How should markets price intelligence if value is relational not intrinsic?
This explores how to price AI-generated intelligence when its worth doesn't live inside the output itself but in what the output does for whoever receives it — and what that means for the very idea of a market.
This explores pricing under the premise that an intelligence-token has no fixed worth baked in — its value is relational, depending on the receiver's context, knowledge, and ability to act on it Where does the value of AI output actually come from?. If that's true, the usual market move of pricing a thing by what it *is* breaks down, because AI output isn't a thing in the commodity sense at all: it lacks the fixed, identical, possessable properties commodities need to be priced uniformly Does AI actually commodify expertise or tokenize it?. The same answer is worth a great deal to a reader who can verify and deploy it, and nearly nothing — or worse than nothing — to one who can't. So the honest pricing model is outcome-based or contextual, charging for what the output accomplishes downstream rather than for the tokens themselves.
The deeper problem the corpus surfaces is that markets normally lean on use-value as a floor under price. Here that floor is gone. Tokenized intelligence achieves reliable *exchange*-value through authoritative, fluent presentation while its use-value stays optional and unverifiable — a decoupling more radical than ordinary commodification, closer to how fiat currency circulates on social function alone Can exchange value exist entirely without use value?. Ask what backs the tokens and the answer is uncomfortable: training data is finite, expert validation can't scale, and statistical likelihood is not the same as value What actually backs the value of AI-generated intelligence?. A currency with no backing tends to inflate, and that's exactly the predicted dynamic — more intelligence in circulation, each unit less reliable.
What keeps an unbacked currency circulating is demand-side acceptance, and the corpus names the mechanism: cognitive surrender, the moment a receiver takes an output at face value because checking is costly and fluency breeds false confidence When do users stop checking whether AI output is actually backed?. This is the catch for any relational pricing scheme. If value is relational, it should be highest where receivers actually verify and act well — yet the market clears precisely where receivers *stop* verifying. Price tracks confidence, not correctness. So a market that prices intelligence relationally has to price the receiver's competence too, or it just rewards the most authoritative-sounding output regardless of whether it does anything.
This reframes the historical stakes. AI marks a shift from the age of the commodity to the age of the token — production organized around contextual flows generated at the point of use rather than identical mass objects Is AI fundamentally changing how value gets produced? — and in one sense a return to older flow-based knowledge economies that existed before print fixed knowledge into stock. But the older flows (oral, gift) were anchored by an embodied carrier: a speaker, a giver, someone accountable for what they passed on. AI flows strip that anchor out Is AI returning knowledge to flow-based economies?. Pricing, then, isn't just an accounting question — it's the search for a new anchor to replace the missing body, the missing warranty.
The most useful design hint is lateral, from work on human-AI collaboration: systems that *guide* rather than *decide* keep responsibility with the receiver and improve their judgment, instead of inviting them to defer Can AI guidance reduce anchoring bias better than AI decisions?. Translated into market terms, that suggests pricing intelligence not as a finished verdict sold by the unit but as interpretive guidance whose value is realized — and measured — in the receiver's better outcome. The thing worth knowing here: if value is genuinely relational, the price of intelligence may say more about the competence and context of the buyer than about the quality of the seller's model.
Sources 8 notes
Intelligence-tokens have no intrinsic use-value—their worth depends entirely on the receiver's context, knowledge, and ability to act. This relational value structure fundamentally differs from commodities and traditional knowledge goods, requiring outcome-based or contextual pricing models.
AI output lacks the fixed, identical, possessable properties of commodities. Instead it functions like tokens—mutable mediums of exchange valued by what they do for receivers, not what they are.
AI knowledge achieves reliable exchange-value through authoritative presentation while maintaining optional, unverifiable use-value. This structural decoupling is more radical than Marxist commodification because it removes use-value as a necessary floor—tokens circulate based on social function alone, analogous to fiat currency rather than commodified goods.
AI-generated knowledge has no reliable backing: training data is finite, expert validation cannot scale, and statistical probability is not value. This structural instability produces the predicted outcome of rising quantity alongside falling reliability.
Users systematically accept AI outputs without verification because checking is costly and fluent output builds false confidence. This receiver-side surrender—measured in studies showing 80% unchallenged adoption—is what enables inflationary token systems to function at scale.
AI production is organized around contextual token-flows generated at point of use, not identical mass-produced objects. This creates different effects than commodification: inflationary devaluation, contextual variation, and skill transformation from production to validation.
Print culture fixed knowledge as accumulated stock; AI returns knowledge to generative flow. However, unlike oral and gift economies, AI flows lack the embodied transmission—the speaker, the giver—that historically anchored knowledge circulation.
Learning to Guide eliminates anchoring bias and unassisted hard cases by having machines supply interpretive guidance rather than autonomous decisions, keeping responsibility with humans while improving their judgment through enhanced perception.