Speculating the Subject of Money: Georg Simmel on Human Value
Journal Title: Religions - Year 2016, Vol 7, Issue 7
Abstract
This article initiates an inquiry into the sources and frameworks of value used to denote human subjects in modernity. In particular, I consider the conflation of monetary, legal, and theological registers employed to demarcate human worth. Drawing on Simmel’s speculative genealogy of the money equivalent of human values, I consider the spectrum of ascriptions from specifically quantified to infinite human value. I suggest that predications of infinite human value require and imply quantified—and specifically monetary-economic—human value. Cost and worth, economically and legally defined, provide a foundation for subsequent eternal projections in a theological imaginary. This calls into question the interventionist potential of claims to infinite or unquantifiable human value as resistance to the contemporary financialization of human life and society.
Authors and Affiliations
Devin Singh
Trends in Addressing Social Needs: A Longitudinal Study of Congregation-Based Service Provision and Political Participation
When congregations seek to address social needs, they often pursue this goal through acts of service and political engagement. Over the past three decades, a tremendous amount of research has been dedicated to analyzin...
Charisma, Medieval and Modern
Popularized by the mass media, Max Weber‘s sociological concept of charisma now has a demotic meaning far from what Weber had in mind. Weberian charismatic leaders have followers, not fans, although, exceptionally, fan...
Holistic Health Care and Spiritual Self-Presence
In this paper, I present evidence of the developing interest in spirituality in healthcare and treat three questions it raises: (1) what makes a person and a life spiritual so that a strictly medical model of health an...
A Cognitive Science View of Abhinavagupta’s Understanding of Consciousness
This paper offers a comparative analysis of the nature of consciousness correlating the insights of the 11th century Śaiva philosopher Abhinavagupta with the work of some contemporary philosophers of consciousness. Ult...
On Dealing with Destructive Emotions through the “Path of Self-Liberation”
In the majority of Buddhist systems and traditions, destructive emotions— hatred, craving and delusion—are considered as the main obstacle to enlightenment and dealt with as such through various methods of counteractin...