While I don't disagree with your tenet that greed and the desire to acquire leads to items having value, I think you might as well try to produce a human without lungs as one without greed. Nature dictates that the greedy survive. A powerful lion is greedy, he eats all he can, he procreates with all the females he can get ahold of, and this continues until another more powerful lion comes along to carry on the tradition.
Humans, at the end of the day, are not that much different than animals. We have a desire for those items which makes life possible, first, then those items which makes life pleasurable. While there is a finite amount of need for those items necessary for life, air, water, food, there is no self limiting on the desire for the items which make life pleasurable.
Greed is bad? Depends upon who you ask. Greed has led to all the major inovations and inventions of our time. If not for a hope of pecuniary gain, people would cease to produce the goods and services which has lead to our current way of life. Air conditioning, clothing, transportation, etc. etc. etc. are all where they are because some clever inventor, attempting to improve his own net worth, came up with a better mousetrap, so to speak.
It is very common for us to look at the simple tribesman, the "noble savage" and say he has no greed, and that is the way we should all live. This notion is widespread, tho likely misguided. And even if not misguided, it is certainly unworkable. Ancient man had an insatiable greed for the things which sustain life, just as we do today. It is unlikely that he also did not have a similar greed for the things which brought pleasure to his existence. He simply was limited in his choice of pleasurable items. And he was quite tied up with the time and energy it took to acquire the things which make life possible at all, including food, water and shelter.
As soon as those ancient people started up agriculture and industry, they began the road which inevitably led to what you see when you look around you today.
B.