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The Benefits of Inequality

New submitter MutualFun sends this article from Science News: Which would you prefer: egalitarianism or totalitarianism? When it comes down to it, the choice you make may not be as obvious as you think. New research suggests that in the distant past, groups of hunter-gatherers may have recognized and accepted the benefits of living in hierarchical societies, even if they themselves weren't counted among the well-off. This model could help explain why bands of humans moved from largely egalitarian groups to hierarchical cultures in which social inequality was rife.

46 of 254 comments (clear)

  1. Why would this surprise? by digsbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So many people refuse to think for themselves. I don't really have a problem with that, except when they persecute me for exercising that right myself.

    1. Re: Why would this surprise? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      Well monkeys, wolves and other social animals don't live in egalitarian groups so the used that humans did so is odd.

      Except that there is no evidence that ancient human societies ever lived in egalitarian groups. There are some societies, such as the Mosuo, that come close, but even they have some hierarchy. Semi-egalitarian societies do best when they are geographically isolated, such as in remote mountains, and thus sheltered from a human activity that is best suited to highly hierarchical organization: war.

    2. Re:Why would this surprise? by digsbo · · Score: 4, Informative

      When did I say they were idiots? I didn't. I said people refuse to think for themselves. I'm talking about people who have said, "I don't want to think about it, that's what government is for." Verbatim, and many other near variants, when I challenge the status quo on everything from the drug laws to the banking system. I actually had a guy recently say to me, after I was critical of the banking system, "Well, it's what we have, and it works." And he's a fairly intelligent guy. He just doesn't want to think about that question, because it's emotionally painful to realize how screwed up things are.

    3. Re:Why would this surprise? by gweihir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The very definition of totalitarianism is that you do not get a choice in the matter. This "research" stinks of propaganda that may be part of a slow effort to bring people around to actually welcome totalitarianism.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  2. False choice by For+a+Free+Internet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bullshit bourgeois propaganda.

    Communism is a classless, stateless society and the road to communism passes through the dictatorship of the proletariat.

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    1. Re:False choice by 0123456 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that the road through the dictatorship of the proletariat is a dead end.

  3. Or... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We could stop automatically assuming a hierarchy has to involve unequal distribution. Perhaps being at the top of a hierarchy is enough of a social motivator that people would take on those responsibilities without taking an unequal share of everyone else's work?

    1. Re:Or... by 0123456 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Indeed. Under communism, comrade, all pigs will be equal. It's just the pigs at the top will have instant access to executive jets, Zil limos and dashas in the country, while the pigs at the bottom will wait twenty years for a Trabant.

    2. Re:Or... by mirix · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, because the only alternative to American style inequality is Soviet style inequality, right?

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    3. Re:Or... by smaddox · · Score: 2

      What's the difference, again?

    4. Re:Or... by rogoshen1 · · Score: 2

      in the American style, we can blindfold ourselves with "social mobility".

      Was it Steinbeck who said something along the lines of "Socialism never took off in the US because the poor see themselves as temporarily embarrassed millionaires."?

    5. Re:Or... by magarity · · Score: 3, Informative

      “Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires."

  4. Can't leave by Sowelu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't know about "benefits"...even the abstract says that one of the main triggers to accepting leadership was that the populace had nowhere to go, or that it was too costly to leave.

    1. Re:Can't leave by suutar · · Score: 2

      one trigger to tolerating excessive disparity, that was. In the simulation, if the top isn't skimming off too much, the rank and file are still better off than the egalitarians, which would make the heirarchy worth it even in the absence of difficulty leaving. It's when the top is raking off too much that the rank and file start wanting to jump ship.

    2. Re:Can't leave by rbrander · · Score: 2

      That's what I loved about Heinlein. One time he'd write that, the next time, 'The Moon is a Harsh Mistress', which is very libertarian. He just posited that the Moon exiles would all just get along and not form into bloods and crips. He really loved thought experiments even when he clearly knew they contained a big assumption; shame so many mistook things like "Starship Troopers" as his serious proposal for government. He wrote a whole essay once about all the other fun ways to restrict franchise: "Why not just \women? Men had their day. Or better yet, why not just mothers? The only humans with an inarguable stake in the future." (quote is approximate.)

