We may have different understandings, be referring to different definitions of, or be applying our own connotations to the word “worth”. I’m using it as a noun meaning “material or market value”, while I think you may be thinking of it like “The quality that renders something desirable, useful, or valuable”, or even as an adjective meaning something like “Deserving of or meriting”.
If that’s the case, I get what you’re saying and agree, I don’t personally think a Gucci bag is worth what people are willing to pay for it, nor do I think any part of its production justifies that price. Unfortunately, some people have more cents than sense.
I think I’m assuming the majority of people use worth the way I am rather than you, but I have no evidence to back that up. Anecdotally, people around me seem to refer to inherent worth rather than subjective worth, but that doesnt make them right just because its common.
I think the problem I have with the phrase is when its used as an intrinsic value like you said. People justify buying things on sale using that logic, and dont realize they aren’t saving money but spending it. Maybe thats a slightly different issue though.
I wonder what it is about humans that makes us want to put everything into such firm boxes, and ignore the nuance of things. It seems rare that things are truly without nuance so I dont quite understand the dissonance there.
We may have different understandings, be referring to different definitions of, or be applying our own connotations to the word “worth”. I’m using it as a noun meaning “material or market value”, while I think you may be thinking of it like “The quality that renders something desirable, useful, or valuable”, or even as an adjective meaning something like “Deserving of or meriting”.
If that’s the case, I get what you’re saying and agree, I don’t personally think a Gucci bag is worth what people are willing to pay for it, nor do I think any part of its production justifies that price. Unfortunately, some people have more cents than sense.
Edit: added a word for grammar’s sake
I think I’m assuming the majority of people use worth the way I am rather than you, but I have no evidence to back that up. Anecdotally, people around me seem to refer to inherent worth rather than subjective worth, but that doesnt make them right just because its common.
I think the problem I have with the phrase is when its used as an intrinsic value like you said. People justify buying things on sale using that logic, and dont realize they aren’t saving money but spending it. Maybe thats a slightly different issue though.
I wonder what it is about humans that makes us want to put everything into such firm boxes, and ignore the nuance of things. It seems rare that things are truly without nuance so I dont quite understand the dissonance there.