"while our worldview is "everything is a competition" that is how we will interpret what we see."
If you think that the idea that competition is rife is merely a product of our world view, stop competing for a while and see what happens. You may have to think carefully about what all constitutes "competition"; you come from a very long line of survivors and there's a lot of competitive behaviors that come naturally to you. Squeezing them all out may take some work.
Competition is a second-order effect; the primary cause is the limited nature of desirable resources, and the ability of resources consumers to step up their rate of consumption exponentially in the face of an increase of resources. Unless you can prove that resources are not limited here and now, you're going to get competition.
Scarce resources can be coped with by both cooperation and competition (and other modes?). If there's limited water, we can share it - thus enabling us to have more people to hunt/gather resources. If you keep all the water you'll be stronger, but perhaps you'll hunt less effectively, struggle to gather enough resources, etc..
Competition isn't always the best way to cope with limited resources.
Competition between different groups within which there is cooperation, that's another option, of course.
If you think that the idea that competition is rife is merely a product of our world view, stop competing for a while and see what happens. You may have to think carefully about what all constitutes "competition"; you come from a very long line of survivors and there's a lot of competitive behaviors that come naturally to you. Squeezing them all out may take some work.
Competition is a second-order effect; the primary cause is the limited nature of desirable resources, and the ability of resources consumers to step up their rate of consumption exponentially in the face of an increase of resources. Unless you can prove that resources are not limited here and now, you're going to get competition.