Commodities Market Prices Biography
Hopefully I can help you parse out this complicated historical issue of contentions among commodities as really contentions among people and politics for the same position of use, battling with each others' interests. Hopefully, I can soon provide helpful reviews and associations for commodity biographies that I have either read or suggest you view as a 'commodity use group.'
At the moment, I think there are around 52 DIFFERENT CONSUMPTIVE USE POSITIONS. Different societies and different knowledge bases fill the same consumptive positions differently--though they always fill them somehow if they can. This is what all societies have in common--these positions--which is the best way to read about a commodity as an issue of shared use motif, even if it is different in different places in the world. It may help promote tolerance and understanding this way of world cultural commonalities. Social categories of commodities are a reference tool for those who enjoy reading commodity biographies and for those who want recommendations of other commodity biography books, organized by commodity competition between them.
I have chosen many of these book associations for cognitive dissonance purposes: it helps you think! Ponder how the same commodity can be used for different consumptive uses, or how one commodity can take over many other different consumptive uses...
I will update this list at my leisure. This is 1-6, or, one of eleven:
1. TEXTILES / CLOTHING (wool, cotton, silk, hemp, synthetics, ramie, linen, furs, etc.)
Hopefully I can help you parse out this complicated historical issue of contentions among commodities as really contentions among people and politics for the same position of use, battling with each others' interests. Hopefully, I can soon provide helpful reviews and associations for commodity biographies that I have either read or suggest you view as a 'commodity use group.'
At the moment, I think there are around 52 DIFFERENT CONSUMPTIVE USE POSITIONS. Different societies and different knowledge bases fill the same consumptive positions differently--though they always fill them somehow if they can. This is what all societies have in common--these positions--which is the best way to read about a commodity as an issue of shared use motif, even if it is different in different places in the world. It may help promote tolerance and understanding this way of world cultural commonalities. Social categories of commodities are a reference tool for those who enjoy reading commodity biographies and for those who want recommendations of other commodity biography books, organized by commodity competition between them.
I have chosen many of these book associations for cognitive dissonance purposes: it helps you think! Ponder how the same commodity can be used for different consumptive uses, or how one commodity can take over many other different consumptive uses...
I will update this list at my leisure. This is 1-6, or, one of eleven:
1. TEXTILES / CLOTHING (wool, cotton, silk, hemp, synthetics, ramie, linen, furs, etc.)
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
Commodities Market Prices
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