Thursday, November 25, 2021

ГЕОРГ ЗИМЕЛ: Филозофијата на Парите

СОДРЖИНА

Preface

 

ANALYTICAL PART

Chapter 1

Value and Money

 

I

Reality and value as mutually independent categories through which our conception become images of the world

 

The psychological fact of objective value

 

Objectivity in practice as standardization or as a guarantee for the totality of subjective values

 

Economic value as the objectification of subjective values, as a result of establishing distance between the consuming subject and the object

 

An analogy with aesthetic value

 

Economic activity establishes distances and overcomes them

 

II

Exchange as a means of overcoming the purely subjective value significance of an object

 

In exchange, objects express their value reciprocally

 

The value of an object becomes objectified by exchanging it for another object

 

Exchange as a form of life and as a condition of economic value, as a primary economic fact

 

Analysis of the theories of utility and scarcity

 

Value and price: the socially fixed price as a preliminary stage of the objectively regulated price

 

III

Incorporation of economic value and relativistic world view

 

The epistemology of relativistic world view

 

The construction of proofs in infinite series and their reciprocal legitimation

 

The objectivity of truth as well as of value viewed as a relation between subjective elements

 

Money as the autonomous manifestation of exchange relation which transforms desired objects into economic objects, and establishes the substitutability of objects

 

Analysis of the nature of money with references to its value stability, its development and its objectivity

 

Money as a reification of the general form of existence according to which things derive their significance from their relationship to each other

 

Chapter 2

The Value of Money as a Substance

 

I

The intrinsic value of money and the measurement of value

 

Problems of measurement

 

The quantity of effective money

 

Does money posses any intrinsic value?

 

The development of the purely symbolic character of money

 

II

Renunciation of the non-monetary uses of monetary material

 

The first argument against money as a merely a symbol: the relations of money and goods, which would make an intrinsic value for money superfluous, are not accurately determinable; intrinsic value remedies this deficiency

 

The second argument against money as merely a symbol: the unlimited augmentability of monetary symbols; relativistic indifference to the absolute limits of monetary quantity and the errors to which this indifference leads

 

The supply of money

 

The reciprocal nature of the limitation that reality places on pure concepts

 

III

The historical development of money from substance to function

 

Social interactions and their crystallization into separate structures; the common relations of buyer and seller to the social unit as the sociological premise of monetary intercourse

 

Monetary policy: largeness and smallness, diffuseness and concentration of the economic circle in their significance for the intrinsic character of money

 

Social interaction and exchange relations: Money’s function: its facilitation of trade, its constancy as a measure of value, its mobilization and condensation of values

 

The nature of economic circle and its signification for money

 

The transition to money’s general functional character

 

The declining significance of money as a substance

 

The increasing function of money as value

 

Chapter 3

Money in the Sequence of Purposes

 

Action towards an end as the conscious interaction between subject and object

 

The varying length of teleological series

 

The tool as intensified means

 

Money as a purest example of a tool

 

The unlimited possibilities for utilization of money

 

The unearned increment of wealth

 

The difference between the same amount of money as part of a large and of a small fortune

 

Money – because of its character as pure means – as peculiarly congruent with personality types that are not closely united with social groups

 

II

The psychological growth of means into ends

 

Money as the most extreme example of a means becoming an end

 

Money as an end depends upon the cultural tendencies of an epoch

 

Psychological consequences of money’s teleological position

 

Greed and avarice

 

Extravagance

 

Ascetic poverty

 

Cynicism

 

The blasé attitude

 

III

The quantity of money as its quality

 

Subjective differences in amounts of risk

 

The qualitatively different consequences of quantitatively altered causes

 

The threshold of economic awareness

 

Differential sensitivity towards economic stimuli

 

Relations between external stimuli and emotional responses in the filed of money

 

Significance of the personal unity of the owner

 

The material and cultural relation of form and amount

 

The relation between quantity and quality of things, and the significance of money for this relation

 

 

SYNTHETIC PART

Chapter 4

Individual Freedom

 

I

Freedom exists with conjunction with duties

 

The gradations of this freedom depend on whether the duties are directly personal or apply only to the products of labor

 

Money payment as the form of most congruent with personal freedom

 

The maximization of value through changes in ownership

 

Cultural development increases the number of persons on whom one is dependent and the simultaneous decrease in ties to persons viewed as individuals

 

Money is responsible for impersonal relations between people, and thus for individual freedom

 

II

Possession and activity

 

The mutual dependence of having and being

 

The dissolving of this dependency by the possession of money

 

Lack of freedom as the interweaving of the mental series: this lack at a minimum when the interweaving of either is with the most general of other series

 

Its application to limitations deriving from economic interests

 

Freedom as the articulation of the self in the medium of things, that is, freedom as possession

 

The possession of money and the self

 

III

Differentiation of person and possession

 

Spatial separation and technical objectification through money

 

The separation of the total personality from individual work activities and the results of this separation for the evaluation of these work activities

 

The development of individual’s independence from the group

 

New forms of association brought about by money; the association planned for purpose

 

General relations between a money economy and the principle of individualism

 

Chapter 5

The Money Equivalent of Personal Values

 

I

Wergild

 

The transition from the utilitarian to the objective and absolute valuation of the human being

 

Punishment by fine and the stages of culture

 

The increasing inadequacy of money

 

Marriage by purchase

 

Marriage by purchase and the value of women

 

Division of labor among the sexes, and the dowry

 

The typical relation between money and prostitution, its development analogous to that of wergild

 

Marriage for money

 

Bribery

 

Money and the ideal of distinction

 

II

The transformation of specific rights into monetary claims

 

The enforceability of demands

 

The transformation of substantive values into money values

 

The negative meaning of freedom and the extirpation of the personality

 

The difference in value between personal achievement and monetary equivalent

 

III

‘Labor money’ and its rationale

 

The unpaid contribution of mental effort

 

Differences in types of labor as quantitative differences

 

Manual labor as the unit of labor

 

The value of psychical activity reducible to that of mental activity

 

Differences in the utility of labor as arguments against ‘labor money’: the insight into the significance of money thereby afforded

 

Chapter 6

The Style of Life

 

I

The preponderance of intellectual over emotional functions brought about by the money economy

 

Lack of character and objectivity of the style of life

 

The dual roles of both intellect and money: with regard to content they are supra-personal

 

The dual roles of intellect and money: with regard to function they are individualistic and egoistic

 

Money’s relationship to the rationalism of law and logic

 

The calculating character of modern times

 

 

II

The concept of culture

 

The increase in material culture and the lag in individual culture

 

The objectification of mind

 

The division of labor as the cause of the divergence of subjective and objective culture

 

The occasional greater weight of subjective culture

 

The relation of money to the agents of these opposing tendencies

 

 

III

Alternations in the distance between the self and objects as the manifestation of varying styles of life

 

Modern tendencies towards the increase and diminution of this distance

 

The part played by money in this dual process

 

Credit

 

The pre-eminence of technology

 

The rhythm of symmetry, and its opposite, of the contents of life

 

The sequence and simultaneity of rhythm and symmetry

 

Analogous developments in money

 

The pace of life, its alternations and those of the money supply

 

The concentration of money activity

 

The mobilization of values

 

Constancy and flux as categories for comprehending the world, their synthesis in the relative character of existence

 

Afterword: The constitution of text

 

Index

 

 

 

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