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My real purpose here is to talk about Gresham’s Law, one of the most ancient and impactful principles of modern human society. It hasn’t been taught in college classrooms since the socialist takeover of American education and government about a century ago, but it is the most impactful determinant of socio-economic events, global geopolitics, and the book of history.
I> ’ll get to both the ancientness of the law and how it applies to Bitcoin and resolve some of the puzzles, but first the law itself.
Gresham’s Law goes by the adage “bad money drives out good money” with the anti-capitalist ring to it that competition drives out “good money” and promotes the use of “bad money,” implying a race to the bottom is a result of capitalism.
This article explains why people are not spending their BTC. Rather, they are HODLing the BTC. Why would someone do that?
Until Thiers´ Law kicks in. Thats basically the reverse, when merchants start to demand pyment in good money and refuse to accept the shitty form of money.
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That law kicks in whenever shtty money has peoples attention called to it as shtty money. People have to figure it out and make the changes necessary.
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I think Mark is right, in essence, but technically that's not what Gresham's Law is. It may have been @denlillaapan who wrote the post (I don't remember and I'm not going to check) about this common misunderstanding.
Bad money drives out good...when there's a fixed exchange rate.
This is pretty clearly a requirement, seeing as we don't all use some third world hyperinflationary fiat for our day-to-day.
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Yes, when the state intervenes in the fixing of the ratio between the two. They really learned this lesson good and hard when they tried to fix the ratio between silver and gold. All of the gold disappeared from he marketplace.
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Yup, guilty. #738907
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Thornton's stories from monetary history are fascinating stories and examples that have nothing to do with Gresham's Law.
Honestly, this has been stated up and down popular and academic outlets but the mind virus of confusing Gresham takes just will not freakin die! #738907
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0 sats \ 8 replies \ @jk_14 20h
There is no such thing as Gresham's Law... The proper name is: Copernicus' Law: #128857
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Like many other intellectual discoveries, Gresham’s law came from someone else, however, the accepted use is the name Gresham’s Law no matter what others would like to say, now. Einstein took a lot of his work from others, should we do all of the revisionism now, to everyone’s confusion?
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Precisely
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You would like the confusion that this would entail? Things have been named, to rename them would be confusing for the laity, least, if not the “experts”, too.
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no, I mean your comment is spot on: yes, things have origins; no, we just keep the names they go by.
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Yes, what’s done is done.
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0 sats \ 2 replies \ @jk_14 15h
Einstein took a lot of his work from others, should we do all of the revisionism now
yes of course, if there is so obvious intelectual theft like in case of Copernicus' Law ;)
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Letting everybody know that the IP was stolen is OK, maybe, changing the name would entail too much work in the way or rewriting all of the textbooks and etc.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @jk_14 5h
"An old statement “Bad money drives out good.” has become increasingly popular in recent years. The original statement is attributed to Nicolaus Copernicus, the great Polish thinker educated in Italy. A mathematician, an astronomer, a physician, a classics scholar, a translator, a governor, a diplomat and an economist, Copernicus is indeed one of the most brilliant minds that ever lived on earth.
During his old age, a young economist by the name of Thomas Gresham, further expanded the concept initiated by Copernicus and he made an economic law out of it..."
but sir somehow "forgot" about the origin... :/
As you can see, it's not a big deal to write: Copernicus-Gresham's Law...
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