write one story with the moral greed is the root causes of all evil and Labour Never Goes unrewarded
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HERE IS YOUR ANSWER..........
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☜☆☞ Money is not the root of all evil.
Before the invention of farming, humans have almost no possession (and of course no money). But they already have territories. When two tribes encounters, it often resulted in a fight (read Lawrence H. Keeley on this topic).
In fact, the vast majority of predators are territorial. When they encounter an other predator in their hunting area they fight.
A wolf has 12% of chances of being killed by a wolf in his life. Because they constantly fight for territories.
Same thing for pumas (11.7%), lions (13.3%) and caracals (10%).
The phylogenetic roots of human lethal violence (a major paper published in Nature).
For comparison, including death penalty, wars, genocides and murders, this number is inferior to 0.3% for humans.
Humans, historically, where like that too. In War Before Civilization, Lawrence H. Keeley shows that in tribal pre-state societies, a human can have up to 30% of chances being killed by an other human (60% for males).
Today it is less that 0.3% !
Because we cooperate instead of fighting for everything. When we want something, we don’t fight, we propose work instead (and therefore money).
HOPE IT HELPS YOU..........
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
HERE IS YOUR ANSWER..........
✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏✏
☜☆☞ Money is not the root of all evil.
Before the invention of farming, humans have almost no possession (and of course no money). But they already have territories. When two tribes encounters, it often resulted in a fight (read Lawrence H. Keeley on this topic).
In fact, the vast majority of predators are territorial. When they encounter an other predator in their hunting area they fight.
A wolf has 12% of chances of being killed by a wolf in his life. Because they constantly fight for territories.
Same thing for pumas (11.7%), lions (13.3%) and caracals (10%).
The phylogenetic roots of human lethal violence (a major paper published in Nature).
For comparison, including death penalty, wars, genocides and murders, this number is inferior to 0.3% for humans.
Humans, historically, where like that too. In War Before Civilization, Lawrence H. Keeley shows that in tribal pre-state societies, a human can have up to 30% of chances being killed by an other human (60% for males).
Today it is less that 0.3% !
Because we cooperate instead of fighting for everything. When we want something, we don’t fight, we propose work instead (and therefore money).
HOPE IT HELPS YOU..........
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
ShivaSinghrajput:
I want a story with moral
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