This article initiates an inquiry into the sources and frameworks of value used to denote human subjects in modernity. In particular, I consider the conflation of monetary, legal, and theological registers employed to demarcate human worth. Drawing on Simmel's speculative genealogy of the money equivalent of human values, I consider the spectrum of ascriptions from specifically quantified to infinite human value. I suggest that predications of infinite human value require and imply quantified-and specifically monetary-economic-human value. Cost and worth, economically and legally defined, provide a foundation for subsequent eternal projections in a theological imaginary. This calls into question the interventionist potential of claims to infinite or unquantifiable human value as resistance to the contemporary financialization of human life and society.
机构:
Univ Costa Rica, Escuela Sociol, San Pedro, Costa Rica
Univ Costa Rica, Ciudad Invest, Edificio Fac Ciencias Sociales,Torre C, San Pedro, Costa RicaUniv Costa Rica, Escuela Sociol, San Pedro, Costa Rica