Economy, Conditioning, and the Psychological Reality of Money examines economy not merely as a system of production, exchange, and finance, but as a projection of human consciousness itself. The paper argues that modern economic structures are deeply rooted in psychological conditioning shaped by fear, comparison, insecurity, ambition, and the search for identity through accumulation. Money, once a practical tool, gradually becomes psychological authority through collective agreement and social conditioning. The work explores how technological advancement and population growth intensified economic dependence while humanity remained inwardly fragmented. It questions whether civilization has evolved psychologically alongside its scientific and technological achievements, or whether modern sophistication conceals deeper existential confusion. Through this inquiry, the paper proposes the possibility of an “eco-economy” grounded in intelligence, coexistence, relationship, and existential understanding rather than endless psychological consumption and accumulation.
Mayank Singh (Thu,) studied this question.