, speaking circuits, and the invisible networks of influencer collaborations and audience monetization. The key language is not only metaphysical. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Doing the inner work. Raising your vibration. Holding sacred space. Aligning with source. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of New Age the movement can sustain, how demanding that consciousness should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The coach who stays up until 3 a.m. channeling a new transmission or the teacher who structures her week around breathwork and client sessions years after building her platform is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of spiritual life she genuinely values. The core New Age values, presence, non-attachment, heart-centered living, collective evolution, are not merely a rhetorical structure. They carry real internal logic and genuine authority over the people who accept them. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions inside elite New Age circles. It is not the whole picture.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
The world of elite New Age thinkers is a hero system of unusual density. It does not offer cosmic significance in the theological register, but it offers something structurally similar. To live as a serious New Age teacher is to participate in a tradition of consciousness expansion against materialism, ego, and cultural sleepwalking. Every transmission delivered with full presence, every retreat where uncomfortable shadows get named, every refusal to chase the latest ayahuasca or quantum-healing trend: these are not merely professional obligations. They are acts of fidelity to a post-1960s heritage that has sustained elite spirituality through conditions far worse than the current era of social-media metrics and wellness capitalism. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of short-term metrics can fully dissolve.
What gives this hero system its particular texture is the paradox of visible non-attachment. A teacher who commands high-ticket mastermind fees but operates from a minimalist jungle compound creates a more potent jurisdictional claim than one operating from a conventional office. By appearing to reject the material rewards her status generates, she signals that her summons is authentic and not merely a product of wellness capitalism. This is costly signaling. The rejection of visible comfort becomes its own credential. It creates a barrier to entry for pragmatic actors who lack the energetic pedigree to sustain the contradiction convincingly.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, adds the theoretical layer that explains how this credential gets transmitted. The world of elite New Age thinkers is not simply a place where teachers happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as true lightworkers through live events, online masterminds, mentorship chains, and ordinary DM-side recognitions. The movement’s thickness is not just a matter of social ties. It is the product of repeated summons into enlightened being. To belong here is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of consciousness leader.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or spiritual failure. The community that summons its members reliably is the community whose hero system remains operative. The community that loses that capacity leaves its members to manage existential terror through whatever substitute frameworks the algorithm-driven wellness industry offers.
That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The teacher who stops putting client awakening first, or who begins softening non-dual rigor to hit launch targets when her circle holds firm, is not merely making a lifestyle adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true embodiment was built to contain. This is not cynical. It is how hero systems function. The stakes feel existential because they partly are.
Three master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority in this space. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious spiritual practice. The second is the organizational structure of retreats, online schools, certification programs, speaking circuits, and influencer alliances. The third is the everyday network through which distinction gets reproduced in group calls, Telegram channels, festival stages, and the mundane problem of navigating the spiritual marketplace without becoming energetically porous. To these three a fourth must be added: technological sovereignty, which in this domain replaces the deal flow and capital allocation that governs Goldman or the project staffing that governs McKinsey. The shift from physical retreats to digital platforms changes the nature of the summons in ways the other elite systems have not faced as acutely. In a physical space, the teacher controls the environment, the scent, the sound, the collective breathing. In a digital space, she must compete with the algorithm. Who controls the platform, who owns the list, who operates inside a proprietary app versus who remains dependent on mainstream social media: these determine reach, and reach determines revenue and future authority.
The traditionalist response to this pressure is to move off mainstream platforms into private, encrypted, or proprietary spaces that simulate the thickness of a closed temple. The pragmatic response is to colonize the algorithm using vibe-consistent aesthetics, low-saturation filters, specific font choices, and unedited video that performs authenticity within the logic of the feed. Both strategies claim fidelity to the core teaching. Both are responses to the same jurisdictional threat.
Since New Age authority lacks a centralized institution or a single canonical text, leaders resolve the legitimacy problem through lineage synthesis. A thinker might claim authority by weaving together quantum physics, Andean shamanism, and Jungian shadow work into a proprietary vocabulary. Quantum Soul Retrieval. Biocentric Alignment. These terms are not merely teachings. They are border walls. By creating a unique language that only certified practitioners can speak fluently, a leader converts cultural capital into a closed economic loop. Certification programs then function exactly as graduate programs function in philosophy or analyst training at McKinsey: they reproduce the right kind of person while generating revenue and expanding the coalition.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that still prize pure non-duality, rigorous shadow work, and heart-centered integrity, uses the language of full summons and energetic standards. Its claim is that the movement’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding consciousness against the pressures of social media and wellness capitalism. In Becker’s terms, this coalition defends the integrity of the hero system against the accommodations that slowly evacuate it. Every softening of the summons is experienced not merely as a social adjustment but as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among newer teachers and more flexible platforms trying to build sustainable reach in a saturated, algorithm-driven global market. Their language is balancing, context, workability, and livable awakening. Their claim is not that the core teachings should be abandoned. It is that New Age life cannot be governed as though it were still a 1970s ashram or a pure non-dual satsang. Once one side defines the movement’s purpose as sustaining maximal vibrational rigor, flexibility begins to look like drift. Once the other side defines the movement’s purpose as making conscious living sustainable under current cultural conditions, maximal rigor begins to look like burnout or status competition masquerading as principle.
