The Philosophy of Money (1900) is a book on
economic sociology by the German
sociologist and
social philosopher,
Georg Simmel
Probably considered Simmel's greatest work. Simmel saw money as a
structuring agent that helps us understand the totality of life.
Money and value
Simmel
believed people created value by making objects, then separating
themselves from those objects and then trying to overcome that distance.
He found that objects that were too close were not considered valuable
and objects that were too far away for people to obtain were also not
considered valuable. What was also considered in determining value was
the scarcity, time, sacrifice, and difficulties involved in getting
objects. In the pre-modern era, beginning with bartering, different
systems of exchange for goods and services allowed for the existence of
incomparable systems of value (land, food, honor, love, etc.). With the
advent of a universal currency as an intermediary, these systems became
reconcilable, as everything tended to become expressible in a single
quantifiable metric: its monetary cost.
Social effects of money
Simmel's
outlook, while gloomy, is not wholly negative. As money and
transactions increase, the independence of an individual decreases as he
or she is drawn into a holistic network of exchange governed by
quantifiable monetary value. Paradoxically, this results in greater
potential freedom of choice for the individual, as money can be deployed
toward any possible goal, even if most people's sheer lack of money
renders that potential quite low much of the time. Money's homogenizing
nature encourages greater liberty and equality, even as it minimizes
exceptional, incommensurable achievements in art and love.
No comments:
Post a Comment