Modified
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2006
- Messages
- 6,985
Like penguins?
As far as I know, penguins don't swap money for things of value.
Like penguins?
They use pebbles . . . .As far as I know, penguins don't swap money for things of value.
A definition of money is not that easy to nail down.bartering is value for value,
Money is an iou for that value,
All of that fits under my definition.A definition of money is not that easy to nail down.
Modern (fiat) money is essentially IOUs for sure. However, commodities like gold, bitcoin, sea shells etc are not issued by any person and don't promise that they can be exchanged for anything of value (but people are willing to do so). Then there is fiduciary money which again is an IOU but the issuer promises to give the commodity it represents in exchange.
How do you track and evaluate the job they have done, though? It sounds as if you're just describing barter with lax rules.
And, of course, as always, your model is of a simplistic, primitive society. You don't "go in a market and take" a balanced and mounted set of tires for your car, a chain for your bicycle, a television set, a tank of acetylene and a set of baby shoes, and stuff them in a sack to take home.
I like to use the simple example of how I would get a set of brake rotors for my Hyundai. It's not just that an attempt to deal directly would take time away from my life. It's that it could not be done. The only possible way it might be done would probably result either in a set of brake rotors cast in a sand pit out of scrap metal, or good precise ones as expensive as a house.
Nothing goes beyond having fun, what do you think human being do during their lives?The formatting above is a little dense, but I would note a couple of things.
First of all, the inconvenience of pure barter goes beyond having fun
with the time saved, and becomes a matter of actual productivity soon enough. If we did not have money or some similar equivalent, forget fun: we wouldn't have the time or energy to get any complex job done or product made.
Here's my view.I like to use the simple example of how I would get a set of brake rotors for my Hyundai. It's not just that an attempt to deal directly would take time away from my life. It's that it could not be done. The only possible way it might be done would probably result either in a set of brake rotors cast in a sand pit out of scrap metal, or good precise ones as expensive as a house.
I would also note that although the primary purpose of money is, of course, to buy things for your labor, it has other purposes that are important at least to some people. One of the chief of those is capital. If you are going to establish a business - say a brake rotor factory - you can't just walk down the street and say "I think I'll make brake rotors today." Assuming you do not live in a state where the government does it, you need to find investors who will do more than just promise to work a lathe or sweep a corridor. You need money, and you need to get it from people whose vision of what money is for goes beyond simple barter. The very idea of a capitalist economy complicates the role of money.
Here's my view.There is also the issue (fraught with controversy no doubt) of inheritance. Many people consider money not in terms of what it will buy them within their lifetimes, but what it will procure to their heirs in theirs. Now of course, you may well consider this a bad idea, and be one who favors the idea that no inheritance should ever take place, but without it, our economy (and our distribution and use of capital) would be very different.
"After all, if someone loses money, someone else gains it. Is that good or bad? " If both participants are having fun it is good, if both are not having fun it is bad, and if one of the two is not having fun it is conflict, which is the worse.As for the winners and losers, again one can argue both sides of this, but for many it's clear that the purpose of money is, essentially, as a marker in a game. In theory of course one gambles some money in order to get more, in order to do something with it later. But in practice, it seems, some people gamble money in order to get more money in order to gamble more. Later never comes. It remains to decide whether this sport is good or bad for the rest of us. After all, if someone loses money, someone else gains it. Is that good or bad?
Finally, I would reiterate that money may serve a social purpose which, while it is not purely related to monetary value, would be met one way or another by something else if money did not exist. It's fashionable among rich conservative folk to argue against taxation and the like on the grounds that one is "penalizing the best," and the implication is clear that for them, money is not just money, but an indication of personal superiority. Making it and holding on to it are markers of social superiority. In many feudal societies and their descendants, class makes money. Here in the US, money makes class. If money were not the gauge, I suggest that something else would be. Of course the counter-argument to that would be that if money were not the gauge, the determination of who is the best would be different. But if you go into that hole, beware: it's full of bees and spiders!
...what?
Kids?
From what I think I know (then I could easily be wrong), ....<snip>
5. The kids who produce and the kids who consumeFrom what I think I know (then I could easily be wrong), the economy consists of:
1. Kids who are working for other kids = employees
2. Kids for who other kids are working for = employers
3. The actions all the kids do for one another = trade
4. The current rules trying to specify what is allowed and what is not = law