My writing here about unity, as it relates to sharing vs competition, is vague, hardly summarizing the source material at Laurency.com (books). They, (the esotericians and Pythagoreans), do map out the levels of existence, from earth, (a physically dense world), to higher realms of existence, (worlds with lighter work loads and more freedom, more sharing). While encouraging voluntary, human evolution upwards, to improve earth-life at very the least. They call this map a hypothesis, for humans to objectively try it (by developing more consciousness, including as a personal experience).

Evolution beyond the need of money or commerce is conventionally so far ahead of current worldly conventions, it is hard to discuss this topic directly. Yet there are extensive essays to see the steps of evolution ensuing. Example of preliminary navigation:

Quote 1.17 The Art of Living

Morality is the infantile version of the art of living….
...Thus morality is enforced conventions for the subjectively minor. When, in addition to this, morality lays down any kind of “thou shalt” or “thou shalt not”, it violates personal freedom or individual sovereignty. Morality has not any right whatsoever to do so. Without his sovereignty the individual will never find the law that he will himself become. Man does not exist for the sake of convention. As long as convention is above man, as long as man can be judged according to convention, so long man is deprived of his human right and human dignity. The slaves to convention regard their slavery as the meaning of life.

The art of living is tact, duty, and virtue. Tact is the inability to hurt. Duty is to fulfil one’s task. Virtue is the “golden mean” between the extremes. The art of living is far from self-torture and moral complexes. The art of living requires the insight that commands do not raise the level of culture, that life grants freedom and men issue commands, since they deny each other freedom. The art of living is (also from the collective point of view) the art of the possible.
http://www.laurency.com/DVSe/ps1.pdf