talent scout
Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2009
- Messages
- 92
well...if you don't think FRNs are valuable I will be happy to take them off your hands.
I sense you are being silly
well...if you don't think FRNs are valuable I will be happy to take them off your hands.
This strikes me as an odd argument.
"Does gold have intrinsic value"
If it didn't have intrinsic value, then no value can be assigned to it to judge its value.
Maybe you don't understand what value is. The above sentence makes no sence. "Value to health." How can health value something? Only intelligent beings can assign value.Just as the body organs of the heart, lungs etc have intrinsic value to health and life, gold has intrinsic value for commerce.
.Originally Posted by talent scout
This strikes me as an odd argument.
"Does gold have intrinsic value"
If it didn't have intrinsic value, then no value can be assigned to it to judge its value.
Sure there is. Have you not read the thread? It has subjective value. Just like everything else.
Just as the body organs of the heart, lungs etc have intrinsic value to health and life, gold has intrinsic value for commerce.
Maybe you don't understand what value is.
The above sentence makes no sence. "Value to health." How can health value something? Only intelligent beings can assign value.
The value of organs is also subjective.
I agree with the essence of the article, honestly.
Gold has only got value where people value it. .
Can't counterfeit it.
A News Service that obviously has a conspiracy against gold said:Ethiopia's national bank has been told to inspect all the gold in its vaults to determine its authenticity.
It follows the discovery that some of the "gold" it had bought for millions of dollars was gold-plated steel.
The first hint that something was wrong reportedly came when the Ethiopian central bank exported a consignment of gold bars to South Africa.
The South Africans sent them back, complaining that they had been sold gilded steel.
An investigation revealed that the bank had bought a consignment of fake gold from a supplier, who is now under arrest.
Other arrests followed, including business associates of the main accused; national bank officials; and chemists from the Geological Survey of Ethiopia, whose job it is to assay the bank's purchases of gold and certify that they are real.
WTH are you talking about? If you believe in an intrinsic theory of value than you are at the wrong website and in the wrong political movement.
Maybe the communist party would be a better match for you.
In numismatics, intrinsic value is the value of the metal, typically a precious metal, in a coin. For example, if gold trades at a price of USD 450 per fine troy ounce ($14/g), a coin minted from one troy ounce of fine gold would have an intrinsic value of USD 450. When the intrinsic value becomes greater than the face value, the coins are in danger of being removed from circulation in large numbers (an expression of Gresham's law). When the coin is in use as money this effect can, at the margin, mitigate forces that might otherwise cause inflation. When copper prices skyrocketed in the mid-to-late 1970s, there was a fear that the U.S. one-cent piece might succumb to this fate. In fact, this did happen, leading the Mint to change the composition of the cent in 1982.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numismatics
I'm still waiting for someone to tell me exactly how much gold is worth. I mean it should be easy to calculate if it's value is intrinsic. Also, why does the price of gold fluctuate if it's value is intrinsic?
I'm still waiting for someone to tell me exactly how much gold is worth. I mean it should be easy to calculate if it's value is intrinsic. Also, why does the price of gold fluctuate if it's value is intrinsic?
Intrinsic value, in general, is the argument that the value of a product is intrinsic within the product rather than dependent on the buyer's perception.
In commodity money, intrinsic value can be partially or entirely due to the desirable features of the object as a medium of exchange and a store of value. Examples of such features include divisibility; easily and securely storable and transportable; scarcity; and hard to counterfeit. When objects come to be used as a medium of exchange they lower the high transaction costs associated with barter and other in-kind transactions.
In numismatics, intrinsic value is the value of the metal, typically a precious metal, in a coin. For example, if gold trades at a price of USD 450 per fine troy ounce ($14/g), a coin minted from one troy ounce of fine gold would have an intrinsic value of USD 450. When the intrinsic value becomes greater than the face value, the coins are in danger of being removed from circulation in large numbers (an expression of Gresham's law). When the coin is in use as money this effect can, at the margin, mitigate forces that might otherwise cause inflation. When copper prices skyrocketed in the mid-to-late 1970s, there was a fear that the U.S. one-cent piece might succumb to this fate. In fact, this did happen, leading the Mint to change the composition of the cent in 1982.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numismatics
I'm still waiting for someone to tell me exactly how much gold is worth. I mean it should be easy to calculate if it's value is intrinsic. Also, why does the price of gold fluctuate if it's value is intrinsic?
The value of gold DOES NOT fluctuate, even if it's price based in pieces of paper does. The dollar is what is fluctuating, not gold. Gold buys more of less dollars depending on how many dollars there are floating around, just like everything else.
I'm still waiting for someone to tell me exactly how much gold is worth. I mean it should be easy to calculate if it's value is intrinsic. Also, why does the price of gold fluctuate if it's value is intrinsic?
.
I don't believe in intrinsic value, .
You don't measure the value of gold. You measure the value of other things in terms of how much gold they are worth. This is the way things work. Gold stays the same value, it's the goods that change in value. Since everything is measured in terms of gold (due to it's relatively constant supply), it has intrinsic value.