Origins of money: a Motivation & Sedimentation Model (MSM) analysis

Author:

Oakley Todd1,Zlatev Jordan2

Affiliation:

1. Case Western Reserve University , Cleveland , OH , USA

2. Lund University , Lund , Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Few other social technologies and institutions are more consequential to human societies than money. Yet money remains a deeply perplexing phenomenon. On the one hand, it is a pan-human system of valuation, but on the other, it is conventional and variable in its uses. While it is controversial if money instantiates a fully-fledged sign system, it is rife with semiotic capacities. To present an illuminating analysis of money is thus a test case for the Motivation & Sedimentation Model (MSM) of meaning making, with roots in the phenomenology of Husserl and Merleau-Ponty. Using MSM, we analyze two origin accounts of money: the commodity money account evidenced in archaic and classical Greek coinage, and the credit money account exemplified by early findings in Mesopotamia. Both accounts focus on the interactions between the three levels of MSM: the pre-signitive Embodied, the cultural Sedimented, and the interactional Situated levels of meaning and propose different series of “loops” to account for the genesis of money. Despite key differences in the two origins, both imply semiotic processes operating according to motivated, and hence non-arbitrary, conventions developing within institutional formations that ultimately influence present day concepts of money.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference80 articles.

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3. Bagehot, Walter. 1877. Lombard street: A description of the money market. New York: Scribner, Armstrong.

4. Bankov, Kristian. 2019. From gold to futurity: A semiotic overview on trust, legal tender, and fiat money. Social Semiotics 29(3). 336–350. https://doi.org/10.1080/10350330.2019.1587833.

5. Beowulf. 2012. Seamus Heaney (trans.). http://www.hieronymus.us.com/latinweb/Mediaevum/Beowulf.htm#X08 (accessed 17 February 2023).

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