If the dollar were to disappear, we could use any number of other currencies or commodities as a reference point to evaluate the relative value of bitcoin. Right now 1 bitcoin = $100,000 = 96,550 euro = 728,640 yuan = 38.4 ounces of gold = 3,560 ounces of silver...
If the dollar disappeared, would your house become valueless because you could no longer price it in dollars? The dollar is not the only monetary unit in existence. If the dollar fails, something else will rise to fill its role…perhaps that something else will be bitcoin itself.
To the latter point, of course not. But give me its value NOT relative to a currency. And likewise, what is bitcoins value NOT relative to a currency? If you tied it to a commodity (pizzas or platinum), what is the value of the commodity NOT relative to a currency?
if i said, "I'll trade you your bitcoin for my 93 toyota." the first thing you'd do is laugh then say "My bitcoin it worth 100k:, your toyota is worth 1K". If I said, "Ill trade you your bitcoin for a fully loaded F350 with a 25' travel trailer, etc." You might say, "OK."This is what i mean when i say we inherently agree on the value of a dollar - we may not agree on how many dollars an item is worth (be it a coke or a car), but we see things in terms of dollars due to a shared understanding of its value in a market. When we agree that an item's cost is equal to it's value, we make a sale. Any conversation of bitcoin value is immediately related to dollars (or whatever currency). I am trying to understand how the value of bitcoin could ever be established outside of using a live currency as its comparison, and be unaffected by it - as I sometimes hear people say. Or conversely that bitcoin replaces the very thing that gives its value on a market.