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  #1  
Old 05-08-2025, 05:16 PM
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Vintagedeputy Vintagedeputy is offline
Jim Reynolds
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Originally Posted by dbussell12 View Post
we can agree to disagree! my point is about ethics and economic theory at a macro/global scale. each individual entity within said system is allowed to do whatever they want within that context, but it doesn't change that context at large. you may make an impact within that context based on your individual/personal decisions, but by and large one person rarely if ever disturbs the market with outlier behavior.

it becomes a larger question about ethics and conduct within marketplaces + conscious awareness of how your behavior impacts others. markets collapse because of increasing lack of context, macroeconomic awareness, and consciousness of how individual decisions impact the global whole. its well precedented historically; ties, fascinatingly enough, into the history of the rise and fall of global empires. furthermore -- some people place ethics in a religious context, others in an intrapersonal context about good faith. your behavior and your decisions are always your own, i'm just providing the macroeconomic background to the microeconomic stage you're setting with your stance and decision making.

i have a ton of economics background, so i'm not surprised it sounds like something you might read in a textbook or a academic article or published document! hopefully it was helpful, even if you choose not to take any of it with you and proceed as you were. it is ultimately of no consequence to me, as i have no claim to nor desire to control human behavior, perhaps only create the possibility of influencing it for the collective human good!

cheers!
david
David,

You’ve mentioned ethics a few times now, and that troubles me. What is unethical about giving someone their asking price of 50 cents? Caveat venditor applies as equally as caveat emptor.

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just buy and sell collectibles at what we felt they were worth instead of what everyone else felt that they were worth or what they read out of a price guide?

Last edited by Vintagedeputy; 05-08-2025 at 05:18 PM.
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Old 05-08-2025, 05:32 PM
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dbussell12 dbussell12 is offline
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Originally Posted by Vintagedeputy View Post
David,

You’ve mentioned ethics a few times now, and that troubles me. What is unethical about giving someone their asking price of 50 cents? Caveat venditor applies as equally as caveat emptor.

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just buy and sell collectible’s at what we felt they were worth instead of what everyone else felt that they were worth or what they read out of a price guide?
you raise a good point; i'm here for it. i think the primary thing we keep bumping up against here is the reality of market value. its something that neither you nor i have any significant influence over. your mantle example is a good point. if i feel that a mickey mantle 52 topps in VG/EX condition is worth 50 cents, and the old woman who is hosting the yard sale also feels the same, we have a theoretical match right?

this is where ethics comes into play. both you and i know that that 52 topps mantle is worth far more than 50 cents. the woman who is hosting the yard sale is 'market unaware', or, in street terms, 'prepared to be taken for a ride'. we both objectively know the real value of a mantle; the reason we know it to be thus is because we live in a market ecosystem of transactions which verify said value.

this is a really interesting point, because it gets us to what constitutes value. i can buy a de kooning right now for hundreds of millions of dollars. insane, right? because objectively to me de kooning paints like absolute shit. but everyone has their opinion. knowing, and having context for this market reality, i can demand my real price that its worth to me, $5. and i may actually in a wild subjective context get that, like a 50 cent 52 mantle at a garage sale.

however -- here's where philosophy of ethics and economics collide -- i am acting in patently bad faith pretending like that de kooning is worth only $5, just as i am pretending that that mantle '52 is only worth 50 cents. it may be worth 50 cents to you because you hate mantle or don't care about baseball cards, but the market does not value it the same way. so you have to ask yourself, in a deep philosophical way, why am i buying this card if its worthless to me?

