HoneyRoastedPeanut
Bluelighter
Except it's not strictly competition in the way we are accustomed to thinking of it. If you consume something for food, shelter, etc., you are responsible for and dependent on the survival of that species to a degree, and are therefore responsible for the survival of its environment. This is a rule that many cultures have followed, but that ours does not acknowledge. You compete only insofar as it is required for your survival, and no other species besides human attempts to control the lives of others outside of their own species (they kill, but do not domesticate, enslave or assimilate).neonads said:All life is in competition with others, the more successful ones just have wider ranges of opposition.
Put another way, humans (although this is not universal to all cultures) are the only species that destroys its food's competition as well as its own. This activity is a result of the supposition that humans have authority over all other life forms on the planet to determine what is right and wrong for everything, which other animals do not display. When a behavior so fundamentally different from these unconscious 'rules of interaction' (my terminology) tries to justify itself using authoritative logic, you'll understand where I question the entire validity of the argument. Modern humans have managed to observe these rules for at least 990,000 years of our existence, and only in the last 10,000 has it been ignored and replaced with the rule of human dominion.
I also agree that the 'natural v unnatural' debate is circular and moot. Something being labeled 'natural' or not has nothing to do with how good of an idea it is (good for whom?), and everything must be judged by its own example. In this case, capitalism's threat to homeostasis is a very bad idea for the survival of our species and most others.
Sorry if I derailed this thread, but I feel all of these issues are at the root of the currency issue.
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