(I’m actually not 100% sure what it means here since I’m used to always seeing “against” after “funge”...)
In most cases, you can replace ‘funge’ with ‘trade,’ and talking about goal factoring/trading makes sense. (It’s not quite as precise, because trading allows you to swap apples for oranges, and here the idea is specifically to acquire more apples through approach A than you would have received through approach B, which funging points at because when goods are fungible they’re mutually interchangeable.)
This is just curiosity, but what community has brought “funge” to have this meaning? The only definition of “funge” I can find is archaic references to either fungus or simpletons.
This is just curiosity, but what community has brought “funge” to have this meaning?
Cyan is correct, with the additional comment that I’m not sure I’ve seen ‘funge’ used as a verb in economics discussions, and so I think the transition to a verb may be due to this community.
In most cases, you can replace ‘funge’ with ‘trade,’ and talking about goal factoring/trading makes sense. (It’s not quite as precise, because trading allows you to swap apples for oranges, and here the idea is specifically to acquire more apples through approach A than you would have received through approach B, which funging points at because when goods are fungible they’re mutually interchangeable.)
This is just curiosity, but what community has brought “funge” to have this meaning? The only definition of “funge” I can find is archaic references to either fungus or simpletons.
Fungible. The term is still current within economics, I believe. If something is fungible, it stands to reason that one can funge it, nu?
Cyan is correct, with the additional comment that I’m not sure I’ve seen ‘funge’ used as a verb in economics discussions, and so I think the transition to a verb may be due to this community.