In the absence of medical or academic boards, calling out or calling in functions as the primary regulatory mechanism. When a high-level influencer gets accused of spiritual bypassing, it is rarely only about the specific psychological oversight being named. It is a jurisdictional strike. The accuser signals that the influencer has lost her frequency, thereby attempting to reallocate her followers to a more rigorous coalition. This is the New Age equivalent of a weak letter or a withheld citation. The enforcement is soft but the social cost is real.
Stephen Turner’s critique of essentialism explains why the fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic New Age thought being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. One faction reconstructs the movement around energetic density and stricter adherence to lineage principles. Another reconstructs it around sustainable adaptation and workable embodiment under modern audience demands. Both claim continuity. Both select from the same dense world of core teachings, lineage history, and transmission practice to support present needs. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages and emphases that authorize its current position.
As the system moves into digital nomad hubs like Bali, Tulum, and Lisbon, the jurisdictional war encounters a further complication. Elite thinkers must decide whether to co-opt local indigenous practices to bolster their source-aligned authority or position themselves as modern evolutionary leaders who have moved beyond what they frame as culturally specific or outdated forms. This choice defines which global markets they can enter and which summons they can credibly issue to a Western audience that wants both ancient wisdom and modern results. The decision is rarely acknowledged as strategic. It is framed as a teaching about integration. That framing is the mechanism Pinsof describes operating in its purest form.
Authority in this context is atmospheric. It lives in who gets platformed at major festivals, who mentors the new wave of coaches, which teachers are quietly recommended for high-ticket masterminds, and which ones are spoken of with hesitation. Minute variations in practice, whether a teacher holds space without visible agenda or hedges constantly with disclaimers, whether transmissions feel sourced or performed, how publicly non-attachment is maintained, function as jurisdictional markers. They signal which authority structure a person has accepted as binding and which summons he or she is available to receive.
Across all three master domains and the fourth of technological sovereignty, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising adherence to core values. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable conscious excellence under actual cultural conditions. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic awakening requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
What makes elite New Age thinkers especially revealing within the sociology of contemporary spirituality is that the gap between signal and cue is wider here than in almost any other elite system. The signal layer proclaims non-attachment, abundance consciousness, and freedom from ego. The cue layer is follower counts, launch revenue, mastermind pricing, platform dependency, and the continuous management of personal brand. When those two layers diverge sharply enough, the hero system becomes unstable. Followers notice the gap before they can articulate it. The summons loses credibility. The community begins to fragment.
The jurisdictional war among elite New Age thinkers is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. The expansion of New Age into new markets, platforms, and geographies does not dissolve that internal tension. It amplifies it, because every new teacher or online school that enters the serious coalition becomes a new arena in which the same question must be answered. How demanding must the summons be to remain credible? Where is the line between a culture that sustains genuine transformation and an accommodation that hollows it out?

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for McKinsey & Company Authority

Consultants at McKinsey & Company do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral and business languages that frame their claims as fidelity to the McKinsey Way, loyalty to client impact first, or responsibility for sustaining the firm’s excellence inside a hyper-competitive global consulting market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, practices, industry groups, partner elections, client teams, and the invisible networks of project staffing and compensation. At McKinsey, the key language is not only analytical. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Living the One Firm principle. Putting client impact first. Delivering rigorous, fact-based excellence. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of McKinsey the firm can sustain, how demanding that culture should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The consultant who stays up until 3 a.m. stress-testing a hypothesis-driven deck is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of professional life she genuinely values. The partner who structures her week around client calls and rigorous internal reviews years after making partner because she knows it protects the firm’s reputation inhabits a world whose demands are real, not merely performed. The McKinsey values, client service, integrity, excellence, professional development, are not a rhetorical structure. They are an ethical and commercial system with its own internal logic and its own genuine authority over the people who accept them. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions inside McKinsey. It is not the whole picture.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
McKinsey is also a hero system. It does not offer cosmic significance in the theological register, but it offers something structurally similar. To live as a serious McKinsey consultant is to participate in one of history’s most tested traditions of elite problem-solving against corporate inertia, regulatory pressure, and short-termism. Every hypothesis-driven recommendation delivered with absolute client focus, every internal session where uncomfortable truths get spoken, every honest acknowledgment that a project went against the firm’s own prior advice, every refusal to chase the latest hot ESG product: these are not merely professional obligations. They are acts of fidelity to a partnership heritage that has sustained elite consulting through conditions far worse than the current era of quarterly client demands and activist investors. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of short-term metrics can fully dissolve.