  5. This is not evidence; this highly simplified model by B-Town · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As a rule, I'm skeptical of everything that uses evolution to explain societal structures. Most of the time it just boils down to a nifty story devoid of any evidence. That seems to be the case here: 1) Come up with a point you want prove 2) Rejig the currently accepted but highly unrealistic assumptions in the field until the model gives the desired result 3) Publish! I see this kind of nonsense in economics papers all the time. Heartening to see that we aren't the only ones cursed with pointless theorizing.

  6. Different approaches for different situations by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some people assume that totalitarian/hierarchical organizations are simply inherently bad, and "democracy" is inherently good. Really, it's more about the situation and context.

    For example, even in our modern "democracy", our military still uses a top-down hierarchy with a rigid chain of command. There are good reasons for this. When you're in dangerous situations, organization and timing can become vital to the survival of the group, and survival tends to trump social justice. If the military commander has a plan that requires a troop of soldiers move to a particular location in a short amount of time, you don't want people standing around debating, or wondering whether the plan is fair. You need people to follow orders immediately, or else a lot of people might die.

    There have been situations in humanity's past when this would have been true of social/governmental organizations too. If the chief needs everyone to mobilize in order to avert disaster and keep the entire tribe from being wiped out, then you don't want a lot of debate. The whole setup worked pretty well for a while.

    Of course now, things are different. Most of our lives (speaking at least of the people reading Slashdot) are relatively safe and comfortable. We don't need to follow orders immediately and unquestioningly in order to stay alive. Also, our society is larger, and the concentration of power is greater. The danger of taking time for debate is not greater than the danger of a bad ruler with absolute power over a society, so totalitarianism seems like it's not such a great idea.

    1. Re:Different approaches for different situations by mlts · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We really need different organizations. As above, the military needs to be strictly hierarchical. However, the civilian leadership needs to be representative of the people's wants. Here is my proposal:

      Instead of elections, why not have all representatives be picked from a lottery of all citizens, similar to jury duty. Instead of a jury picking a foreman, they nominate and elect a president.

      This way, the elected people are truly a cross section of the governed, voter fraud isn't an issue, and with proper enforcement of bribery laws, the big "campaign donations" that plague the US wouldn't be an issue. After four years, a new lottery takes place, and a new bunch of people get into office.

    2. Re:Different approaches for different situations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      so in other words nothing would change

    3. Re:Different approaches for different situations by chihowa · · Score: 2

      Well, you'd ramp up the number of representatives, too. (Both to dilute the extremely stupid, corrupt, overbearing and to make bribery more difficult.) If we scaled up Congress to the same levels of representation (congresspeople per citizen) we had when the country was founded, we'd have over 10,000 congressmen today. At 25k unique congresspeople per decade, you'd run out of seats on your board pretty quickly.

      Even sticking with the current number of representatives, the complete turnover every four years (staggered, but on average) would overwhelm available board positions pretty quickly.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    4. Re:Different approaches for different situations by chihowa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We don't need leaders. We need representatives.

      "Leaders", who treat the country and its citizens as their plaything, are what got us into this mess.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  7. Intellectually dishonest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Inequality wouldn't be so bad if we had a robust safety net and didn't fuck people at the bottom. It's one thing to be poor, it's another to have to survive day to day worrying about food, shelter, health care, etc. As long as we keep screwing people, any argument defending inequality is completely void of substance or ethics.

    1. Re:Intellectually dishonest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I suppose that Capitalism is a step up then, making only 90-something percent equally poor and the remaining percentage astoundingly rich.

      The problem with any system is people. Pure free-market Capitalism is wonderful, but cannot exist, much like Pure Communism.
      Imagine anything else with the 'rules' as enforced by either system in the real world. A baseball game where the owner of one team simply goes out and pays the pitcher of the other team to throw easy pitches, or pays the governing body to make a rule where any team that plays their team is only allowed to take 5 steps per minute or something equally unfair.

      Economic systems usually come down to who can cheat the most effectively. If everyone did the same thing as the people that 'rise' to the top, we'd all starve to death. In any system.

