Vintageness ( was Re: Serious Request For Moderation (On

From: Iggy Drougge <optimus_at_canit.se>
Date: Sun May 13 06:41:05 2001

Eric Chomko skrev:

>Pardon me for jumping in...

By all means.

>Iggy Drougge wrote:

>> Sellam Ismail skrev:
>>
>> >On 12 May 2001, Iggy Drougge wrote:
>>
>> >> Da Vinci's greatness as an artist stemmed IOW from his ability to
>> >> produce great works of art. A work of art is a work of art even if
>> >> mass-produced, the last century has taught us as much.
>>
>> >Abstractly, yes. The original is a tangible product of the man, hence
>> >it's value relative to copies.
>>
>> Are copies less tangible?

>No, more tangible, and that is the point! When speaking of rarity and value
>one deals with supply and demand. The demand for copies of originals can
>always met, therefore the price is low. The demand for a unique item will
>drive the price of the item up as long as more than one person wants it.

My point is that Mona Lisa isn't rare since there are reproductions. Anyone
who'd pay millions more for the "original" is an utter fool.

>Why is it like that? Because!

>> >> But then that is metaphysics, and should we really invest that much
>> >> money into something which essentially would be a golden calf?
>>
>> >A golden calf, as in idol worshipping? Is this becoming religious? I
>> >hope not. Things connect us to the past. Perhaps you keep a memento that
>> >reminds you of a dead relative, for example? Or maybe you're an
>> >emotionless bastard and you don't, in which case you can't understand my
>> >point?
>>
>> I'd go for the second. Bastards don't have emotional ties to their
>> relatives.
>> =)
>>
>> >> But of course it can! It's built from the same plans and offers the
>> >> same functionality.
>>
>> >And it has all the historical significance that everything "Made in
>> >Taiwan" has. Yes, of course!
>>
>> It doesn't matter whether it's built in Taiwan or the Czech republic as
>> long as it's according to the plans.

>That's not exactly correct when trying to determine the value of something.

>By your own arguement, no one here should collect an old computer based upon
>functionality, as I can buy a new one than can out perform the old ones.
>Therefore,
>no one should bother with older ones regardless of model or type.

In what way can any computer outperform another? Every computer is unique in
its own sense, isn't that why we collect several?
We don't use computers to run benchmarks. At least not most of the time.

--
En ligne avec Thor 2.6a.
"Real life is full of idiots, and tons of ads. I don't see how IRC is any
different, other than a lot more people want to have sex with you."
 -- m3000
Received on Sun May 13 2001 - 06:41:05 BST

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