Larry Gallagher

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Most economists are wary of interrogating the specific needs or desires that might make things seem scarce in the first place. They dispose of questions such as why non-essential things like diamonds are more valuable than essential things like water as the “paradox of value,” and for the most part are content to say that it doesn’t much bother them why or what motivates different needs, as the relative value of those needs will be adjudicated by markets.
Work: A Deep History, from the Stone Age to the Age of Robots
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