Red: But you can't say that. Money does not represent some or any amount of goods. When you have money, you and the one you want to trade with, still have to consider the preference of money over the goods. There is no requiring of goods for money, it is all speculation of what you will be able to trade them for. There is no such thing as going into a shop and just buy, either you accept the shop owners offer, or you make an offer that he might accept. This point is crucial and makes money different from debt, or the debt-based gift economy.
Before we continue, I think, you should substantiate your previous claim about how I misunderstood the word "intrinsic" in respect to money. It is not something that you could say and get away with, so you'd better first take responsibility for your words...
And I still don't understand what you mean
Intrinsic, by and in itself, with regard to money, is the direct use value. If you can eat it, for example it has intrinsic value. Gold has some intrinsic value, since it can be used in electronics and for pretty things (the use for pretty things can be somewhat foggy, because the reason for carrying a gold bracelet may not only be for decoration, but also for the money reserve).
You still didn't say how
I misunderstood the word, you're just saying how
you understand it. You see it is always risky to say things like that, since you may be asked to explain how I (or anyone else for that matter) understood it (even incorrectly), that is, explain my point. I'm all ears, go ahead...
Looking back, it seems you used the word "value as such", not intrinsic, but I read it as the same concept.
You want to discuss diminishing marginal utility, which is okay. It is a stretch to use that meme in regard to money, since they have no direct utility, but I guess you could apply it to value itself if it is large enough, except it does not seem to work that way in practice. The very rich seem to be just as eager to keep and expand their wealth as a poor one. Anyway it does not touch the problem of money value being real, or representing what you migh get for the money.
Ah...It seems this was your point. Ok I get it. Money value does not seem to diminish, therefore there is a fundamental difference. I am ok with that, except that the money value is not therefore in any way unreal, or representing something else. The difference is just the exchange value contra the direct use value, general value contra the more specific. Maybe we are mostly in agreement.
Hitherto I have considered the diminishing marginal utility as a different, not uninteresting but rather obvious, concept. The same with the subjective contra objective value discussions that comes up from time to time.
Edit: Rethinking the diminishing marginal utility, for these examples to work, maybe it should be renamed to
diminishing marginal value...:
Someone could think that
I have enough money, therefore I don't need to work overtime.
I reduce my work ours, because I prefer more of my own time to money.
I could get by without a new car, but I have enough money, so why not.
The example with the very rich, could be regarded as an obsession, or a delution (they think they are not economically safe, but they really are), or as a competition, to be richer than most everyone, just like a guy who collects beer bottle capsules. The only way to get in the paper is to be the one who have most, meaning the next capsule is worth more than each previous.
End rant... it
can be said that money value also diminishes when you have more.