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The Representational Theory of Capital - Property Rights and the Reification of Capital (Paperback)
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The Representational Theory of Capital - Property Rights and the Reification of Capital (Paperback)
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This book proposes a “representational” theory of capital
according to which there is a relation between capital goods in the
real side of the economy and instruments representative of property
claims on those goods in the abstract side. Financial instruments
are treated herein as a particularly liquid form of property claim.
The relation proposed between these two things is a loose rather
than a direct one, and the causes for (and consequences of) the
looseness are explored in the book. This book aims not merely to
simplify our understanding of the relationship between “things”
and “claims to things,” but to make explicit and precise what
many current researchers assume implicitly and, consequently,
imprecisely. This book will be a tool that researchers can apply to
their own research, in the form of a standard by which
inconsistencies in the literature on Capital Theory can be
identified. Understanding what capital is requires delving into its
nature on both the real and the abstract sides. In regard to
capital goods, what they actually are is made clearer by the thesis
that they exist on a spectrum with respect to consumer goods. In
going back to the philosophical and economic basics, no claim is
made of being comprehensive. The argument is that a crucial idea
for our understanding of what capital is that actual capital goods
(and processes, and knowledge) are represented in financial
instruments and other property claims. A formal treatment that lays
out the philosophical and economic basics is necessary to put this
idea across, and the model proposed in the book is a first step in
that direction. Further, by laying out the philosophical and
economic basics of the theory, the book offers the reader the
reasons why having a clearer concept of capital is an important
tool for wealth creation, and why wealth creation is, more than
never, necessary for our individual wellbeing and the flourishing
of our civilization.
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