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#Bitcoin has "no intrinsic value" in exactly the same way language has no intrinsic value. The value of both is derived from the network it creates and what what is possible only with if that network exists. A society without language to communicate information is so poor it's hardly worth calling it a "society." The same is true for Bitcoin and sound money. Keep watching. The world of bitcoiners will keep getting wealthier, and the fiat world will keep getting poorer. You are invited anytime you would like to stop having fun staying poor using money that explicitly steals from you and says its for your benefit.

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lol, but more to the point, one communicates ideas, while the other communicates value. To communicate an idea you broadcast it (speech), to communicate value you must trade for it. Its more like a weight where you must have something on the other side of the scale for it to even be measurable. They have distinct ways to transmit the two different mediums. So really, you can't "buy language" for the same reason you can't "think money" or "speak heavy objects." But both are very costly to create and sustain, a cost that is absolutely worth it, as they allow society to exist. In fact, one could argue that language and money are quite possibly the two greatest emergent investments in human history. 🤔
Hey, I live in a society where barely anyone speaks the same language anymore, and everybody uses fiat money because bitcoin is evil and gold is for weird, old-timey aristocrats. Nobody has ever seen anyone use bitcoin for crime or met a noble but that's the beauty of propaganda, it doesn't even have to resemble reality.
The "intrinsic value" question was my personal #Bitcoin Rubicon that stopped me for so long as a recovering gold bug. The Socratic Method helped me. The question I asked myself was "does the TCP/IP protocol have "intrinsic value"? And by extention, does the internet itself have "intrinsic value"? My answer was definitively yes, but it was not necessarily tangible. I wrestled with this for awhile...The Bitcoin protocol is the same, but it has a price attached. I bought in size the next day and haven't stopped. I should have just listened to more episodes of Bitcoin Audible...it may have saved me time, but not the proof of work!
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What you’re describing is actually extrinsic value- value placed on it by people. Something with intrinsic value is something that has value without the need for that. Gold has value because of its actual material properties as an element. A company or apartment actually produces cash flow. Bitcoin only has value if someone thinks it does.
"Water is abundant and valuable." not really. only situationally. scarcity is a necessary component to value. "so everything you listed only has value because others decide to want it and they have relative scarcity?" you are trying to pick that apart in a retarded way. people must want/need it and it must be scarce. then it will acquire value. this is true for everything.
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I can’t be bothered trying to explain it anymore so maybe ai can: What he’s missing is the difference between market price/liquidity and intrinsic or situational value. He’s conflating “value” with “tradable commodity on a market.” A few points: 1. Value isn’t only economic. Water has enormous value in survival terms, even if there’s no one to sell it to you personally. If you’re stranded without water, its worth is infinite relative to your life; the market is irrelevant. Bitcoin and gold may have a price, but that price means nothing if they can’t sustain you physically or psychologically in the moment. 2. Liquidity ≠ inherent value. Just because something is hard to trade or lacks a market doesn’t make it valueless. Scarcity in a market context doesn’t generate intrinsic worth; it just allows pricing to happen. 3. Situational vs absolute value. He’s dismissing water because he’s imagining a situation where he can’t sell it. But value is highly context-dependent — to a thirsty human, water’s value is immediate and undeniable, regardless of markets. Scarcity alone does not create value; need does. 4. Human perception and utility matter. Value is tied to utility and desire, not just scarcity. Water’s utility is life-sustaining; Bitcoin’s is trust, speculation, or medium of exchange. He’s blind to the distinction between “can I sell this” and “can I survive without it.” In short: he’s thinking like a trader, not a human being. Scarcity alone doesn’t produce value; utility, desire, and consequences do.
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I think I see what you’re trying to do now. You’re basically saying that ‘intrinsic’ value is meaningless, and if something is scarce and in demand, it will have value. If it is truly scarce and lots of people want it, it will be really valuable, maybe infinitely so. Ok, so let’s say you’re correct. And let’s apply this to bitcoin. It’s scarce (21m) and lots of people want it. So it must always go up. And when people have it they’ll continue to want it. Why? Because other people want it, who will pay for it, because they want it. So the people who have it just have to convince others to want what they have, but not sell what they have, which will work because others want it.. Can you see the circular logic of this?
for the record, i don't think it ill always go up. i don't think it's valuation works as it should have anymore. but i do think that bitcoin is not like physical stuff. for example i would not want 1000 barrels of oil delivered to my door, but i would always accept a 1000 btc if someone wants to send it to me. there is no cap on what a single person can conveniently hold. it's very special in that sense.
also we already discussed that there is no value in stuff that is in infinite supply. you can make up your own bullshit, but you can't just conjure more bitcoin into existence and can't just create an advantage to yourself by printing your own money. that's why it was a schelling point. at least that was true before the paper bitcoin era. once people start to hold "bitcoin" on their bank accounts (few years tops) the banks will just make those numbers up like they did with everything. KYC/AML regulation will make sure you can only send from walled garden to walled garden which will quickly devolve into cheaper "off-chain" offerings. then bitcoin scarcity becomes a joke. the writing is on the wall. it already failed to appreciate in real terms (or against gold) for an entire cycle. the simple reason is that people are not buying bitcoin anymore, they are buying paper and weird ponzinomic affinity scams.
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Exactly. It had some value as peer to peer cash while the fees stayed low (and before other crypto did it better, eg bitcoin cash). But after that, well people didn’t want to say, well we have all this hash power supporting an inferior exchange of value, so maybe we can sell it as a store of value. But a store of what value? Its only value was as an exchange, so if you remove that, it has none. Or rather it has the value people have been convinced to believe it has. And clearly humans are pretty susceptible to extraordinary claims without any actual evidence. So the narrative works for ages. But not forever.
i think #bitcoin would still be fine with the speculation / shared hallucination about it's value. if it could hang on to it's supply cap. it would protect your purchasing power against real inflation, and it would provide an opt-out from the consequences of fiscal and monetary policy. but bitcoin in a high -trust environment (white markets) loses all of it's cherished properties. including the scarcity! bitcoin only makes sense as a low-trust (supra-legal) system. in the absence of large, liquid, established gray or black markets and circular economies that insist on final settlement on-chain and provide independent price discovery, at bifurcation the massive power advantage goes to the regulators and their enforcers, the financial institutions.
Guy Swann's avatar Guy Swann
#Bitcoin has "no intrinsic value" in exactly the same way language has no intrinsic value. The value of both is derived from the network it creates and what what is possible only with if that network exists. A society without language to communicate information is so poor it's hardly worth calling it a "society." The same is true for Bitcoin and sound money. Keep watching. The world of bitcoiners will keep getting wealthier, and the fiat world will keep getting poorer. You are invited anytime you would like to stop having fun staying poor using money that explicitly steals from you and says its for your benefit.
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