A Use Value
is something that someone finds useful. Use Values can be the
products of Nature. The air, or spring water are Use Values. In
fact, air and water are probably the two greatest Use Values for
human beings, because without them we cannot live. But, despite that
they are generally free, because they are provide by Nature, rather
than being the product of human labour. Use values represent real
wealth. The greater quantity and quality of the Use Values a society
possesses the more wealthy it is. Use values that are the product of
human labour, are also the products of Nature. As Marx puts it
Labour is the Father, and nature the Mother. Even the labour is
itself a product of Nature, because it is inseparable from the Human
Being which is itself the product of nature. Labour takes the
products of Nature, and manipulates them by the same kind of
processes that Nature does, in order to change their form, to create
some new Use Value. Wood is taken and carved, cut and shaped to
become a table, for example.
Use Value
derives from the inherent qualities of the object itself, and is
inseparable from it. The usefulness deriving from the inherent qualities of a Use Value are what orthodox economics calls Utility. If I find a diamond useful, and want it because
of its specific hardness, I cannot separate its quality of hardness
from the diamond itself. To possess the specific hardness, I also
have to possess the diamond itself. The same applies to services
provided by humans. If I want a live performance by Robbie Williams,
I cannot have it without Robbie Williams. If I am happy with a
recorded version, I cannot have it without also the physical medium
on which it is recorded, and so on.
Use Values
do not have to conform to any moral standard or cultural norms. A
society might frown upon Opium or heroin use, but for someone who has
a desire for Opium or Heroin, it constitutes a Use Value.
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