What makes McKinsey a distinctive case is that its summons mechanism carries an explicit existential threat built into the structure. The up-or-out policy is the most intense version of the mechanism across any of the elite institutions this series has examined. You are either hailed as a future partner or you are un-made as a McKinseyite. Every engagement review and every semi-annual performance cycle is a moment where the firm decides whether your hero system remains operative. To be told you have reached your ceiling is to have the hero system withdrawn. The threat of being un-made keeps the summons effective in a way that softer enforcement mechanisms cannot match.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, adds the theoretical layer that explains this. The world of McKinsey is not simply a place where consultants happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as true McKinseyites through institutions, interactions, schedules, performance reviews, off-sites, mentorship chains, and ordinary desk-side recognitions. The firm’s thickness is not just a matter of social ties. It is the product of repeated summons into McKinsey being. To belong here is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of consultant.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or career failure. The community that summons its members reliably is the community whose hero system remains operative. The community that loses that capacity leaves its members to manage existential terror through whatever substitute frameworks the broader consulting market offers.
That is why defection from the firm’s standards carries such disproportionate social weight. The consultant who stops putting client impact first, or who begins softening analytical rigor to hit utilization targets when his circle holds firm, is not merely making a lifestyle adjustment. He is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true excellence was built to contain. This is not cynical. It is how hero systems function. The stakes feel existential because they partly are.
Four master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority at McKinsey. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious McKinsey behavior. The second is the organizational structure of practices, industry groups, compensation committees, and partner elections. The third is the everyday network through which McKinsey distinction gets reproduced in project rooms, client off-sites, knowledge-sharing calls, and the mundane problem of navigating the consulting industry without becoming reputationally porous. The fourth is control over project flow and intellectual property access, and this is where authority cashes out. Who gets assigned to prestige strategy projects, who accesses the proprietary knowledge bases, who manages the internal distribution of expert time: these determine performance ratings and partner election. Moral language and organizational position matter because they determine access to flow. Flow determines everything else.
Running through all four domains is a persistent gap between what is said and what governs behavior. McKinsey’s public language, client impact first, integrity, One Firm knowledge sharing, is the signal layer. It maintains institutional legitimacy and the firm’s hero system status. The cue layer is staffing decisions, performance ratings, and partner election patterns. While the firm signals long-term client excellence, the cues often reward utilization rates and revenue generation. When signals and cues align, the culture feels coherent. When they diverge, people follow the cues. The firm says one thing and does another, and everyone inside knows which one actually governs behavior.
A structural fracture deepens this tension. McKinsey used to be a pure strategy shop. Now it does implementation, digital transformation, and specialized operations at enormous scale. The strategy coalition operates on a long horizon of high-level advisory and reputational density. The implementation coalition operates on the short horizon of project delivery and measurable results. Every internal conflict maps onto this break. The strategy side treats itself as the carrier of the original hero system. The implementation side argues that the firm’s future lies in doing the work rather than advising on it. Neither says plainly that it is fighting over prestige, staffing priority, and partner election influence. Each says it is protecting the true McKinsey Way.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that still prize classic McKinsey strategy culture, fact-based rigor, client-first integrity, One Firm knowledge sharing, uses the language of analytical standards and separation from short-term revenue-chasing or purpose-washing. Its claim is that the firm’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding excellence against the pressures of public scrutiny and the broader consulting market. In Becker’s terms, this coalition defends the integrity of the hero system against the accommodations that slowly evacuate it. Every softening of the summons is experienced not merely as a social adjustment but as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among those navigating the post-2000s reality, newer partners, and more flexible practices trying to build sustainable performance in a hyper-competitive global market. Their language is balancing, context, workability, and livable excellence. Their claim is not that the McKinsey values should be abandoned. It is that McKinsey life cannot be governed as though it were still a pure private partnership or a 1990s strategy shop. Once one side defines the firm’s purpose as sustaining maximal client-impact rigor, flexibility begins to look like drift. Once the other side defines the firm’s purpose as making McKinsey sustainable under current market and regulatory conditions, maximal rigor begins to look like burnout or status competition masquerading as principle. Neither side says it is fighting over prestige, compensation pools, promotion slots, or practice influence. Each says it is protecting the true McKinsey Way.
Each coalition has predictable failure modes. Traditionalism can harden into arrogance and nostalgia, protecting legacy strategy practices that no longer map onto what clients actually need and confusing elite self-regard with genuine judgment. Pragmatism can slide into a moral vacuum where adaptation covers commoditization, and the firm becomes indistinguishable from the implementation shops it once looked down on. The firm oscillates between these poles without resolving the tension, because both are rooted in real constraints.
