The situatin is quite different in human societies [from the
social insects]. For one thing, the coordination among their component
parts is often poor. for another, their components do not always
function in ways that are conducive to the well-being of the systme itself
(i.e., the society). For example, their members are individualistic
and often self-assertive, resist efforts to coordinate and control their
behavior, and do not readily subordinate their needs to the needs of the
group. In short, a genetic blue-print that is very different from
the honeybee's, but just as compelling, prevents human societies from achieving
the strict ordering of relations that characterizes some systems (1991,
p. 20).