    2. Re: Intellectually dishonest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The average wealth in China and Russa increased under comunism, just not as fast as Europe or America.

    3. Re:Intellectually dishonest by reboot246 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Under Communism, man exploits man.

      Under Capitalism, it's the other way round.

    4. Re:Intellectually dishonest by towermac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "It's one thing to be poor, it's another to have to survive day to day worrying about food, shelter, health care, etc."

      No, that's not another thing. That's exactly what 'being poor' means.

      I don't think you've ever been poor, or you would know this.

  8. always a lack of middle ground by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    as if nothing exists between absolute equality and absolute inequality. "Only a Sith deals in absolutes." - Obi Wan Kenobi

    1. Re:always a lack of middle ground by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is a common problem with absolutists. They think everything is binary when it's nested case statements with table-driven variables.

      There is no either or - there is A B C C1 C2 D E1 NULL. And the boundaries between A and B are artificial limitations not found in nature, but only in perception.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    2. Re:always a lack of middle ground by Frequency+Domain · · Score: 2

      Yeah, and on top of the observation that this isn't a binary choice it should be noted that "equality" can be assessed along many dimensions.

  9. Mostly useless by onproton · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yes, Capitalism is the accepted economic system because it produces results; if those same results persist through extreme levels of inequality is a different matter. If what you are trying to say is that the current levels of inequality are actually beneficial for society, I believe most economists would disagree. See The Great Depression, this article, or this book. No one knows what they threshold really is, but no one argues that there isn't one.

    1. Re:Mostly useless by Kjella · · Score: 2

      That depends on whether you think it's fundamentally inequality or some absolute threshold of poverty that causes people to rebel. When you have like no job, no money and you're short on food, shelter and healthcare for you and your family, then I can imagine becoming an extremist. But the fact that there's people like Bill Gates who have so ridiculously much more money than I'll ever have doesn't really bother me. I have good place to live, a working car, food and drink on my table and sure I could have fun with a billion dollars, but I'm not hurting myself either.

      Of course I know I'm very well off myself, globally speaking. But the number of living in extreme poverty is dwindling, illiteracy is dropping, some 99.9% don't starve - the big scary numbers are from malnourishment enhancing the effect of other diseases, almost 90% have clean drinking water and it doesn't mean the last 10% drink poison. Trends on life expectancy are good, even in Africa. In short, even the poorest are moving out of the "nothing to lose" category to where they might have a shitty job for shitty pay to make a very modest living, but it's not nothing.

      It's one thing to think your minimum wage job at McDonald's suck and barely pays enough to make a living. But it is really enough to want to start a revolution and throw the world as you know it into chaos? I don't really think so.

      --
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  10. Totalitarianism all the way by kruach+aum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Democracy is just a terrible system of government, but it turns out it's all we can trust ourselves with to not fuck shit up. The vote of a retard counts just as much as the vote of a genius, and that's ridiculous, but what's even more ridiculous is that everything else has turned out worse.

    Ideally we would be ruled by a benevolent artificial intelligence who can determine without outside input what is best for everyone.

    1. Re:Totalitarianism all the way by onproton · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which is why we don't actually have a democracy, we have a republic, in which all of us have the wonderful freedom to choose between corrupt representative 1, or corrupt representative 2. Perhaps if democracy could be implemented without the polarizing effect of the 2 party system, or in a way that allowed more direct voting on actual issues instead of arbitrarily grouped policies it would be more functional - but then again maybe not.

  11. Math loves to be Anthromorphized! by Prien715 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Terrible summary and title.

    From TFA:
    Our model predicts that the transition to larger despotic groups will then occur when: (i) surplus resources lead to demographic expansion of groups, removing the viability of an acephalous niche in the same area and so locking individuals into hierarchy; (ii) high dispersal costs limit followers' ability to escape a despot. Empirical evidence suggests that these conditions were probably met, for the first time, during the subsistence intensification of the Neolithic.

    So availability of resources to a minority and the inability to escape cause large despotisms, much like CO2 and Greenhouse gases cause global warming. Climate science should be renamed "The Benefits of Global Warming". Or after a man's parachute fails to open he "realizes the benefits of gravity in assisting his painless disassembly".

