I gave up wading through all that prose....<p>A few economic ideas that come to mind which I think are not reflected by how our economy works (and fails to work):<p>If you think of the raw unrecovered resources of Earth, our solar system, and beyond, as an inheritance that humans have received without any merit of our own, then in principle it would seem that an economic system could benefit all of us without any redistribution taking place.<p>For instance, paying everyone equally from auction proceeds of new resource rights.<p>Similarly with intellectual property, incentives to innovate are both useful and often earned. But hard intellectual property laws are also harmful in blocking (even if temporarily) directions that others may have been likely to also benefit from.<p>A fix might be to assign a small percentage of revenue or profits on ideas protected by IP to a similar equally dispersed fund.<p>That funding would reflect the cost of society to temporarily give up the rights of others to independently discover and monetize protected innovations, and the cost of providing that protection.<p>The idea that the human race inherits open ended physical and intellectual terrain, but that inheritance is unequally divided, seems tragic.<p>I am not in any way overlooking the efforts made to uncover ideas or utilize new resources, or the need for those that do that work to benefit directly from that work.