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Concept
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The Economics of Play: Collecting Without Scarcity

A collecting philosophy that rejects market-based value, gathering freely available or discarded items without concern for rarity or investment potential.

Nas
Why It Matters

Capitalist collecting is driven by scarcity economics: find rare items, accumulate them, trade them for profit or status. The Hodja, a figure of modest means, teaches a different way. His wisdom suggests collecting what is abundant and free: pebbles, leaves, discarded items, forgotten objects. This inverts the usual collecting hierarchy. Rare first editions mean nothing compared to a handful of wildflowers gathered while lost in thought. The most expensive collection is less interesting than a box of found buttons and broken zippers. By choosing abundance over scarcity, we free ourselves from anxiety and competition. We stop asking 'Is this valuable?' and start asking 'Does this delight me?' This aligns collecting with the examined joyful life. There's genuine freedom in gathering what nobody wants, what nobody will ever pay for—it belongs entirely to us, motivated purely by play. The Hodja would smile at someone spending an afternoon collecting smooth rocks, utterly unconcerned with market value.

Helpful guides
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Play & Joy
Peri
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