martedì 27 marzo 2018

6 The Mere Commodity Objection

6 The Mere Commodity Objection
Note:6@@@@@@@@@@@@@@

Yellow highlight | Page: 51
The Argument
Note:Tttttttttt

Yellow highlight | Page: 51
in the process of buying and selling the painting, people are failing to appreciate and respect the painting’s
Note:IL TIMORE DI CHI TEME LA MERCIFICAZIONE

Yellow highlight | Page: 51
having merely instrumental
Note:SI TEME CHE TUTTO SIA STRUM

Yellow highlight | Page: 51
reverence or respect.
Note:CIÒ CHE SI VORREBBE

Yellow highlight | Page: 51
offer certain goods and services for sale necessarily shows that one regards those things as mere commodities.
Note:LA PORNOGRAFIA DEL COMMERCIO

Yellow highlight | Page: 52
Commodities Vs. Mere Commodities
Note:Ttttttttttttttt

Yellow highlight | Page: 52
A commodity just is, by definition, a thing governed by norms distinctive of the market, and the market norms are fundamental amoral,
Note:PER MOLTI

Yellow highlight | Page: 52
it is always an open question whether a person who buys or sells an object actually views the object as a commodity
Note:MEGLIO L APPROCCIO EMPIRICO

Yellow highlight | Page: 52
Let us say that a commodity is simply anything with a price tag,
Note:UNA DEF CHE NN SEMBRA AVERE CONNOTATI MORALI

Yellow highlight | Page: 52
A mere commodity is something with a price tag, exchanged on a market, that is properly viewed as merely having instrumental value,
Note:AL CONTRARIO...ES MONETA

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
it is an interesting, substantive thesis to say that a person buying and selling something regards the object as a mere commodity.
Note:IL CONCETTO DI MERCE PURA FACILITA L APPROCCIO EMPIRICO

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
we would need to conduct additional psychological research
Note:PSICOLOGIA

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
Commodities, But Not Mere Commodities
Note:Tttttttttttttttt

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
Consider pets.
Note:ANALOGIA

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
pets are routinely bought and sold.
Note:MA NN SONO UNA MERA MERCE

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
many people cherish their purchased pets,
Yellow highlight | Page: 53
many pet breeders have a deep love for the animals they breed.
Yellow highlight | Page: 53
Alfred Barnes accumulated one of the most prized collections of masterpieces
Note:COLLEZIONISTI D ARTE

Yellow highlight | Page: 53
Many Catholic bookstores sell candles, rosaries, prayer cards,
Yellow highlight | Page: 53
The Cavanaghs are devout Catholics
Note:L IMPRESA CHE PRODUCE TUTTE LE OSTIE USA

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
when people buy and sell certain objects, this tends over time to cause them to view the objects as mere commodities.
Note:RISPOSTA... UNA TESI PIÙ MODERATA

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
this new argument is a corruption objection, not a semiotic objection.
Note:SNATURATA L OB

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
would need to be substantiated with empirical psychological
Note:NN È UN B FILOSOFICA

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
bear the burden of proof,
Yellow highlight | Page: 54
The Meaning of Markets
Note:Ttttttttttt

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
the word “market.”
Note:UNA PAROLA CHE NN PIACE

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
voluntary exchanges
Note:CUORE DELLA DEFINIZIONE

Yellow highlight | Page: 54
purely selfish motivations,
Note:REQUISITO INESSENZIALE

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
that leaves open the possibility that there are schmarkets,
Note:IL MERCATO SENZA EGOISMO

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
lack all the bad attitudes
Yellow highlight | Page: 55
it becomes an empirical question whether any given sale in the real world is in the markets or the schmarkets.
Note:MARKET O SCHMARKET?

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
all actual markets are schmarkets.
Note:ANTICIPO TESI

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
what motivates people
Note:EGOISMO O DESIDERIO AUTENTICO? EMPIRIA

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
it’s at most an objection to the attitudes buyers and sellers
Note:LA MCO

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
It’s a complaint not about what is being sold, but how
Yellow highlight | Page: 55
A Note on the Meaning of Prices
Note:TttttttttttLA CARDINALITÀ DELL ECON RESTA SOGGETTIVA

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
lengthy attacks against cost-benefit analysis
Note:CRITICA ASSOCIATA

Yellow highlight | Page: 55
There are not merely many different valuable things, but many different kinds of values
Note:LA TESI

Yellow highlight | Page: 56
deciding between saving the rainforest or allowing more industrial production,
Note:ES

Yellow highlight | Page: 56
even if one accepts that 1) there are a plurality of different kinds of values, and 2) the way we value these different things is different, it’s still possible that the value of these goods can be expressed on a single, cardinal scale.
Note:IL CFR È POSSIBILE

Yellow highlight | Page: 57
whether one option is better than the other
Note:BASTA QS

Yellow highlight | Page: 57
we can generate an “ordinary utility function”
Yellow highlight | Page: 57
economist isn’t asserting here that all values are subjective, either. Instead, the economist remains agnostic.
Note:NON UN RELATIVISYA

Yellow highlight | Page: 57
we’ll be able to translate any ordinal utility function into a cardinal utility
Note:VON NEUMANN

Yellow highlight | Page: 58
all such preferences can be represented on a single continuous numerical scale.
Note:RAPPRESENTAZIONE NN VALORI UNICI...IL SOGGETTIVISMO RIGUARDA LA NN CFRTABILITÀ NN LA NON RAPPRESENTABILITÀ

Yellow highlight | Page: 58
not everything is fungible with money,
Note:CONSEGUENZA

Yellow highlight | Page: 58
they need to show (not merely assert) some values are radically incommensurate, such that we cannot compare them in any way, or have any preferences between them.
Note:CIÒ CHE DEVE DIMOSTRARE L ANTICOMOD

Yellow highlight | Page: 58
Bach was brilliant and Darwin was brilliant. They have a different kind of brilliance—
Note:ES. Dell ANTICOMOD

Yellow highlight | Page: 59
it seems obvious to us that adding brilliance to one eventually tilts the judgment in favor of one over the other.
Note:DIMOSTRAZIONE DI UN CFR POSSIBILE

Yellow highlight | Page: 59
Had Darwin, say, achieved everything Einstein did plus what Darwin in fact did, he would be more brilliant, tout court, than Bach.
Note:ES

Yellow highlight | Page: 59
we just don’t have enough information to quite make the comparison.
Note:FORSE MEGLIO DIRE COSÌ

Yellow highlight | Page: 60