    I know it would be odd to ask for editors to, uh, you know, edit.

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
  12. What do you mean inequality? by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'll take a meritocracy over a completely egaitarean society any time and I suppose that makes me in favor of inequality but I also reject the kind of society the USA has become where a few have risen to the top and roll boulders down on anybody else trying to rise by his own merit. Now feel free to color me radcal but any meritocracy will eventually become a plutocracy which is why bloody revolutions (pandemics like the black death also work wonders) are necessary at regular intervals to level the playing field. I'm not sure that's quite what Thomas Jefferson meant when he said: "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants" but it's close.

    --
    Only to idiots, are orders laws.
    -- Henning von Tresckow
  13. Re:Careful Libtards! by onproton · · Score: 2

    Hello Troll, I think your confusion lies in your inability to comprehend scale or derive useful meaning from data. In your frustration, lashing out seems your only recourse - but there are other ways of coping.

  14. Equality of OPPORTUNITY or RESULTS? by mi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The word "equality" is meaningless without the clarification: equality of what? Hair color? Penis size?

    In the context of politics, the following two equalities are usually meant by the arguing sides — even when neither side makes their own meaning explicit:

    Equality of Opportunity versus Equality of Results .

    The "all men created equal" concept is about equality of opportunity: you start with (roughly) the same things as everybody else and whatever you achieve (or not achieve as the case might be) is due to your own industry, frugality, and, perhaps, genes. We might be created equal (subject to gene variations), but what we do after the creation is up to us.

    The equality of results is the opposite: whatever you do, you will have (roughly) the same things at the end: if you are more successful than average, the State will tax you to ensure the results of the less successful aren't too different from yours — a concept lovingly referred to as "spreading the wealth around".

    A large number of politicians made careers of conflating the two equalities — by harping at the absence of latter and implying, the former does not exist. Such demagoguery patently dishonest not only in theory, but also in practice...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  15. Gini coefficient by Animats · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a naive article. For a better analysis, see "How Asia Works", which is a comparison of the coastal Asian countries, how they developed, and why. Development requires several phases. One is raising agricultural productivity. There's the heavy-handed approach, which comes in the communist form of collective arms and the capitalist form of big plantations. Then there's the light approach, which involves lots of little services like tractor rental and agricultural agents. (The heavy-handed approach works well only for flat land. Hill operations require too many local decisions.) There's thus a visible relationship between what a country looks like and its Gini coefficient.

    The second phase of development is about industrialization. Where investment goes really matters. Market forces do not direct investment towards overall economic growth, but toward short-term profit. The successful "Asian tigers" all had very directed investment controls, and how well countries did relative to each other depends on how well investment was directed.

    The book has lots of country-by-country comparisons, both statistical and on the ground. It's worth a read.

  16. It's human nature by reboot246 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In any group of people some are going to be better at some tasks than others. We put value on those tasks depending on how much they're needed or wanted by society. In a society like we have today, doctors are more valuable than burger flippers so they're paid more. It's not always that simple, but that's the way we tend to perceive it.

    True superiority is actually unifying. False superiority is where the problems come from. When the king (or democratically elected government) begins to believe that they are all-knowing and infallible, people are right to oppose them.

  17. Re:This is not evidence; this highly simplified mo by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I was about to write the same thing (sorry, no points to mod you up).

    About the strongest claims from evolutionary sociologists / psychologists / etc. that I'm willing to entertain are of the form "We can see how X could have led to an evolutionary benefit when we assume their world operated like Y. So, if the world really did operate like Y, then maybe evolutionary pressures were a reason X was true." Modulo the plausibility of X and Y having been actually true for a significant fraction of the population being discussed.

    I've sometimes wondered if I'm being too hard on those academics because I don't fully understand their claims, or because they know stuff that I don't. But I find it completely plausible that their community is simply engaged in a huge group-think circle-jerk.

  18. Re:Careful Libtards! by sjames · · Score: 2

    If, unlike the current case, there were dozens of studies with data that I could reference instead, I wouldn't be frustrated.

