[meteorite-list] Meteorite market trends - a critical note
From: Darren Garrison <cynapse_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2008 13:22:17 -0500 Message-ID: <874lu3pdvo58pp2ah88fn4otajqvqg0iin_at_4ax.com> On Wed, 26 Mar 2008 12:02:57 -0500, you wrote: >certainly entitled to wish for what he wants but I see it as a >unrealistic and it is at this time. I simply disagree with with him. The >_market_ determines the price along with many factors. Posting messages >here on the list it seems someone will always twist things around in >ways you never thought they could. Cuts both ways-- I didn't anticipate you twisting my fantasy about how I WISHED things could be as being "unrealistic". "Unrealistic" seems to me to imply that you thought that I thought that there could be some chance of that happening, and you had to lecture me on how I was wrong. I was simply replying to the statement that all collectors want the prices to remain stable. I disagree with that. People truly obsessed with collecting something care only about getting more of the something-- and the lower the prices go, the better. I brought up the computer analogy: do I cry over once paying $40 a megabyte for RAM, $3.00 a megabyte for HD space, when now it costs $40 a gigabyte for RAM and 3 GB to the dollar for HD space? (Roughly-- rounded for symmetry). Do I care that I'll never recoup the thousands paid on that old hardware? Heck no! And the same goes for meteorites-- if I paid $500 a gram for a lunar, and suddenly enough lunar material hit the market that I could buy 500 grams for a dollar, would I cry that I'd never get back the money I spent on the original material? Nope, I'd gleefully buy lots of it at the new price. When I buy something, I intend to keep it for the rest of my life, so I don't care about the value of something once I have it. (I've given away a few meteorites, but I've never sold one of mine, probably never will. When it comes time to give them up, I'll donate them all to a small museum or college or something). So, if prices crash, bring it on! > >I'll walk you through my thoughts on what I was trying to say. Darren, >wants to be able to buy meteorites by the truck load. I compared that to >my desire to be able to buy automobiles cheaper than they are now as an >example. Oh, I also wish that all material goods were esentially free (and thus, as you mentioned, all traditional economies totally collapse). I don't expect that world to come about, but it is the one that I want to live in. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_scarcity http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_singularity http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whuffie Received on Wed 26 Mar 2008 02:22:17 PM PDT |
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