![]() Utopia could be just the poison you need to avoid. Invest in the journey that takes paths unknown, fail because you're trying a new thing you've never done before. Work with what you have, because that is the nature of life itself. To avoid strife within our own mind which manifests as strife within society, maybe we do need to struggle individually in the physical/material realm, and with each struggle find a sense of achievement, of movement, of winning.or even losing but not for the lack of trying.ĭon't look for the perfect world, the perfect conditions, or the state where you have everything. Perhaps struggle is what gives meaning to life, like the fire that purifies base ore into precious metals or the cut and polish which transform rough stones into gems. You may read about this study and may come back saying, "Yes, but we're different, we're not mice." This decades-old scientific study is always a good reminder, in which scientists provided healthy mice with all that they needed, only to watch that mouse society flourish but eventually fall, not due to external struggles (of which there were none!), but due to strife that was entirely internally generated within the society. These spaces were designed to cater to every need of the rodents. He created enclosed spaces called 'rat utopias' for rats to live in with no predators and minimal exposure to disease. ![]() tagonist Strelok, like the first responders in our universe, still relies on. Introduction From the 1940s, John Calhoun conducted a series of experiments on rodents to study behaviour during overcrowding. What happens when you get the perfect world? What would we do if we got to Utopia and had absolutely everything that we wanted and even all that we didn't know we wanted? Europe, garbage, zombies and utopia in three contemporary computer games. ![]()
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