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Is it really a myth, though? In the end, we are still beholden to our genetic lineage. And despite how much we want to believe ourselves logical beings, we are still slaves to our instincts. Competition is an instinctive trait for tribal primates… and that's exactly what we are.
The genetic determinant for behavior is largely refuted in the third film. In short, our genetic expression is activated by environmental (including social) factors.
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And the wealthy aren't happy by merit of wealth, but by merit of ambition. Ambition drives them to accrue wealth, and it is the acquisition that brings them happiness, not the wealth itself. That's why you'll rarely ever see an executive happy during a time of terrible losses, even if his social status still places him among the ranks of the elite (or hyperelite). His happiness comes from the fulfillment of his ambitions, not from the fulfillment of monetary needs.
Except I have friends who know some of the current generations of Morgans, Rothschilds etc. and they are neither fulfilled nor ambitious...they have ALL the money...to the point it is largely meaningless. I also know many successful people have also realized that money alone is meaningless...it is the experiences you really want. Richard Branson is a good example of a more achievement motivated 1%. Basically those in power don't really have to work that hard for money...it's all too easy at that point for the investment class.
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And therein lies the crux of the problem: how do you cure a man of ambition? For many, resource balance would be a wonderful harmony; but for the ambitious, resource balance is tantamount to stagnation. You can take an ambitious man out of a social structure where ambition dominates, but that does nothing to quell their ambition. Or as it is said in an older adage, "you can take the beast out of the wild, but not the wild out of the beast".
I disagree that it is stagnation...ambitions will turn towards physical, mental, scientific, and social achievement. Come talk to me after you have seen Moving Forward, and we can discuss the effect of environment on behavior. The genetic determinant argument is an age-old and very popular trap.
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Post-scarcity would quell the issue of ambition forcing others into a state of suffering by means of resource depletion, but it will simply shift the nature of ambition towards the next form of scarcity. And according to my conjecture, the next form of scarcity will be fame. When resources cease to be a power structure, popularity will continue to be one (especially if we expect democracy to be the prevailing government; democracy is effectively powered by popularity). By the very nature of this, social order will continue to be.
I agree popularity will still be an important human sociological factor, but what will happen when popularity is determined by your contribution to your fellow humans, because in a resource based economy, everyone's discovery is shared with everyone else, so everyone's work uplifts everyone.