So I ask you, what might a society look like with a rebellious stance towards production? Answer wisely, and not flippantly as you seem to usually do. I'll just ignore any predictable flippant answer. — schopenhauer1
For real world examples, look at the labor movement in the United States under Hoffa, say. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, there was a socialist and even communist approach related to worker's collectivism and revolutionary attitudes toward labor relations.
However, when people like Hoffa got involved in unionizing, they didn't take a socialist approach. They essentially treated labor as a commodity that they could control and that every industrialist needed. They used capitalist principles and gained more for workers than any other labor movement since.
In a real sense, that was a "rebellious stance" towards production that changed its society.
Nevertheless, I think you mean something like how would society look like if work wasn't necessary to possess or rely on a comfortable life. Additionally, address some views on the ethics of our work and production philosophy against the supposition of a "free" society.
Toward the first part, it seems unlikely that there is only one way society could go or present itself if the imposition or requirement to "produce, grow or die" Work was technically "optional" in the communist USSR, East Germany and Red China but the necessities of life still required a major workforce to maintain production (in Eurasia) or agriculture (in China). However, there are democratic, capitalist societies throughout the West that instituted social programs in response to the communist ideals being spread at the time. Some social programs were created in response to the threat of communism and others led by leftists influenced by socialism. This emerged in welfare programs and policies that allowed more people to choose not to work in capitalist societies even more effectively than in nominal communist ones.
On top of that, the real revolutions in work were better conditions and easier jobs that paid more... at least until the "neo-liberal" revolution of people like Reagan and Thatcher. Just as the "New Deal" under FDR had made every president (and congress) from Truman to Nixon a "New Deal" president, Reagan dismantled it and no President since has ever considered undoing the Reagan ideal of America.
This is a bit of a ramble, but it's Saturday night.
Nevertheless, even though it seems like worker rights have eroded, we also have some of the most prosperous living and working conditions in part due to the gradual invisible revolution of these labor policies. However, ironically or paradoxically, much of that is the result of the fact that the United States is not a producing nation in the way that we were before Reagan or even Nixon. Other than extremely destructive and increasingly complicated military equipment and agricultural products, America doesn't produce much in a global industrial sense even though we still have the minds for it.
So, we may be a nation of people living paycheck to paycheck, we are not really workers. We're all consumers. Production is hard work, but people need to work to consume - the essential behavior of the society - so there are any number of unnecessary jobs out there to put money in people's pockets.
Which comes down to my basic controversial thesis - work is a compulsion by the worker in the same way that alcohol or drugs or the television and movies and internet encourage compulsive behavior. Work for an increasing number of people is a distraction they need to avoid severe emotional distress. People work so they feel good about buying crap they don't need.
Jerry Seinfeld does a
hilarious acceptance speech for the Clio advertiser's award, but at its kernal is the idea that wanting something provides much greater pleasure than having that thing. The distraction of shopping is the purpose of production. The product provides the fetish or ideal objective for the consumer to want and that is the end - the sublimated objective - not the actual satisfaction of that desire. Desire projects the wanting person into an imagined future state of happiness that is dashed by the actual arrival of the product that leads inevitably to either disappointment or disinterest. Desire is the essence of all distraction.
It is possibly this potentially revolutionary principle that guides the expression of work and production in a modern society far more than rational theories or mathematical and logical concepts emerging from economics.
So, a radical production philosophy that could overturn that would first need to assert those things that cannot be bought - that must be earned and experience - should be available to everyone and not something that can be monetized. However, in our society, what exactly has not been monetized or quantified or used to sell something to fire our desire?