
I.N.C.E.L.S. Boss
Kept you waitin, huh
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- Joined
- Mar 15, 2020
- Posts
- 3,517
Sorry for the wall of text, I tried my best to make the writing style as smooth as my english allows me to.
First of all, to give context to what will be disclosed, humans have always lived in small groups called tribes. Once the number of the members gets past a certain threshold which is based on the available resources, the tribe is splitted into two differents groups and so on.
The issue in the modern time is that resources are or at least seem to be inexhaustible, thus the tribe doesn't have to divide and the very notion of a tribe, in face of the sheer reproduction output, becomes so diluted that it doesn't hold sense anymore. You cannot make a tribe of 3 billions inhabitants, the brain is limited as to how much social connections it can compute.
Here are my thoughts on the subject :
The human species sheer survival strength relies on the social connection built with others, everything about humans has evolved towards the acquisition of that survival specialization. We have no sharp claws, no dracula teeth, or gorilla tier strength but evolution has gifted us with a very strong asset.
The essential advantage of that asset is that its mean is the same at its end. We solidify our social connections to the members of the tribe in order to ..... solidify our social connections towards the same members.
To sum it up, that evolutionary asset "steroid"-s itself by itself. I have read some studies hypothesizing that the brain evolved bigger in order to increase the computation capabilities of more social cues (like body language, facial expressions, voice tones) with the purpose of guessing what's on the other's mind.
Think about it. Working for your people in exchange of food and shelter somehow theoretically feels more rewarding than working for somebody you don't know in exchange of the same things.
That's because work, as an evolutionary tool, isn't supposed to be its own end. Work and everything humans do is to cement connections between the members of the tribe.
Once we lose that aspect, once all the necessary biological needs are covered (aka food and shelter), even if the pay increases, what you do will still not feel as rewarding since no inherent purpose is linked to it.
We are not homo economicus, we are homo socialus.
This aspect was lost in our modern societies where we are billions of free electrons, free to go where we want with no nucleus to stick to and guide our trajectory.
This increasing freedom comes with a price and its price is you.
First of all, to give context to what will be disclosed, humans have always lived in small groups called tribes. Once the number of the members gets past a certain threshold which is based on the available resources, the tribe is splitted into two differents groups and so on.
The issue in the modern time is that resources are or at least seem to be inexhaustible, thus the tribe doesn't have to divide and the very notion of a tribe, in face of the sheer reproduction output, becomes so diluted that it doesn't hold sense anymore. You cannot make a tribe of 3 billions inhabitants, the brain is limited as to how much social connections it can compute.
Here are my thoughts on the subject :
The human species sheer survival strength relies on the social connection built with others, everything about humans has evolved towards the acquisition of that survival specialization. We have no sharp claws, no dracula teeth, or gorilla tier strength but evolution has gifted us with a very strong asset.
The essential advantage of that asset is that its mean is the same at its end. We solidify our social connections to the members of the tribe in order to ..... solidify our social connections towards the same members.
To sum it up, that evolutionary asset "steroid"-s itself by itself. I have read some studies hypothesizing that the brain evolved bigger in order to increase the computation capabilities of more social cues (like body language, facial expressions, voice tones) with the purpose of guessing what's on the other's mind.
Think about it. Working for your people in exchange of food and shelter somehow theoretically feels more rewarding than working for somebody you don't know in exchange of the same things.
That's because work, as an evolutionary tool, isn't supposed to be its own end. Work and everything humans do is to cement connections between the members of the tribe.
Once we lose that aspect, once all the necessary biological needs are covered (aka food and shelter), even if the pay increases, what you do will still not feel as rewarding since no inherent purpose is linked to it.
We are not homo economicus, we are homo socialus.
This aspect was lost in our modern societies where we are billions of free electrons, free to go where we want with no nucleus to stick to and guide our trajectory.
This increasing freedom comes with a price and its price is you.