Communities that stay in one place on an indefinite basis must have
been formed for reasons other than food gathering and the security of
numbers. In all probability food gathering itself would have promoted
movement or migration as food was exhausted in a specific locality. It
is reasonable to assume that static communities were formed to exploit a
material that was prized by the hunting and food-gathering communities
of man. In all likelihood, the substance of that material was not
essential to biological survival.
If the compelling reason for establishing static communities was to
exploit a resource in the neighborhood, then food requirements for the
population would have to be imported into the area. This would
inevitably bring about a division of labor in which those people who
were exploiting the resource would not be compelled to gather food. The
resource may have been a mineral that was fashioned into hunting and
fishing tools, making it possible for hunters and fishermen to expand
their food-gathering activities and increase their hunting
efficiency.
Wealth is a function of knowledge plus resources and, since resources
are essentially static, wealth increased as knowledge increased. The
establishment of permanent communities was a significant milestone in
development of technology based on information and language. It is at
this juncture that man is separated from all other higher animals. At
this point he acquired the concept of maximizing wealth production and
could modify the environment for increased comfort, well-being, and
security.
We find in modern man behavioral modes, ranging from basic survival
to wealth production for its own sake. On the one hand, the Australian
aborigines and the Kalahari bushmen live at elementary survival levels,
and on the other, the Wall Street broker trades information in the form
of wealth.
|