ABSTRACT

This book offers a novel understanding of money by moving away from the dominant lens of economics through which it is usually seen.

In contrast to the economic frameworks of "money", the volume examines philosophical discourses on money through conceptual frameworks that explain how monetary value manifests in various empirical monetary systems. It showcases how the increasingly abstract nature of the objects that stand proxy for money could be conceptualized ontologically, highlighting the predominance of digital money today, as well as contemporary monetary innovations such as cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

Provocative, yet grounded in a sound theoretical framework, this book will be of interest to scholars, students, and teachers interested in money or monetary value, across various domains and disciplines such as philosophy, economics, sociology, anthropology, finance, science, and technology studies, as well as the interested general reader.

chapter 3|9 pages

Aristotle and the philosophical discourse on money

Ethics, Politics, and the Nature of Monetary Value

chapter 5|7 pages

Money and the modern scientific paradigm

chapter 8|12 pages

Moving beyond the substantive framework of monetary value

Voices of Discontentment

chapter 9|9 pages

Origin of money

The Barter Narrative and the Credit Theory of Money

chapter 11|9 pages

Money is what money does

chapter 12|7 pages

The constructivist paradigm

How Are We to Understand Monetary Value?

chapter 13|9 pages

Substance and relation

Two Sides of the Same Coin