Word: non-zero-sum
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Solomon believed Israel could benefit - economically and otherwise - by staying on good terms with nearby nations. As game theorists say, he saw relations with other nations as non-zero-sum; the fortunes of Israel and other nations were positively correlated, so outcomes could be win-win or lose-lose. His warmth toward those religions was a way of making the win-win outcome more likely...
Again and again in the Bible, this perception of non-zero-sumness underlies religious tolerance. This doesn't mean religious tolerance is always consciously calculated. The human mind does lots of subterranean work to pave the way for social success. But whether the calculation is conscious or not, people are more open to the religious beliefs of other people if they sense a non-zero-sum dynamic...
Happily, after the exile, life got more non-zero-sum. The Babylonians who had conquered Israel were in turn conquered by the Persians, who returned the exiles to their homeland. Israel was no longer in a bad neighborhood. Nearby nations were now fellow members of the Persian Empire and so no longer threats. And, predictably, books of the Bible typically dated as postexilic, such as Ruth and Jonah, strike a warm tone toward peoples - Moabites and Assyrians - that in pre-exilic times had been vilified...
Relations among nations have long been getting more non-zero-sum. The fates of national economies are more and more shared--win-win or lose-lose. And nuclear weapons have made war a highly non-zero-sum game, a lose-lose game that you win by not playing...
...United Nations and other such bodies into a genuine system of world governance. That's not a crazy thought, assuming technological evolution keeps following the path that biological evolution embarked on a few billion years ago--giving rise to larger and more elaborate and more far-flung non-zero-sum games featuring more and more players...