You can look at what reputation represents at many levels.
At a zoomed in level it's an incentive for users to do their best to make their answers as useful as they can for others. This way they increase their likelihood of receiving reputation (pleasure) and avoiding downvoting (pain). Even people who ask questions have the incentive of asking their question in proper and clear form or have to fear for being down-voted. Resulting in abstraction from their question and decreasing the chance of a real answer. These incentive are in the form of upvotes, replies and even down-votes. For the community and all the people who visit the site, it makes good and bad answers measurable and makes it easier to find the most valuable answer fast. Topics with more upvotes are also easier to find with the search function.
If you zoom out to a larger scale, you can also notice trending topics by viewing where the most reputation is being given. To see what's going on in the world, which real life problems are popular and which questions are important. Overall I think that when technology evolves that also the question that are being asked change in their direction, ever so slightly. The shift in interesting topics, probably also changes where you can earn the most reputation. This probably makes having a high reputation more relevant since you can assume that a person with a high reputation has real applicable day to day knowledge.
I think that the zoomed in and zoomed out perspective as described give the users a sense of belonging. Either at a zoomed in level, where you can get a good feeling for helping others and are rewarded mainly in the form of reputation (since you are not allowed to say +1 or "thanks"). At a zoomed out level it can be used as a kind of resume for even something like a job-interview to show that you're active in the field and have experience with current day problems.
L0 8A77
, what does that mean?