Now, not to bash your views, but the arguments you've presented recently seem based on maybes and suppositions that aren't really backed up by experience (at the time at which you're presenting them). You're coming across as a sort of yeah I know what all of our observed data says, but I don't think any of it is true because we can't literally have 100% proof in front of us. Like psychological models of humanity are somehow not taking any data from anyone but the 1%.
Sure, maybe all of our observation of humanity including the majority of our findings in the field of psychology are wrong and it's just some people that are hardwired to pursue a means of rising above the rest of humanity through cold competition. But that's not really enough to draw a conclusion. My own position is not that humanity is inherently or predominantly greedy or malicious, just that there are negative traits endemic to humanity. No person lacks greed or cruelty, and it's by speaking to these parts of us that society has been able to steer itself the way you describe.
EDIT: I'm trying to dance around being that asshat who attacks your argument rather than talking to you. Do you have some links to some material about your position? Thanks muchly!
I assume you're responding only to the point about status. This is more just adding together personal experience + some other bits that I know about psychology + perspective that I think is rarely taken into account. Science isn't immune to bias/unrecognized assumptions. On top of that, psychology isn't a hard science, and it's questionable how objective a science it can possibly be. As the practice of studying human thought must be undertaken from a frame of reference captured within human thought, it is going to be twisted by self-ideation, which effects what questions are asked, the manner in which observation takes place, and how observations are interpreted.
Personal Experience: Whenever this topic comes up, I feel like I must be an alien. Because I really don't relate to it. I don't want to be a billionaire or world leader. Never have. I enjoy spending time around people that I admire, not people I feel superior to. I also feel gross giving orders to anyone. And I used to feel like I was alone in this, up until young adulthood. But then I started meeting a wider variety of people in different contexts. And since then, when I really think about the people that I know, most of them seem to have pretty modest desires and aspirations.
Other Psychology Bits and Perspective: Internalization is something that's been studied in psychology a lot for a while, and relates to this subject pretty strongly.
Racism is a good place to look for what I'm talking about. White people were the dominant culture in the USA throughout the 20th century. They controlled the vast majority of media, and made it in their own image, with positive representation being almost exclusively associated with whiteness. As a result, black people growing up in this culture suffer problems with negative self-image on a massive scale, related to their appearance and beliefs about their own nature. And this isn't about some great conspiracy of white people looking to destroy the psyches of black people. White people just happened to be those doing media work, and they of course made what they personally related to.
Now when we're talking about the desire for status, you're speaking directly about dominance itself. Whoever has it. Wealth, political power, authority, and respect. A concept which runs directly parallel to who has the most control in guiding the very direction and functioning of civilization as a whole. So following the same principle, don't you think it would be natural that those with status will guide society in a direction that relates to what they can personally relate to, which is the experience of living with and desiring status? And that this would trickle down to pervasive internalizations that everyone would struggle with?
Think about this mechanically. Just as white people made media on the assumption that it was for people like themselves, we live in a society designed on the assumption that everyone is greedy. Thus, the structure we all live in forces us to behave as if we are greedy in order to survive. Even if we don't want it, we have to compete with others for material security, which often comes through association with other forms of status, not just direct ownership of material wealth. So this is what everyone sees everyone else doing. It's what we organize our lives around. It's what we plan and strive for. So if we build data from this based on empirical observations, what will that data show if the right questions are not asked to frame its context?
Let's say there's a management opportunity opened up in an office environment. There may be 5 people fighting for that promotion - everyone considered eligible. It may be possible that only 1 of them actually wants that position. One person who dreams of climbing the corporate ladder to become a rich executive, who actually cares about having authority, or is interested in money for reasons beyond basic self-preservation. Maybe 2 of them are fighting for it because they're drowning in bills and desperately need the pay raise no matter what, another because of high pressure expectations put by family, and another because it's what they've been told they want their whole lives and never truly reflected to determine for themselves if it's what they want. If you were to engage in straightforward empirical observation of that situation, what data would you come away with? That 100% of people eligible for receiving more wealth and authority were eager to compete for it.
And what type of research is likely to be most prevalent within the context of a society that subjects every attempt to establish a more egalitarian society to ridicule and violence? Did anthropological and psychological research related to race in the slavery and Jim Crow days critically analyze the assumptions underlying race relationships in those days, or was it just a platform for reinforcing confirmation bias? Assuming there is a great amount of scientific literature behind the idea that everyone desires wealth and status (I'm not aware of it), how much do you really believe that modern science is immune to foundational biases?
Even in harder sciences, we're still discovering those biases pretty regularly.
Here's an example.