• @BetaBlake@lemmy.world
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    -453 days ago

    Even without interference communism can never work, it’s not how human nature works, it relys on everyone being on the same page which will never happen

    • @untorquer@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      It’s in our genetics to engage in a perpetual exponential quarterly growth and make our decisions based on the benefit it brings to our investors. Any caveman could tell you that smh…

      E: my god it’s a hyperbolically absurd take in memes and even with the caveman comment I still need to /s apparently…

      • @SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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        23 days ago

        No, cavemen were very egalitarian. This is because back then, you couldn’t hoard much of anything - food spoils quickly, sex requires your partner to like you, and personal possessions were things like tools or the odd bit of clothing. It was when wealth could be preserved, such as livestock, stored grain, jewelry, and eventually coinage, that wealth became an hereditary thing.

        This is why a future economic system has to be designed to prevent the excessive hoarding of wealth. Not too little, nor too much. Humans weren’t evolved to be free of consequence, especially from each other.

        • Cowbee [he/they]
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          103 days ago

          Very frequently, but it is exactly just as likely it would have moved on to Socialism and eventually Communism, or retained feudalism, it all depends on when in development.

            • Cowbee [he/they]
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              63 days ago

              Fantastic question! The answer is no, not necessarily. The PRC is Socialist, and never had a true “Capitalist” phase. It currently has a Socialist Market Economy, but never really had a stage dominated entirely by Capitalism.

              There are also reversions. Russia reverted to Capitalism, and Germany almost became Communist, but was stopped by the Nazi Party coming to power.

              However, all of that being said, history does generally progress alongside technological development, and the Mode of Production follows suit.

        • 小莱卡
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          3 days ago

          the majority would be relatively the same with minor variances on cultural customs and traditions, society conforms to law whether if you realize it or not, this is a chief principle of materialist philosophy, understanding that the things conform to definite laws and that we must and can discover them. Historical materialism is the materialist conception of history with the conclusion that the development of production is the chief driving force in the development of society, quantitative improvements in production lead to qualitative changes in how society is organized.

          With this in mind, Communism is a stage of development where developments in production led to a society of abundance that ended the exploitation of man by man. Communist states, like China, are not in that stage but are organized to pursue that goal, this is why China has a massive focus point on the development of productive industries.

        • @Grapho@lemmy.ml
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          3 days ago

          Far less often than we end up with communalist hunter gatherers and early agrarian communes and evidently for a much shorter time. Does that mean feudalism can never work? Capitalism is never at any point of productive development possible?

          Edit: deleted a section that assumed you were the same guy who said communism was against human nature. Apologies.

          • @Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            Your words make no sense to me. If you want to convey ideas use the common tongue. It feels like you have some neat ideas though.

            Edit: Can anyone please decipher what this guy said?

            • NSRXN
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              73 days ago

              people share goods and culture naturally. the prevailing historical models are cooperative. anticooperative, competitive societies are rare.

                • @Grapho@lemmy.ml
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                  2 days ago

                  If you wanna talk psychology, the ultracompetitive demands of modern capitalism have to be drilled into each of us from birth, and most of us resist it all the same. Mark Fisher elaborates on this in Capitalist Realism, this learned behavior is in large part responsible for the mental health crisis in the world.

                  • @Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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                    3 days ago

                    You’re assuming way too much about my motives. I haven’t even stated a conclusion. But from what I gather, you think our behavior is (almost?) fully formed from external forces. That’s a valid take, but, I believe to be highly debatable, which I have no answer or conclusion for.

        • @untorquer@lemmy.world
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          53 days ago

          So many it would be hard to count, at least 4 or 5. But numbers don’t really go much higher than that. Any caveman could tell you that.

        • NSRXN
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          23 days ago

          this rather shows the untestability of the hypothesis. this is no test at all.

          • @Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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            13 days ago

            It’s an unanswerable question. Just something to think about. My intention was to ponder how much external forces dictate our society rather than the internal expressive ones.

      • Spaniard
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        -43 days ago

        No, but greed and envy is. That’s why humans have written so much in the last thousand years about greed and envy.

    • NSRXN
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      193 days ago

      it’s not how human nature works

      where is human nature defined?

      this is a thought-terminating cliche, not an my argument to be taken seriously

    • Cowbee [he/they]
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      183 days ago

      How does it rely on “everyone being on the same page?” What gave you that impression?

    • 小莱卡
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      103 days ago

      do you realize that you are contradicting your statement? You talk of “human nature” as a law of nature, something that cannot be changed and has to conform every single time, but then you mention that people are just different lmao.

      • @Dengalicious@lemmygrad.ml
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        133 days ago

        People who talk of “human nature” are white supremacists. The idea is that groups and people with different cultures are not human is what underpins this whole concept

    • comfy
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      173 days ago

      What part of communism relys on everyone being on the same page?

    • @m532@lemmygrad.ml
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      53 days ago

      Haha no communism can force you to go against your evil “human nature” so you have to aid the collective people, who mostly have a good human nature

    • @TheFogan@programming.dev
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      -53 days ago

      Kind of some level of any system isn’t it? In short if a system has a means to power that can tweak the rules. Inevitably will result in one group ceasing the rules, turning them to raise how much they can tweak them, and ensuring they continue to be tweaked in their favor.

      Communism relies on a possibly impossible starting point. Theoretically if the starting point were reached, it seems the most sustainable. Whether it’s possible to reach that starting point is the great mystery.

      • Cowbee [he/they]
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        83 days ago

        What “possibly impossible starting point” does Communism rely on? This reads like someone that hasn’t actually attempted to engage with what Communists believe, to be honest.

      • @quaternaut@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Yeah I think you hit the nail on the head here. It’s interesting to think about how even though communism could theoretically be the best system, it could mean nothing if we don’t know how to meet the conditions to achieve it in the first place.