Sunday, February 18, 2007

Divine Microeconomy Theory Began in the 14th Century!

This will be a brief blog entry but it does not need to be lengthy. As far I can tell the first person to postulate and go into detail about how the divine economy operates at the level of the individual was Sant' Antonio of Florence (1389-1459).

Sant' Antonio was a significant contributor to economic theory along with the other contributors during the Late Scholastic period. He took the abstract principles of theology and ethics and applied them to the detailed empirical data of daily life.

It is an honor to revive such a meaningful postulate. Unnamed before, this theoretical effort is now referred to as divine microeconomy theory!

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Divine Microeconomy Theory And Gold.

This will be a rather brief blog entry. This is because: a thorough understanding of gold at the microeconomic level requires a breakthrough in economic theory since gold lies at the cusp. What I mean to say is that a more illuminating analysis lies in potential and will be presented at a later date, once the divine economy theory is expanded to encompass the realm of ethics. That is the exploration of my third book.

For the time being, gold represents a standard of purity that is trusted by everyone. Every encounter with this gold standard tests the trustworthiness of those in the mix. If a thought emerges to alter its purity, by altering the value in some manner, then the test is ultimately a test of character. It serves as an alarm. It, therefore, provides an anchor for the human conscience.

Those who have a character too weak will error and be discovered. The market process eventually finds this error because someone will lose property. These individuals with flawed character are in need of counseling. They need to develop their character so they can function in a way that protects property rights and human rights.

So what we see is this: gold allows trust and trustworthiness to flourish and it also serves as an indicator. It indicates which individuals need education and care so that they can become trustworthy. At the macro level the gold standard indicates which institutions are untrustworthy.