Stephen Turner‘s critique of essentialism explains why the fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic McKinsey being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. One faction reconstructs the firm around seriousness, reputational density, and stricter adherence to the original values. Another reconstructs it around sustainable balancing, selective adaptation, and workable performance under modern client demands. Both claim continuity. Both select from the same dense world of McKinsey values, One Firm history, and project practice to support present needs. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages and emphases that authorize its current position.
The system operates at three distinct layers. At the retail layer, the public language of values and client impact is loud and visible. Recruiting brochures, press releases, thought leadership publications. High volume, carefully managed. This is where the McKinsey Way gets performed for external audiences. At the mid-tier gatekeeping layer, engagement managers and staffing partners do the actual sorting with procedural language. A consultant is not rejected for a project because of a personal grudge. His skill set is not the right fit. Her previous feedback raises concerns. The language maintains the appearance of neutral process while doing the work of coalition enforcement. At the wholesale layer, senior partners operate with stripped-down criteria. At this level, moral language largely disappears. The barrier is the ability to generate revenue and manage complex client relationships at scale. They use the power to ignore to maintain institutional boundaries. To respond to a challenge is to admit it exists within the same jurisdiction. Silence is the stronger signal.
Credentialing functions here as it does across all the elite systems. Once you clear partner election, your views inherit the legitimacy of the firm. You can speak with less explicit moral signaling because your status stands in for it. Junior consultants must continuously perform alignment with the McKinsey Way to compensate for their lack of standing. The credential does not certify judgment. It certifies prior submission to the right protocols under sufficient pressure.
Much of McKinsey’s real operating knowledge is tacit. It lives in judgment about clients, markets, and organizational situations that cannot be fully written down or systematized. This makes the system dependent on apprenticeship and the One Firm network of internal relationships. As the firm scales and adds more specialized implementation roles, that tacit layer becomes harder to transmit. The firm relies increasingly on metrics and formal processes, utilization rates, client satisfaction scores, knowledge management systems, that only partially capture what the best practitioners actually do. The knowledge that built the franchise gets harder to pass on precisely when the pipeline most needs it.
Authority in this context is atmospheric. It lives in who gets platformed at partner off-sites, who mentors the new associate class, which practices are quietly recommended for top talent, and which ones are spoken of with hesitation. Minute variations in practice, whether a team truly pushes back on a client or tells them what they want to hear, whether recommendations are grounded in rigorous analysis or dressed-up intuition, how publicly long-term thinking is maintained, function as jurisdictional markers. They signal which authority structure a person has accepted as binding and which summons he or she is available to receive.
This internal structure now operates within a global consulting landscape that has shifted considerably. For most of the twentieth century, McKinsey stood as the gold standard of strategy consulting. That coherence has eroded under the pressures of rapid growth, the reputational damage of the opioid crisis fallout, relentless regulatory scrutiny, and the rise of boutique strategy firms and technology consultancies. These rival systems offer different hero systems: more specialized prestige, faster timelines, fewer reputational constraints. The firm’s internal debates are partly responses to talent pressure from those adjacent systems. Emerging markets, digital transformation, and sustainability consulting are projected to dominate future revenue, and the firm has committed significant resources to those areas, treating expansion as a structural imperative. This is the hero system in its institutional mode, extending its summoning capacity into new territory before competitors can consolidate.
Across all four master domains, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising adherence to the McKinsey values. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable excellence under actual market conditions. Organizational leaders claim the coordinating power needed to sustain a thick network of high-performance output. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic McKinsey requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
What makes McKinsey especially revealing within the sociology of professional services is that authority here operates less through formal decree than through repeated social summons backed by an unusually explicit threat of removal. The firm works because private drift is constantly interrupted. There is always another client review, another internal knowledge call, another 360-degree feedback round, another partner election cycle, another moment in which one is hailed as a certain kind of McKinseyite or quietly signaled that the hailing may stop. Through Becker’s lens, those interruptions are the hero system defending itself against the entropy that threatens every collective framework for managing mortality. The community’s power lies in making excellence difficult to forget and difficult to privatize, because a hero system that can be privatized has already begun to fail.
The jurisdictional war at McKinsey is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. The expansion of McKinsey into new geographies, digital practices, and implementation work does not dissolve that internal tension. It amplifies it, because every new office or practice that enters the serious coalition becomes a new arena in which the same question must be answered. How demanding must the summons be to remain credible? Where is the line between a culture that sustains genuine excellence and an accommodation that hollows it out? What looks like a debate about values is a fight over control of the system that decides what counts as value.

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