> we rely on the manufacturer. We rely on electricity.
We rely on having money. And we rely on a mature economy where someone is willing to solve every problem in exchange for that money.
In an individualistic society, each person is expected to earn their own way and then pay to solve every problem they may have.
In more community-oriented societies, personal earnings are less important than a strong network of friends and family who can fulfill every need. Each person's income/wealth is contributing to the collective for whatever cannot be served internally.
This movement toward individualization correlates very strongly with the capitalism.
> In more community-oriented societies, personal earnings are less important than a strong network of friends and family who can fulfill every need.
and as this community grew, accounting for such "favours" between friends/family become more important, and thus, the need for unit of accounts - aka money. You'd end up replicating the current system when given long enough time and a large enough community.
I'm following up a bit late but I wasn't referring to communism or nation-sized communities. I was referring to societies that tend to value community (ranging from brazil to china - look for countries where it's normal for aging parents to live with their children).
These societies tend to keep those communities smaller - immediate family plus some closer relatives and family friends. Then there are broader networks with shallower ties where business is favoured but money will usually change hands.
> This movement toward individualization correlates very strongly with the capitalism.
This idea never made sense to me. Capitalism is organized around people self-organizing to form companies. One man companies don't get much of anything done. There's nothing whatsoever about free markets and capitalism that prevents or discourages people working together.
BTW, even small voluntary collectives don't work. Jamestown didn't work, the first year the Pilgrims tried a collective didn't work, the kibbutzen in Israel doesn't work (they get subsidized by the government funded by taxes on capitalists).
> We rely on having money. And we rely on a mature economy where someone is willing to solve every problem in exchange for that money. [...] This movement toward individualization correlates very strongly with the capitalism.
Money as a facilitator for the exchange of goods and services long, long, long predates the rise of capitalism.
We rely on having money. And we rely on a mature economy where someone is willing to solve every problem in exchange for that money.
In an individualistic society, each person is expected to earn their own way and then pay to solve every problem they may have.
In more community-oriented societies, personal earnings are less important than a strong network of friends and family who can fulfill every need. Each person's income/wealth is contributing to the collective for whatever cannot be served internally.
This movement toward individualization correlates very strongly with the capitalism.