b'We are peering towards the New World of unlimited technological promise and global access, but weve never left the Old World of consumerism, tribalism and wealth inequality.The problem is our map. Homo economicus is still relying on a centuries-old map, whose features were shaped by colonial expansion, the industrial revolution and the logic of a world that had little knowledge of ecological systems. Its a map drawn by Adam Smiths invisible hand and, the hype and glitter of the Age of Ones and Zeros notwithstanding, we havent revised it.The Map of the World According to the Invisible Hand shows only two economic continents: Investing and Philanthropy. 11The continent of Investing is where we pursue profit, economic growth, rising standards of living, cheap commodities, mass production, effi-ciency, technological innovation, competition, wealth, personal gain. The continent of Philanthropy is where we take a tiny fraction of the proceeds generated on Continent One and allocate it to the nonprofit pursuit of diversity, community, ecology, faith, education, art, health. Perhaps it was inevitable that a map showing only these two continents would lead us to think in terms of binary choiceseither you are a Deal Doer or a Do Gooder, a 1%er or an Occupier, a capitalist or a socialist. 11 In The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith describes how each person intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention. . . By pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes that of the society more effectually than when he really intends to promote it. (Book IV, Chapter 2)88'