To some degree it does, but often doesn’t. For example, many people around me are obsessed with travelling to exotic countries. I am okay with staying home, or I travel to meet interesting people, but the idea of travelling to the opposite side of planet just to see a beach or a jungle seems completely silly. Some people spend a lot of money on fashion. Many people love to eat and drink in restaurants; I am okay with soylent. I only bought a smartphone because I wanted to develop mobile games. If the mass transit is reliable, I don’t want a car.
Things that I value most are: having free time, and talking with interesting people. Also having a computer with internet connection, but that is relatively cheap today. If I would win a lottery, I would mostly try to achieve the situation where I never have to work for money again. (That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t do anything productive. It just means I would be doing things that I choose to do, and doing them my way.)
I guess the question is, if other people would get a lot of money, what fraction of that would go into competing for resources I care about. (I assume it’s smaller than 10%, but I didn’t think about this too much.) Then I wouldn’t want other people to become so rich that even that fraction of their income would be higher than my whole income.
To some degree it does, but often doesn’t. For example, many people around me are obsessed with travelling to exotic countries. I am okay with staying home, or I travel to meet interesting people, but the idea of travelling to the opposite side of planet just to see a beach or a jungle seems completely silly. Some people spend a lot of money on fashion. Many people love to eat and drink in restaurants; I am okay with soylent. I only bought a smartphone because I wanted to develop mobile games. If the mass transit is reliable, I don’t want a car.
Things that I value most are: having free time, and talking with interesting people. Also having a computer with internet connection, but that is relatively cheap today. If I would win a lottery, I would mostly try to achieve the situation where I never have to work for money again. (That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t do anything productive. It just means I would be doing things that I choose to do, and doing them my way.)
Attending conferences is a way to get to talk with a lot of interesting people. Seats at the TED conference or LeWeb are expensive and limited.
Is that an optimal way of finding interesting people to talk with?
I guess the question is, if other people would get a lot of money, what fraction of that would go into competing for resources I care about. (I assume it’s smaller than 10%, but I didn’t think about this too much.) Then I wouldn’t want other people to become so rich that even that fraction of their income would be higher than my whole income.