bgryph wrote:
But seeing how much you can get via a string of trades without people knowing about it (and therefore deliberately trying to be generous) would be an interesting experiment, too.
I'm not a scientist, but I do understand basic economics:
If you try this without telling anyone what you're doing, it will not work at all. I have one red paperclip in my desk at work, but no one has ever offered me something more valuable for it, because there is absolutely no incentive for them to do so. If I try just leaving the red paperclip out on my desk, what do you think are the odds someone will take it and replace it with something worth more? (Knowing my coworkers, they'd just take it.) The same will go for a cheap item just sitting in trades with no explanation - only with slightly better odds because there aren't silly kids walking around my office and offering random junk in exchange for office supplies (unlike the trading post on neo).
Besides, "deliberately trying to be generous" is the whole point of this experiment. It's about
asking people to be just a little bit generous, and watching it grow. At best, putting up a junk trade with no explanation could be the control group for this experiment, but it's not an experiment in and of itself.
What I would be really interested in seeing worked out is the np difference between the value of the items in each trade
jrtman has done.
ETA: I think sparking 5 pages of discussion already makes it a very good experiment.