Pochsy wrote:
So, to make sure I understand correctly, you're trying to argue that realist thinkers
Not realist thinkers, establishment thinkers.
Pochsy wrote:
...are wrong because relative gains (trying to make sure you get more than the next guy,
Not trying to get more than the next guy, trying to get more than you have through uneven trade.
That is to say there is no problem with having $1000 of yams before the trade and then $1000 of yams and brown sugar, but there is a problem having $1000 worth of yams and then screwing someone over for $1500 worth of yams and brown sugar.
Pochsy wrote:
...however you subjectively define 'more')
More is more. You don't have to define original value to know you have more than you used to.
Pochsy wrote:
...are less efficient than the absolute gains (we all rise together, lets hold hands) of liberal thinkers?
I don't know about the liberal thinkers part but sure. Greed is a by-product of human nature not right-wing capitalism.
Pochsy wrote:
And all this surrounding a poor definition of compromise without a proper context?
The dictionary definition of compromise is fine and the argument doesn't really need any context. I was only apologizing to Poe in that I did not explain examples of what most would (wrongly) consider compromise in the first place and save everyone some trouble. Usually I try to either use the word as others on the forum use the word, regardless as to its true meaning or issues I have with the word, or I hash out my issues with how the word is typically used in the first place. I failed to do so in this instance.
Pug wrote:
Ahh, so are you arguing there is no such thing as a compromise, because it's the maximum value is what everyone gets anyway? aka the only deal possible is the compromise?
All true
when both minds are fair.
The issue I take is when someone abuses the idea of compromise to get more than they should. The only time compromise exists is when there is a snake in the equation, in which case it is unequivocally bad.
JohnG@lt wrote:
Trades, by their very definition are a compromise. It's impossible for both parties to get exactly what they want.
And no, the value added after the trade is not irrelevant at all. The trade allowed both companies to proceed with things that wouldn't be possible without the trade, so that value must be included at least partially.
Btw, you're insistence that every transaction is zero-sum is coming very close to invoking the fallacy of Say's Law.
uh, no. You of all people should know what you want has nothing to do with it. You go to the store and buy gum for a quarter. You might
want the gum to be free, fact is it's not. If you felt the trade wasn't fair you wouldn't make it. Compromise never enters the equation.
That value is what makes the parties want to trade in the first place, as I said. That is the allocative value of the goods. Going from $1000 worth of yams to $1000 of yams
and brown sugar is awesome and delicious because now you can make candied yams. Fuck the guy with the brown sugar doesn't care what the yam guy is going to use the brown sugar for, the yam guy could roll around in it for all he cares. The important part is the trade is even in both minds and the value added is from whatever reason the yam guy feels its in his best interest to have $1000 of both yams and brown sugar instead of just yams.
Every transaction should be zero-sum. Didn't say they were all zero-sum. Quite the opposite really, there wouldn't be a point to the thread if I thought all transactions were zero-sum.
Pug wrote:
If this inefficiency was solved, wouldn't that mean there's nothing leftover on the table? If that happened, have you thought about the impact this would have on technology - aka we only do what is asked and nothing more?
wat
Are you saying the economy would halt because there would be no scarcity? Why?