EDIT: Woo, sleeplessness is GREAT!
Okay, I'm sorry for being incredibly lazy for only reading the first 1.5 posts in this thread, but those first ideas laid out there just made me want to SCREAM that I wasn't there during a time I could've posted...
I'm sure the topic has changed significantly since then, and maybe even this stuff has been said before, but I just have to get these ideas off my chest;
In addition to what LordBucket was saying way back in the beginning of this threa, two potentially feasible, and potentially 'perfect' economic/societal systems appear in my head...
The first one is something akin to the Brave New World utopia, which probably won't happen just because of how outlandish it sounds.
Basically, the ultimate goal of this utopia would be that humans would essentially be 'manufactured' and pre-conditioned, beginning in the womb, to be ideally suited for whatever role in society they are already destined to perform. Whatever sector of society which needed more workers, would simply send a request for them to the 'human factories', or would already know when their current workers are most likely to start dying off, and I suppose those who survive a longer time would just be retired or something, I don't know.
Also, because all people would be per-conditioned and ultimately under completely controlled conditions, and all needs can be anticipated and met in a timely manner by society as a whole, there would be no reason for anyone to want to fight each other, and in the book they even had readily-available, mind-altering drugs made a societal norm, drugs which made one complacent and passive. (An gramme of soma clears ten gloomy sentiments!)
It's... Kinda hard to go over everything which is covered in the book about the specifics of how this 'utopian' society would work. Plus it requires assumptions on technological breakthroughs and human evolution which we simply haven't made enough progress toward yet. And of course I'm not saying that this is exactly, gospel-truth how such a society would function, nor am I saying that this is a desirable, or even a realistically possible result.
The second society, which is to me MUCH more feasible, and could even do accomplished with current technology and knowledge, is to basically just go back to homesteading, and decentralize the economy as much as is logically and efficiently possible, particularly in regards to food production. I've been learning a lot about how to homestead, farm, be self-sufficient, etc. (I haven't learned everything, of course, and as of now the knowledge I have is almost entirely theoretical) and it's amazing just how simple it is to grow and maintain an almost entirely self-sustaining ecosystem designed to provide a human or, more preferably, a large group of humans, with an abundance well in excess of their needs, including food, water, shelter, community, energy, health, well-being, etc.
There are actually many examples that exist,
today, as testaments to just how incredibly feasible this is.
This is a good example.Another good example, which though a bit romantic, is also amazing.A few more interesting people to look up would be Masanobu Fukuoka, Joel Salatin, Sepp Holzer, (So sorry not to provide you with more videos or articles, but I can't recall any off the top of my head atm and it'd take too long for me to find and read/watch a good example right now. Give me some time and I'll try producing more info.)
And I'm sure there are many more examples I could find, if I really wanted to...
These are some of the more advanced products of a growing movement called, "permaculture", which... Is a bit difficult to fully describe, since there are many different takes on the word. At its core, its essentially just the methods of sustainability, but also, it's often used as a term for something which is, I suppose, a kind of a culmination of science and hippie idealism, where one takes an understanding of nature, ecological systems, biology, etc. and uses it to improve the world around him/her, especially in an agricultural context.
I guess this isn't really so much a new economic system, so much as it is a call to realize what those 'stupid hippies' were trying to tell us (and probably learn of and understand in the first place) all along, that we actually CAN understand and work WITH, not AGAINST, natural systems.
Some potential problems with this would mostly spring up around the fact that, although ecosystems can be simpler then we may think, they are also highly complex, and are prone to literally each and ever variable conceivable in the given context. It does require a fair amount of brainpower and a LOT of knowledge and understanding to be able to take a piece of land and actually make it better, instead of just making things worse. And you can never be 100% certain that you've accounted for everything and anything, especially since somethings are, even if they WERE predictable, simply impossible to fully prepare for.
I'd still say that this is better then the alternative, though.
And now I've gotten myself into some big rant about permaculture or somesuch that I'll probably regret posting later, so I hope I haven't embarrassed myself TOO much...