perhaps, like a rare few, you are simply buying a piece of junk to play with it for awhile then toss it. but if you know that mantle is worth five or even six figures and you buy it from an old woman at a garage sale for 50 cents, you have to ask yourself if you are really standing in good faith. each person is entitled their individual action in a marketplace, including, as we well observe, theft and exploitation which goes unpunished by legal systems around the world. markets survive and thrive because of regular good faith transactions, even among patently exploitative ones, like destroying an ecosystem to prop up a national economy. markets collapse because of regular bad faith transactions -- they erode trust and destroy the concept of collective value -- which philosophically is tied directly to meaning. here, you get to the root of the problem. market value, like meaning in nations and communities -- is collectively constructed. it is a composite of individual beliefs of value. the whole thing, as your question reveals; as i sometimes wish i wasn't so aware of, is constructed entirely of a tapestry of belief -- perceived meaning en masse.

philosophy of ethics and economics -- as above, are intimate bedfellows. to act in 'good faith', here, is to pay the old woman what her mantle is worth -- knowing what we know about the market value of the object itself: even if she doesn't know it; even if we think its only worth 50 cents. otherwise, we're leveraging market knowledge over someone else who is unsuspecting and doesn't know any better. you could call this hoodwinking, exploitation of lack of awareness, et cetera. but it is ultimately the fact that you know the true collectively constructed market value that creates duality here -- this duality being 'good faith' or 'bad faith' transaction. ethics is human conduct with and towards one another. markets are human transactions of goods, services, materials, and knowledge with one another. the two are absolutely, utterly, profoundly inseparable.

i admire your question and willingness to inquire further here. what your question really reveals is the difference between subjective value and objective valuation. its part of why, personally, i enjoy baseball cards so much. that tip top bread 1910 common that everyone passes by is something easily obtainable for me -- because it holds a hotbed of deep historical and philosophical meaning that the market doesn't yet understand or is not yet aware of. is this exploitative? perhaps. and that begs a deeper question about what real value is and how markets understand it and attempt to contextualize it. van gogh sold only a couple paintings in his lifetime; for pennies considering what his work is worth on the global market now. was he swindled out of those paintings (looking back)? definitely. but in and at the time he sold it? they were the bare few paintings he could sell! ethically, without a doubt, all of those transactions would be constituted as in 'good faith'... in fact, they even helped a desperate painter! he lived in a world that thought his paintings were worthless at the time... so much that they couldn't be sold, really, for any amount. if only he could see the way that the collective imagination changed; reconstituted that market value. if i were to buy what i knew to be a van gogh for pennies from an unsuspecting inheritor of one of those paintings he sold in his lifetime... we're in a very different world ethically!

is my 1910 tip top bread common worth more than what the market values it at? i think so -- but this is the depth of questioning into philosophy, ethics, and economics that makes this conversation so provocative and thought-provoking. (i even have to ask myself -- am i imagining that this 1910 tip top bread 1910 common is worth anything at all!!

Last edited by dbussell12; 05-08-2025 at 06:00 PM.
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Old 05-08-2025, 05:53 PM
jayshum jayshum is offline
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Originally Posted by Vintagedeputy View Post
David,

You’ve mentioned ethics a few times now, and that troubles me. What is unethical about giving someone their asking price of 50 cents? Caveat venditor applies as equally as caveat emptor.

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just buy and sell collectibles at what we felt they were worth instead of what everyone else felt that they were worth or what they read out of a price guide?
You're certainly welcome to buy and sell at what you think something is worth. The problem is you have to find someone else who agrees with your desired price, which, if you're wildly different from what other similar cards have recently sold for, will probably be difficult to do.
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Old 05-08-2025, 06:02 PM
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Vintagedeputy Vintagedeputy is offline
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You're certainly welcome to buy and sell at what you think something is worth. The problem is you have to find someone else who agrees with your desired price, which, if you're wildly different from what other similar cards have recently sold for, will probably be difficult to do.
That is very true, and I have accepted that fact. I still only buy at values that I’m comfortable with.
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Old 05-08-2025, 06:12 PM
jayshum jayshum is offline
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That is very true, and I have accepted that fact. I still only buy at values that I’m comfortable with.
That's true for me as well, and I imagine for most collectors. However, the reality is those values are generally being based on comps to other sales of the same card in similar condition.
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Old 05-08-2025, 06:19 PM
ajjohnsonsoxfan ajjohnsonsoxfan is offline
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Guy finds a Mantle at a yardsale for .50. Can't stomach taking advantage of the lady and offers her $1000. She thinks, oh my if he's willing to pay $1000 maybe he's willing to pay $10,000 and instead decides to keep it.

