Money of course depends on a pre established living system; us. But it is not separate from us either, as we all hold the belief that money exists and can be used. So it could be viewed as an extension of our own living systems that has its own body and its own purpose and agenda. Consider that we are born into a world where money dominates and none of us can do much to convince each other otherwise. We can simply agree to use it or well... starve or live in poverty or “off the grid”.
4/5) Growth/ development/ Regulation or homestasis - think society - central banks, the fiscal legal system, public demand, commodities, design features ( anti-fraud measures and security) - all in place to ensure money stays in a relatively functional state of having a certain value. Mechanisms are there to counter inflation and other economic phenomenon that could render money untrustworthy/ valueless.
6). Nutrition: metals (coins), paper (notes/cheques) plastic (cards), etc. Metabolism: exchange of money between people In order to carry out a diverse range of processes; construction, renewal, development, innovation, destruction, maintenance all of which can produce money, help to exchange thus propagating its value.
7). Excretion (old bank notes and outdated coins etc are disposed of and replaced)
2). Order and self organisation; money comes in may forms and structures and orders of magnitude. It is self organised in that money has a tendency to congregate: to go away from areas of low wealth and towards areas of greater wealth. Once in areas of wealth (power and influence) it can put in place more avenues/ means by which it can continue to accumulate there.
3). Reproduction: Money drives the work done to produce itself. If you didn’t hand the staff at the mint a paycheck they wouldn’t make the money used to pay them. Ironic.
4). Sensitivity and resonance to the environment. Money is highly sensitive to conditions of the human environment; war, unrest and uncertain times tend to dirige inflation of (a reduction in the belief that money has value) to a society whilst times of prosperity strengthen a currency. Consider the last person alive in a catastrophe... this is value zero for money (ie. the point at which money has lost all value as it can’t be used to do anything for one person... what are they going to do... pay themselves?)
Here we see that in certain ways the monetary system possesses (as an extension of us) all the features of a living system. Can it be said then that we birthed an organism that is more powerful and more self perpetuating than the individual human? Or perhaps a virus of kinds that feeds off of us (a host) to survive and do it’s bidding? — Benj96
Here we see that in certain ways the monetary system possesses (as an extension of us) all the features of a living system. Can it be said then that we birthed an organism that is more powerful and more self perpetuating than the individual human? Or perhaps a virus of kinds that feeds off of us (a host) to survive and do it’s bidding? — Benj96
↪Benj96 Biological systems are based on chemistry and physics. If it thrives or dies is based on quite logical reasoning. A monetary system is a faith based system.
Does this make a problem to your model? — ssu
Yes. I suspect that Richard Dawkins would agree that "Money" is a meme, which replicates in human minds like a virus. Most viruses are innocuous for humans, but some may cause a worldwide Pandemic. In that battle for the soul of mankind, some humans fight the invasive "trickle-down" Capitalist Virus with its antithesis, the supposedly "bottom-up" Socialist Virus.Here we see that in certain ways the monetary system possesses (as an extension of us) all the features of a living system. Can it be said then that we birthed an organism that is more powerful and more self perpetuating than the individual human? Or perhaps a virus of kinds that feeds off of us (a host) to survive and do it’s bidding? — Benj96
The question I'd ask is less "can such a comparison be made" and more "what does it entail"? What new insights do you think this conceptualisation offers? What predictions result from applying it? Does it agree with the actual history of money? — Echarmion
The question I'd ask is less "can such a comparison be made" and more "what does it entail"? What new insights do you think this conceptualisation offers? What predictions result from applying it? Does it agree with the actual history of money? — Echarmion
hich Money Meme do you think is becoming "more powerful and more self perpetuating than the individual human"? Are we merely passive hosts for the greedy artificial Money Matrix? Will humanity survive the monetization of the mind? Are we becoming mere organic "bots" for transporting unnatural selfish money memes? :joke: — Gnomon
No new insights to me, as the concept of money has always been a subject of studies of societies. Our view of money is a reflection of our values as people. Our use of money is a reflection of our requirements for happiness. — Caldwell
I find it curious that you made this comparison. As when we study biology or specifically bioenergetics we come to the understanding that ATP is the “energy currency” of the cell. Why is it that even in biology money or “the symbolic potential to release energy/ perform actions” is an inescapable truth of the development and persistence of ordered intelligent systems. Cells have societies too do they not? ;) — Benj96
Sorry perhaps comparison isn’t the right word. “Association”. The tie of money to a group. Value as a concept exchange between multiple individuals — Benj96
There is currently no consensus regarding the definition of life. — Wikipedia
In fact if money is a process of the living it stand to reason that it’s less of a jump than the statement “the living is a process of the dead/inanimate (physics/chemistry). — Benj96
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