And LCA is a flywheel that makes that situation intractable.
People don’t realize that Microsoft is good (responsive to consumers even if two out of two hundred products are somewhat monopolistic; pays taxes; files accurate annual reports) and the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is bad (no taxes; no accountability; only serves Bill and Melinda Gates.)
What I miss in accounts like this, is how very intimate groups of equals are fostering uniform beliefs and thinking, very often in oppressive manner. I suspect that there were enough people with creative urges that did not fit there. They, even without desire to have power over others, still supported the emerging political powers in exchange for freedom to think, create, tinker. Not having the notion of property - when anyone can take anything from you at any time - makes tinkering difficult, too. So they might have shifted the balance toward inequality.
I think your points are true if we consider the last 2000 years but the article basically points out on why the transformation happened before that time(12000 years ago). If we consider hunters and foragers at that time, the oppression on creativity might not work and in my opinion is more free and real(no monetary benefit). At that time only thing they might have cared is, whether there is enough food for themselves and their families. Sure, there might be differences in physical strengths a little bit, but I don't think that would be such a big offset.
(I have misunderstood your comment, rewritten it).
I wrote about tipping the scales, not about primary cause. Yes hunter-gatherer societies might be freer for the creativity too, if there are the natural resources. But it also means very low population density and thus fewer people to exchange ideas with.
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[ 1.6 ms ] story [ 34.4 ms ] threadhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Logic_of_Collective_Action
People don’t realize that Microsoft is good (responsive to consumers even if two out of two hundred products are somewhat monopolistic; pays taxes; files accurate annual reports) and the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is bad (no taxes; no accountability; only serves Bill and Melinda Gates.)
I wrote about tipping the scales, not about primary cause. Yes hunter-gatherer societies might be freer for the creativity too, if there are the natural resources. But it also means very low population density and thus fewer people to exchange ideas with.