freediver wrote on Mar 6
th, 2024 at 12:37pm:
Quote:How do gold and silver have intrinsic value?
As jewellery, and in various industrial applications. For example gold plated electrical connections work well because it does not rust and has a few other good properties. Gold would probably not have become a form of money in ancient times if not for it's use as jewellery. Most other early forms of money are the same.
Gold's imagined intrinsic value is not obvious to all and neither is it universal.
Some people, tribes and cultures don't like gold or see nothing intrinsically valuable in it.
They may also see it as an evil.
As opposed to a cow whose intrinsic value is obvious, is universally indisputable and is intrinsically good - a blessing from a god, even.
However, precious metals are immensely more convenient as a medium of exchange than cows, and it is that convenience, that would have gone a long way to making them preferable to cows - and never mind the metaphysical mythology that grew around the likes of gold and silver as, say, tears of the sun god and moon goddess.
The same way such tribes would not see any value in a $100 bill since it would symbolise nothing in their world.
But there is no tribe that doesn't see value in a cow because the value of it is not at all symbolic or dependent on abstraction.
Pr each oo is metals were the first semi-symbolic, portable e symbols of cows and all other exchangable things of value, including labour.