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Curious, what small scale examples are you thinking of? Those might be a good model.
Just trying things and seeing what sticks puts millions of lives on the line. Seems risky. But maybe eventually we can predict mass human behavior well enough to develop a control loop that keeps an unstable system stable without succumbing to selfishness/power grabbing? But that seems dangerously close to just hoping AGI will save us all.
There have been many groups that form communes within a larger system. Sometimes its built around a religion (or cult), sometimes around various ideals, like artist communes. In my opinion, what makes these work is that they're small (your reputation matters), people join it voluntarily, and people can be kicked out if they don't uphold the ideals. So, you don't need a state to enforce the rules aside from a mechanism to remove people who don't participate fairly. And because they are within a larger entity, they don't have to deal with things like national security or foreign affairs. I don't think that model scales to a national level.
Yeah I agree. If people don't have a relationship with everyone, that sort of reputation model would be hard, so it wouldn't scale well.
I recommend reading The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber for more details on societal structures of the past
But which ones? Were they religious communities? Hunter gatherers such that centralization was less advantageous?
Some examples in the book include the Wendat people and Teotihuacan. You can also check out the book's wiki page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dawn_of_Everything.
One of the core conclusions of the book that you may find interesting (quote from the wiki):