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i only need this one.

2007-12-30 11:45:46 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

4 answers

Basing the concept of utopia on my own personal happiness (which is all any of us can do) I would say that there is no economy in utopia. Everthing is free, you just go and take it. Robots do the jobs that need doing, unless any person really 'wants' to do them, it is utopia after all!

2008-01-01 17:11:23 · answer #1 · answered by soppy.bollocks 4 · 0 0

A utopian society, in my view, would not be society based upon mere fulfilment of human greed, lust or physical hunger. The concept does not entail only superfluity, exuberance and indulgence and society, where there is as much as one might like to consume, and where there is still more to waste.

Since a utopian concept is not alien to the mind, it is in fact the product the very mind that we are, the human mind. We must understand, besides our needs of urgent physical nature, the mind has other needs too. We search for the fulfilment of higher level of our needs once basic needs are fulfilled. Therefore, a world built merely upon the elements of human physical desire would not be an ideal world after all. The Utopia would be an ideal world where there is plenty for the fulfilment of or emotion, aesthetic and spiritual and physical appetite in the mind.

I can see that in a utopian world plenty of everything would be for the purpose of ending greed, liberty in order to render criminal tendencies obsolete and peace to ir order for people to develop and grow, instead of an image of lazing about under grows of fruit tree and flower orchids.

2008-01-03 01:30:36 · answer #2 · answered by Shahid 7 · 0 0

Primitive communism I'm sure

2007-12-30 12:53:45 · answer #3 · answered by БloozБoy Conte Legend in Making 7 · 0 0

Barter for services: supply and demand of skills.

2007-12-30 12:08:42 · answer #4 · answered by Dart 4 · 0 0

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