While writing yesterday, I kept thinking about Brook Farm and The Blithedale Romance. (I did a report on Nathaniel Hawthorne in high school.)
As it is, I think I have more to say about Orderville.
Orderville was an early commune in Utah, named as it was organized to practice the United Order, a Latter-Day Saint collectivist program.
It doesn't get talked about a lot, but we were told a story once that stuck with me.
A teenage boy whose job was helping with docking the lambs collected the tails, shaved the wool off of them, and sold that as his private stash, then used it to buy a pair of jeans.
Part of the collectivism was that everyone had the same clothes, as well as dining together and sharing everything, right? So the other teen boys saw this new fancy pair of store-bought pants and were jealous.
The community leaders decided to copy that pattern, and that would be the new style of pants that everyone would get when their pants needed replacing. The other boys did not want to wait so they did things to wear their pants out faster.
The community leaders gave up and everyone got new pants.
Some people take that as a sign that with these attitudes it couldn't work out. Apparently what really did things in was the coming of the railroad and multiple arrests for polygamy.
I think the big problem is the attempt to maintain equality by strict control.
I remember being irritated with this in Utopia; why does everyone have to dress alike?
In Utopia it was even worse; everyone had to play the same games and eat the same food. That's what Thomas More thought was needed for peace. He just happened to make things look a lot like his own preference of monastic life but with families. Plato thought plays were bad for morality, so in The Republic you can't have plays, though Plato is putting his ideas in Socrates' mouth.
The first thing to take from that is how easy it is to assume your preferences will work for everyone else. That is an illusion, though not one that stops you from being a philosopher.
The more important question is whether we can we have our differences and get along.
Well, let's get back to Brook Farm.
It started out fun, but then there were people who wanted to follow Fourier's principles more, and then they weren't making enough money, so they went vegetarian but not everyone wanted to do that and they were sitting at different tables and some people were paying more.
Financial issues affect things -- that's part of what the railroad coming to Orderville did -- but it was the different ideas that Hawthorne noted the most in The Blithedale Romance. The main characters disagree about women's rights and criminal reform. Those disagreements gradually get more hostile.
A lot of hippie communes had issues with women still being expected to do the cooking and cleaning.
Here's something else interesting, from The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better, a 2009 book by Richard G. Wilkinson and Kate Pickett.
In addition to discovering that more equal societies tend to do better, they also discovered that the method didn't really matter. Some countries had high taxes and then those taxes covered a lot of things. Others might have wage controls or universal basic income, but the point was the equality, and it helped, and people still got to pick out their own clothes.
Dominator culture, even with good intentions, leans toward exercising more control. They don't trust people to do right, so they will make them do right.
As scary as trusting can be, you can't force people to be good, but also, so much becomes about things that don't even related to goodness, like what style of pants you put on in the morning.
There are differences we can allow.