Nightmask wrote:1 Yes, a spell is knowledge. It is something that can be taught to someone else, information of how to do something.
It is not knowledge that can be possessed by all.
2 No, the population of the megaverse is infinite, since the number of dimensions is infinite the population is infinite as well. There is no effective restriction of the total numbers of anything if one counts the multiverse and even if you just considered a universe the size is sufficiently large enough to find virtually anything in plentiful supply and mages certainly aren't in short supply whether of the 'I just know how to do this' or 'I was taught how to do this'.
Not all beings can learn magic. That means the population that can learn spells is not infinite.
The people who can't learn or cast spells aren't relevant to the discussion, since it's all about mages and how much they charge for someone to learn a spell from them or for them to cast a spell for someone else.
Not all mages can learn new spells through teaching. Of those that can learn spells, not all can learn all spells of all levels. Those that do have a vested interest in being a scarcer commodity rather than a common one. If you have the only gold mine it is not in your best interest to instruct others on how to mine gold.
Of which the numbers of mages around is significant, Rifts Earth alone clearly has hundreds of thousands of mages of various types if not closer to a million with Ley Line Walkers and Techno-Wizards (those who most spend time learning and trading spells) the most common.
I'd like to see your basis for this.
No, obviously it does not.
Do you think you know economics better than he does?
Funny, they just seem to prove my statement, you reduce everything down to claiming it's all about money
No, he very specifically did NOT do that.
I quote for you:
Ed wrote:Yes. I am. Mages seek to maximize their personal benefit (however defined) and minimize their personal cost (however defined).
Note that he said cost and benefit and said 'however defined.' Cost does not only mean money. It could be time, money, convenience, political capital, sleep, effort, land easements, or anything at all the person values but has to give up to do something. Benefit means the same thing.
which is patently false, it's not all about money and economics can't really account for how people react based on those intangible, non-monetary desires.
That is specifically what economics studies. Do you have any understanding of economics? I'm not the *best* at it, but I clearly know more about it than you do. Ed knows a DAMNED sight more about it than I do.
Economists get caught in the wrong all the time because they didn't manage to account for one intangible or another (if they were so right and people so predictable the market would never crash for one, and they'd all be wealthy if they could be so perfect in predicting people's behavior).
You are absolutely incorrect about pretty much every single thing in this entire statement.
/Sub