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MugaSofer's avatar

I think a possible issue here is that a taboo tradeoff does not become less taboo if you're trading one sacred thing for another; the taboo-ness doesn't cancel out, but if anything adds together. E.g. trading sex for your child's cancer medicine is regarded as doubly tragic, not *less* tragic, because you're trading one priceless good for another.

If a person sells their liver to a sacred hospital for sacred money, and buys medicine they desperately need from another sacred hospital using that sacred money; this seems like exactly the sort of market efficient outcome this system is intended to free up (I think?) But also, people will absolutely hate the idea of poor people being *forced to sell their body parts to afford medical treatment* and will definitely try to ban such trades.

In fact, it's not clear to me there are *any* trades that people would accept under this system they will not accept currently. Could you give some concrete examples?

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Anomaly UK's avatar

"Money is profane and contaminates the sacred" is not true. It is a good heuristic, but the underlying issue is different.

Some interactions require a level of commitment that cannot be captured by contracts. You want your provider to be motivated by something other than keeping an agreement and getting paid.

The only way to bring these areas into the scope of capital is to be able to define the behaviour that consumers want, well enough to be able to contract them to it.

I wrote in 2007, "we need emotional commitment where we can’t achieve commitment via public enforcement (contracts) because the considerations required can’t be specified precisely enough (perhaps because flexibility is itself a key consideration)."

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