MeisterEckhart wrote on Mar 8
th, 2024 at 5:04pm:
Frank wrote on Mar 8
th, 2024 at 4:51pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Mar 8
th, 2024 at 4:09pm:
Frank wrote on Mar 8
th, 2024 at 4:05pm:
You are not suggesting, are you, that all goods, labour, services were exchanged first into cows and then the cows were exchanged for other goods, labour etc.
That is exactly how cows were used.
If a clan didn't have any cows, or not enough as a medium of exchange, they had to resort solely to bartering, begging or offering their labour in exchange for food and shelter.
So they were bartering things for cows.
The thing about cows, versus money, is that they are not portable and do not have a variety of denominations. Additionally, money being an abstract concept, it has no other function than as a medium of echange into which any tradable value can be readily 'translated'. A cow is not money j uyst because it has value and can be exchanged for other things of roughly similar value?
The entire point of money - and partially the mystery of it - is that it is totally abstract, like the measure of time, yet very well suited for the performance of its function, unlike cows or bulls.
It's no accident that money and time are uncountable - how much money/ time do you have? - and only their measure is countable as dollars, hours, cows.
The reason gold and silver are valued was because of their lustre and extreme scarcity, and the immense effort that was required to mine them - no mystery at all.
Well, cows have no lustre, aren't scarce and they multiply without h human effort.
Just on those counts they are obviously nothing like gold.
Anyway, the first question is of value. What is value? And what is the
exchangeable subsection of value? Not all value is tradable.
The second question is how to express exchangeable value that is applicable to everything that does have such exchangable value?
Cows do have value but are not value only. They are exchangeable but not only that. You can express some exchangeable value in cows but most you can't.
Money, on the other hand , has no value UNLESS it is exchangeable for things with tradable value. Hyperinflation money brings this into stark light.
There has never been and never will be a hyperinflation of cows.
Money, on the other hand, expresses every