commonsense wrote: ↑Fri Mar 15, 2024 4:53 pm
Mr. Civility wrote: ↑Sat Mar 09, 2024 5:39 pm
So, what are your views on the differences and different uses of competition and co-operation in human affairs?
Competition favors the competent. Cooperation enhances the mediocre.
K: and yet, this is not true... think about it.. human society was/is built
by cooperation than not by competition..
the modern world was not built by competition.. think of the rise of
government... that valuable institution that make us a civilization,
as the Romans were a civilization...
for building roads and having institutions like the State Department
and HUD, department of housing and urban development...
that requires cooperation, not competition.. the very rise of human
beings require cooperation.... the city being one example...
the city begins as a means of protection against animals,
and a way to feed and house ourselves... it is by cooperation
that we are at the top of the food chain.. to build anything,
from a house to a skyscraper to spaceships capable of going to
the moon, all requires cooperation... to move food, clothes,
chairs and books, all requires cooperation, not competition....
and one response might be, but competition made the
supply chain more efficient.... and since when has our
ruling principle been efficiency? much of the most important
things in life, are not very efficient... love and beauty
and music and hope, none of these things are very efficient...
''stopping to smell the flowers'' as many suggest, is not very
efficient.. and yet, it improves our lives... competition is
about creating efficiency.. being more efficient in some
set example....for example delivering the mail or our packages...
and that is nice, but frankly not that necessary.. we will live without
our book from Amazon being delivered in the next few minutes instead
of tomorrow or the next day... in fact, I would suggest that the search
for efficiency has damaged our lives... and that is part of what
the value of competition does... its value lies in creating efficiency...
and I suggest that efficiency is not the value we should be engaged with...
nor is competition a value we should be engaged with...
Now mind you, I was an athlete in High School...and played sports
all during my youth and well into my twenties...I am well aware
of the value of competition... but don't give is more value than it deserves...
and as Nietzsche pointed out, the battle is not to ''win'' in the outside
world, but to learn to become greater, inside of us...
the idea of the Übermensch, is not to win the war or the battles,
but to become a greater human being.. the idea of the Übermensch,
is to conquer ourselves...the competition is not outside of us, but
inside of us...to become who we are... and this is a struggle,
for some, a lifetime struggle... the engagement is inside of us...
or as Socrates said, his motto was, ''to know thyself'' and
''the unexamined life isn't worth living'' and neither one
asks for or engages with competition outside of us...
and the daily competition we get wrong is the pursuit
of trinkets... the pursuit of wealth, or fame or material
possessions, titles or power, that competition is one
that leads to failure... and why are these failures?
because of the payoff.. we get nothing of value when
we become wealthy or famous or have material possessions...
and titles and power? every single thing here is temporary,
short lived... wealth comes and goes, as does power and
titles and fame and material possessions...
I have had titles, so what? they mean nothing.. there is no
advantage to having a title.. as is having material possessions,
we change our cars and couches, and TV sets every couple of years..
we even move quite regularly... and as for power and fame..
both of those are quite brief.. I once had my 15 seconds of fame..
and it wasn't worth anything... it means nothing...
and in the end, we see that cooperation has giving us far better results
than competition ever has... think of every great thing you have had,
and I can bet that you got that by cooperation, not competition...
Kropotkin