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Date: | Mon, 17 Oct 2011 09:13:17 -0400 |
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Dear Eric
It seems as though you might agree that, as the territory economics occupies
rest hard up against politics, applied economics morphs seamlessly into
political matters, and the murky waters such activities occupy. As a
citizen I deplore political misuse of economic theories, and I wish good
speed to the judiciary and legislature in tackling the very difficult issues
this raises, but I do not think my own little knowledge concerning economic
history has much to offer in assistance.
What I do have to say regarding ethics is to do with the narratives
concerning historical money use, offered by both bullionists and cartalists,
which quite often seem to depart from the facts as we know them.
Have you by any chance ever looked into a book by the anthropologist Donald
E Brown, “Hierarchy, History and Human Nature”? He outlines seemingly
profound distinctions between those “open” human societies who strove to
create objective history, and those “closed” human societies who perpetuated
only myths.
It seems to me an interesting thesis, and perhaps relevant to the issue I
pointed to. The bending of fact to make a pleasing narrative seems to me
akin to myth making, a tribalistic and quasi religious activity, which is
anti-scientific, and regrettably so.
regards
Rob Tye
York, UK
personal web site: http://www.earlyworldcoins.com
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