Being inside a deeply rooted paradigm, it is hard to imagine that the idea of "the worth" of a thing might not have been a paradigm that pre-historic people comprehended.
The thing that anthropologists like Graeber excel at is how they can take themselves out of their own conditioned thinking.
Think off this, when you see a n expensive car drive by you will most likely reflexively say "That car is probably worth $300,000". You assign an objective worth to the car, when classical economics will tell you that the actual worth of a car is subjective.
Personal ownership was not seen in the same way in the past as we see it today so objective worth might not have been in their mental framework.
Being inside a deeply rooted paradigm, it is hard to imagine that the idea of "the worth" of a thing might not have been a paradigm that pre-historic people comprehended.
The thing that anthropologists like Graeber excel at is how they can take themselves out of their own conditioned thinking.
Think off this, when you see a n expensive car drive by you will most likely reflexively say "That car is probably worth $300,000". You assign an objective worth to the car, when classical economics will tell you that the actual worth of a car is subjective.
Personal ownership was not seen in the same way in the past as we see it today so objective worth might not have been in their mental framework.