This is an interesting and profound assertion. How does it lift us out and what is mundane? — Marcus de Brun
I don't agree that greed is immoral. It's amoral. The marketplace challenges its residents to wake up from a slave mentality and become self possessed. It's the aristocrat who glorifies the blind submission of the people....perhaps the greatest or purest local or personal immorality is in essence the consumptive act or trade. If economics is the basis of political systems, borders, deprivation, ecological destruction etc, this elevation out of the mundane has deeper import, in that our belief's in respect of that which is mundane may well be socially programmed in order to facilitate trade. — Marcus de Brun
There does appear to be an anti-trade anti-consumption or minimalist philosophy that is gaing ground and may represent the grren shoots of an entirely alternate view on that which is mundane. Self sufficiency and the necessity for trade and consumption in general are evolving concepts that may shape the future in a more substantive form than technology — Marcus de Brun
This is a mish-mash assertion. ...The flint changed for you, your use for the flint has nothing to do with fire .....But note that in the moment I exchange my flint for a shell necklace, the flint changed for me. My use for the flint has nothing to do with fire. If has to do with coming to own the necklace. — frank
Either your use for the flint changed or the essence of the flint changed. Which one? — Caldwell
Okay.When I decide to trade the flint, it's a part of me that is lifted up from a kind of unconscious obscurity to be witnessed as a thing of value. Trade takes things out of the shadows. — frank
Interesting view. You're concerned with salvation. — frank
No. Valuewise, as they are. — Caldwell
So, it's your perception that changed. — Caldwell
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