This is 100% what would happen to me if I found a .50 Mantle at a yardsale.
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Last edited by ajjohnsonsoxfan; 05-08-2025 at 06:20 PM.
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  #7  
Old 05-08-2025, 06:25 PM
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dbussell12 dbussell12 is offline
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Originally Posted by ajjohnsonsoxfan View Post
Guy finds a Mantle at a yardsale for .50. Can't stomach taking advantage of the lady and offers her $1000. She thinks, oh my if he's willing to pay $1000 maybe he's willing to pay $10,000 and instead decides to keep it.

This is 100% what would happen to me if I found a .50 Mantle at a yardsale.

LOL -- ethics gone wrong... or right?

Last edited by dbussell12; 05-08-2025 at 06:26 PM.
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Old 05-08-2025, 07:47 PM
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Were I to ever run across a cheap, magical find at a garage sale, dealer's booth, etc., I would buy it at the low price, and then (after knowing their address or a way to contact them) send them a 'more proper' amount of money.
Sadly, though, incredible crap like that never happens to me!!
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Old 05-08-2025, 06:17 PM
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dbussell12 dbussell12 is offline
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That is very true, and I have accepted that fact. I still only buy at values that I’m comfortable with.
this is a noble point -- and it actually really deeply connects back to the issue that was raised in the other thread about shill bidding. markets are regularly inflated by people who are actively manipulating them with false signals; distorting data and driving untrue price inflation -- or deflation -- for perceived personal gain. and a lot of what that thread ended up discussing is what happened to people who thought that this was a viable or ethical or practical way of engaging with the community. these conversations going on seem to be about is how that impacts us as collectors; people who genuinely love baseball cards; seek to act with integrity and consciously; participate in community surrounding our passions -- not merely ruthlessly conquer piles and piles of photos or cards -- regardless of what it does to us or others, what have you. many people in this hobby seem to have met their demise by descending into a total greed to possess what really is nothing more than pieces of cardboard (really cool pieces of cardboard, mind you) at all costs. it reminds me of reading about what happened with type 1 photography in some of those early auction days in jim chapman's book.

there are people who both buy and sell in this hobby with deep reverence for our community and baseball history as a whole; there are people who do the same with the idea to extract every single possible dollar out of a card, meaning be damned. to me its a sort of illness or disease -- the people who do that and live that way. we are here for meaning and the love of the cards. there is another faction which is here to extract monetary value from them. there is no real love there; thus, no real community built around genuine passion and connection with/for them.

our community, which was i think at one point in history more resembled a small group of passionate kids -- has been in many ways 'hijacked' by people leveraging cards as tokens and assets; we've seen the way the hobby as a whole, particularly in modern, has adopted this hyper modern method of pumping and dumping '1/1 super gold supreme' cards like shells. its like the introduction of a stock market to a sandlot -- a cold calculating hand; as you mentioned earlier jim, the juxtaposition of trading with your friends back in the day. there's a warmth to that; a commonality. its much more human. its ultimately a big part of the reason that, for me, baseball cards are such an important thing.

there's so much to be said here, but it ultimately comes back to the integrity and the passion that i think we all have here on the forum for cards and the game and history. and how our community has been turned into a market for stock turnover and pumping inflated values into something which was always about something far deeper than that. however, i think there are still plenty of us out here who still reside at that level of care. and i often see that reflected in the right kind of relationships where i'm buying, trading, selling, communicating -- all of the above.

Last edited by dbussell12; 05-08-2025 at 06:45 PM.
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