    But go ahead, condemn your grandkids to hell so you can make a buck today. Mark your grave well so they'll know where to piss.

  19. Re:Wrong again! by sd4f · · Score: 2

    Your history needs a lot of refinement. Soviet Russia didn't become technologically powerful until WW2, after the USA gifted them entire factories to make stuff as part of the war effort. Then the soviets infiltrated many companies and government research missions with their spies sending back heaps of information, and took in heaps of german scientists after WW2 (so did USA). If anyones technological prowess depends on some richer or advanced countries benevolence, then I don't think you can really claim that the glorious revolution was all that much a success.

  20. We all voted to be serfs! by mschwanke97402 · · Score: 2

    Hey, Everyone! Lets all vote ourselves in as serfs, except that guy over there, we'll elect him as Baron. He'll own everything and be responsible for everything so we don't have to. All in favor? Hands? Yes, I can just see how folks chose to be be kept down, working the fields, chattel of the local lord.

  21. Re:Hierarchical society = Division of labor by gweihir · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nonsense. The difference is whether those on top coordinate or decide. The first is non-hierarchical with regard to power. The second is. The rare good manager knows that he serves his workers and that it is his job to remove obstacles. The failed manager thinks that it is his job to rule his underlings.

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  22. Misleading summary by Jesrad · · Score: 2

    I went and examined the paper, and damn right the /. summary is misleading.

    First one, the researchers don't use the vague term "social inequality". Second, they are merely reporting on the results of a computer model, and not on some new archeological findings. From the abstract:

    We model the coevolution of individual preferences for hierarchy alongside the degree of despotism of leaders, and the dispersal preferences of followers. We show that voluntary leadership without coercion can evolve in small groups, when leaders help to solve coordination problems related to resource production.

    They did a computer simulation of the classic Coase argument about transaction costs affecting market structure (and its consequences on asymetry of information which equate to inequalities of human capital), applying it to individuals undergoing the agricultural revolution (food surpluses but with delayed returns and higher need for coordination). Well, yeah, a hierarchy emerges in this situation, because the rapid change in productivity is not uniformly distributed and depends on information that is costly to disseminate. That idea's been around at least since Hayek's works on spontaneous order. It's kinda nice to see it verified in a computer model, but it doesn't teach us anything new.

    --
    Maybe we deserve this world ?
  23. False dichotomy by jandersen · · Score: 3, Informative

    Which would you prefer: egalitarianism or totalitarianism?

    The question makes little sense - for one thing, egalitarian is not the opposite of totalitarian - to quote Wikipedia:

    - "Egalitarianism ... is a trend of thought that favors equality for all people"

    - "Totalitarianism or totalitarian state is a political system in which the state holds total authority over the society and seeks to control all aspects of public and private life wherever possible".

    Arguably, the opposite of egalitarianism is elitism; there isn't really a good word for it that I could find. The same holds for totalitarianism - no good antonym, but democratism might be close enough. These concept occupy two, independent spaces, although it may be that totalitarianism is found more with elitism than with egalitarianism.

    The other problem with this question is that they are not binary concepts, but define a continuum - IOW there are different degrees of both scales.

    When it comes down to it, the choice you make may not be as obvious as you think. New research suggests that in the distant past, groups of hunter-gatherers may have recognized and accepted the benefits of living in hierarchical societies, even if they themselves weren't counted among the well-off. This model could help explain why bands of humans moved from largely egalitarian groups to hierarchical cultures in which social inequality was rife.

    There is nothing new in this. Even back in the day, when we can imagine that humans lives like the other, large apes in small groups, there would have been leaders - alpha-males or -females. Or in family groups, one or both parents would have been in charge. This makes sense, since a more experienced, older adult makes better decisions than a younger one, and a physically stronger individual is able to take what he/she wants as well as offering better protection against attackers etc.

    But what recent research of the Egyptian culture actually shows is, that hierarchical society developed, not because hierarchy is inherently better, but because the alternatives were worse. If Egypt hadn't been surrounded by desert, people would have moved away, and hierchical society wouldn't have been established that early. Compare to North Europe, where it is possible to live more or less everywhere, and hierchical societies seemingly didn't arise until much later, when population density got high enough.