on 2/3/02 10:39 AM, Michael Perelman at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Miyachi's solution is not so simple. You have a new computer. Some of > the value will be transferred to the product today. You have no idea how > long the computer will last; when it will become obsolete. Unless you > have foreknowledge of the future, you cannot know how much value transfers > to the product. > > I wrote about this in more detail a few years ago in the Cambridge Journal > of Economics. > -- > Michael Perelman > Economics Department > California State University > Chico, CA 95929 > > Tel. 530-898-5321 > E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Sir Michael Perelman
I can't understand your account. My computer has price, and I consume it some years. After some year, my computer's price down, because I consume by using it. I can't transfer value to computer, on the contrary, by using it, I destruct its exchange value. If I trade in my computer to shop, shopper assess my computer's trading price usually due to using years. It is well common knowledge even little kids knows. If I transfer value while using computer, trading price is higher than when I bought it. Ridiculous! Did you use trading shop? If you did not, try it. When you try, you can understand common knowledge which California State University did not teach. MIYACHI TATSUO PSYCHIATRIC DEPARTMENT KOMAKI MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL KOMAKI CITY AICHI Pre. JAPAN [EMAIL PROTECTED]
