• Sanctus@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Mutual aid is why we developed such expressive emotions in the first place. Our emotions broadcast our physical and mental states, often without noise. We can begin to cry, and those around us know we are in pain without speaking.

    • lars@lemmy.sdf.org
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      9 months ago

      Christ my overly expressive face makes me wonder how the hell my ancestors decided they needed all this spoken language stuff at all.

  • e_t_@kbin.pithyphrase.net
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    9 months ago

    It can be exhausting for the one giving aid, though. I have been supporting a friend by drawing down some savings and foregoing some luxuries. I judge keeping food on his table more valuable than those luxuries. But I don’t want to keep it up forever.

    • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 months ago

      What’s crazy to me (I didn’t watch your thing, I’m sorry; maybe they discuss it maybe they don’t) is that when you provide the basic needs of many species, they are also able to move into cooperative social structures. Even when we can’t understand how that would evolve for them.

      Think about all the videos we’ve seen where an animal takes on care of another species’ young. Or forms a friendship bond that transcends predator/prey relationships. That really shouldn’t happen in the wild, and it probably doesn’t, but the artificial post-scarcity but non-enriching environment we give them makes it possible.

      Turns out those basic needs are really vital, but once met, open a lots of species up to communalism and cooperation.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        9 months ago

        i maintain that cooperation is just objectively the best strategy on large scales, to the point that life on earth is fundamentally cooperative.

        Like, imagine if species couldn’t eat each other, if mushrooms didn’t exist to break things down into digestible nutrients, we would have a fraction of the biomass and diversity we do now and life would be extremely vulnerable.

        Cooperation inherently leads to more efficient resource utilization as species can specialize and resources are continuously recycled.

  • Crow@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. It’s not human nature per se that is the problem, but our incredible ability to adapt. Humans can happily adapt to live a life that is nowhere within their human nature, and it’s a real problem.

  • anti-idpol action@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    it’s reformist though. How isn’t it anything but depressing sharing of whatever meagre crumbs the bourgeoisie kicks from the table. Coops are marginally better but at the end of the day you’re playing a game whose rules you don’t control.

  • NutWrench@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    This. Don’t let billionaires gaslight you into thinking that capitalism is some kind of holy word. THEIR idea of “capitalism” is the 19th-century, robber-baron kind that benefits no one but themselves.