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by llamaz
637 days ago
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The credit for the labour theory of value goes to Adam Smith, specifically the Wealth of Nations. Whether it was true or not is a separate question, but it was based on empirical data available at the time. Marx is usually credited with it because he altered it, and saw a flaw in Adam Smith's version. The idea that "what something costs is what people are willing to pay for it" was something Adam Smith was familiar with and addressed in the Wealth of Nations. > Those who believe the things should be treated preferentially, and those who don't should be persecuted because they stand in the way of the implementation of those things. The Gnostics and followers of Hermes were one of the most hounded and persecuted groups throughout history. The Cathars were wiped out, and Giordano Bruno, an early proponent of the Copernican model of the solar system was burnt at the stake by the inquisition. It seems to be the other way around. > Hermeticism, specifically the emerald tablet, says that we can make things become believable by just willing them with our minds. I don't think this is correct, but I can't prove a negative. |
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And for good reason, as we later found out in the 20th century.