This repository has been archived on 2026-07-08. You can view files and clone it. You cannot open issues or pull requests or push a commit.
Files
markitect-main/examples/infospace-with-history/output/entities/labour-as-measure-of-value.md
tegwick 41773f1320 feat(llm): add OpenAI adapter, entity archive policy, process chapters 5-7
Add OpenAIAdapter for the OpenAI chat completions API (apikey-chatgpt.txt
or OPENAI_API_KEY). Set default model to arcee-ai/trinity-large-preview:free
for the infospace pipeline and increase max_tokens from 4096 to 8192.

Reprocess chapter 05 with Trinity Large (was Gemini: 1 truncated entity,
now 19 complete entities). Process chapters 06 (Aurora Alpha, 10 entities)
and 07 (Trinity Large, 15 entities including regenerated violent-policy.md).
Canonical set now at 85 unique entities.

Add entity archive policy: entities are never silently deleted. Retired
entities move to output/entities/archive/ with a dated reason header.
New CLI option: --archive-entity <slug> --reason "...". The --list
output shows the archive count alongside the canonical set.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-11 23:39:44 +01:00

1.8 KiB

labour-as-measure-of-value

Definition

The principle that labour is the only universal and accurate standard by which the value of all commodities can be compared at all times and places. Smith argues that labour alone, never varying in its own value, is the ultimate and real standard for estimating and comparing the value of commodities, as it reflects the actual human effort required to produce them. This concept forms the foundation of his labour theory of value.

Source Chapter

Book 1, Chapter 5: "OF THE REAL AND NOMINAL PRICE OF COMMODITIES, OR OF THEIR PRICE IN LABOUR, AND THEIR PRICE IN MONEY."

Context

Smith develops this concept as the central argument of Chapter 5, building from his definitions of real and nominal price. He systematically demonstrates why labour is superior to other commodities (like silver or corn) as a measure of value, arguing that equal quantities of labour always have equal value to the labourer regardless of time or place, while other commodities are subject to fluctuations in their own value.

Economic Domain

General Theory

Smith's Original Wording

"Labour therefore, is the real measure of the exchangeable value of all commodities... Labour alone, therefore, never varying in its own value, is alone the ultimate and real standard by which the value of all commodities can at all times and places be estimated and compared."

Modern Interpretation

Labour as measure of value represents the idea that human effort is the fundamental source of economic value. While modern economics has moved away from pure labour theories of value, the concept remains influential in understanding the relationship between work, production, and value creation. It anticipates modern discussions about productivity, human capital, and the role of labour in determining economic worth.