Nightmask wrote:There's nothing monopolistic regarding spell instruction, if you're a spellcaster of a class that can learn and teach spells you can do it and it's been argued ad nauseum in that regard as well as the strong incentives to NOT restrict supply.
Argued at length but not persuasively supported by ANY canon or historical examples.
Again, no that's just wrong. Learning spells is analogous to someone teaching you that 2+2=4. Spells are knowledge, they aren't electricity or power armor suits or any other flawed analogy you wish to make. While spells have uses so does math, both are just information.
The critical difference being, knowledge of arithmetic does not confer an ability to manipulate reality.
As I've also pointed out repeatedly you need to stop reducing everything to economics, particularly simplistic and idealized markets because they don't exist. An apt example actually comes from the movie 'Back To School', where the protagonist is in a business class and the stuffy uptight teacher is discussing the idealized model for a business only for the protagonist who's actually lived and made his fortune as a businessman asks about all the things he's leaving out and the teacher behaves as if the reality of business is unrealistic when hearing about it from an actual businessman.
Until you can produce a predictive or explanitive model better than Rodney Dangerfield doing the Triple Lindy OR an actual Ley Line Walker to provide evidence, I'll stick to "simplistic and idealized markets" or as most people like to call them; the Laws of Economics.
Many things of value we have are the result of people producing or learning how to do them to help others, the marketability of these things wasn't a motivating factor for them (even if those funding them may or may not have been motivated by it). The development of the Polio Vaccine was a result of doctors horrified at what the disease was doing as it reached pandemic proportions, not because they looked around and thought 'wow if I can come up with a way to prevent this I can make a fortune selling the vaccine to people'. The same goes with transplant surgery. Spell knowledge and the teaching thereof is just as subject to these other factors as everything else is, where economic factors via with other factors and may lose out against them.
Strange, I've never seen pictures of Dr Salk begging on street corners to support his research, but I admit I've no more than a passing knowledge of his life.
Economic models measure cost and benefit. Monetary values are nothing more than a convenient measurement.