Jackson Cionek
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From Grain to Pixel: when money loses the body

From Grain to Pixel: when money loses the body

What if the real problem with money is not only inequality—but that it has lost its body?

For most of human history, exchange was material and alive. Grains, seeds, salt, fabrics, feathers, animals—when divided, they remained part of what they were. A broken grain was still food. A seed still carried life. A feather still belonged to a body, a territory, a cycle.

Value was anchored in the world.

It was not just a number.
It could be touched, cultivated, transformed, and lived.

This materiality did not eliminate inequality or conflict, but it maintained a direct relationship between economy and life. For something to have value, it needed to exist within territory, body, and time.

With the emergence of metal coins, then fiat money, and now fully digital systems, this bond has progressively weakened.

Today, money is no longer grain, metal, or even paper.
It is pixel.


The rupture: when value detaches from life

Digital money is not just a technological evolution. It represents a profound ontological shift: value no longer depends directly on something material or alive—it exists as abstract record within systems.

A pixel is not part of a living cycle.
It does not grow, decay, breathe, or belong.

It represents.

And this difference changes everything.

When value is tied to material processes, it carries limits: time of production, ecological constraints, territory, care. When value becomes digital, it can be multiplied, transferred, leveraged, and abstracted at speeds and scales detached from life.

This is where money begins to lose its body.


From exchange to control

In The Great Transformation, Karl Polanyi shows how modern economies transformed land, labor, and money into “fictitious commodities”—things treated as market goods even though they were not produced for sale. This marked a shift from embedded economies to self-regulating markets.

With digitalization, this process intensifies.

Money ceases to be only a medium of exchange and becomes a system of control:

  • control of flows

  • control of access

  • control of behavior

  • control of time

  • control of attention

What once mediated exchange now organizes life itself.


Money without territory

David Harvey demonstrates that contemporary capitalism increasingly operates through financialization: capital circulates globally, detached from specific territories, seeking returns in abstract flows.

Money no longer needs land.
It needs systems.

This creates a rupture with the concepts we developed:

  • Body-Territory

  • APUS

  • Jiwasa

  • Pachamama

Money stops belonging to territory and starts organizing territory from outside it.

The result is profound: the body loses reference.

When value is no longer anchored in lived reality, the body cannot regulate its relationship with it. This leads to:

  • economic anxiety

  • constant competition

  • loss of belonging

  • permanent scarcity perception

Even in materially abundant environments.


Pixel and Zone 3

Digital money, when governed by scarcity and competition, pushes the body into Zone 3.

Why?

Because the system has no body.
And without a body, it has no organic limits.

The result is:

  • continuous urgency

  • endless comparison

  • instability

  • fear of loss

  • chronic insufficiency

The body enters defense—not due to lack of life, but due to excess abstraction.


The break from life cycles

Traditional economies were tied to cycles:

  • planting

  • harvesting

  • storing

  • sharing

  • replanting

These cycles helped regulate time, effort, patience, and return.

When value becomes pixel, the cycle breaks.

There is no season.
No pause.
No natural limit.

Everything can happen all the time.

This continuous acceleration distances the body from Zone 2, because it disrupts:

  • fruition

  • metacognition

  • continuity perception

  • real belonging


Neuroscience of economic abstraction

Research in decision neuroscience shows that the human brain is not optimized to deal with continuous, high-speed financial abstraction.

Daniel Kahneman, in Thinking, Fast and Slow, demonstrates how decision-making systems are biased under uncertainty and complexity. Abstract risk environments distort perception, amplify emotional reactivity, and reduce stable reasoning.

More recent work in neuroeconomics indicates that volatile and unpredictable reward systems can increase anxiety-related neural activation while impairing long-term evaluation.

This reinforces a key idea:

the further value moves away from the body, the harder it is for the body to regulate itself.


From Quorum Sensing to belonging collapse

In the previous blog, we introduced Human Quorum Sensing as the elevation of bodily belonging into conscious perception.

Here, we see its disruption.

Pixel-based value systems generate signals that do not originate in territory or life:

  • numbers on screens

  • fluctuating graphs

  • instant gains and losses

  • digital validation

These signals compete with real bodily signals.

The result can be a distorted Quorum Sensing:

  • belonging based on performance

  • belonging based on wealth

  • belonging based on comparison

Instead of lived belonging, we get simulated belonging.


The need to return body to money

This does not mean rejecting digital systems.

It means re-anchoring money in life.

This is where DREX Cidadão becomes relevant.

The proposal is not to abandon digital money, but to invert its logic:

  • instead of being created in financial systems → it is generated in the citizen

  • instead of organizing life through scarcity → it supports social metabolism

  • instead of producing permanent competition → it enables minimal stability for belonging

Money returns to being energy of the social body, analogous to how nutrients sustain biological organisms.


From pixel back to body-territory

The goal is not to return literally to grain.
It is to recover the principle of grain:

  • value connected to life

  • organic limits

  • cyclical processes

  • belonging

  • continuity

Digital systems can coexist with this—if guided by principles that respect body and territory.

Otherwise, pixel replaces life as the reference of value.


Conclusion

The shift from grain to pixel is not merely technological.
It is existential.

When money loses its body:

  • value detaches from life

  • territory loses centrality

  • the body loses reference

  • belonging weakens

And society moves toward Zone 3.

Perhaps the most important question is not:

“How much money do we have?”

But:

“Does this money still belong to the world that sustains life?”

Because, in the end, money does not sustain the body.

It is the body—within territory—that gives meaning to money.

Without that, value becomes only number.
And numbers alone cannot sustain life.


References

The Great Transformation — Karl Polanyi
Foundational work on the transformation of economies and the concept of fictitious commodities.

The Limits to Capital — David Harvey
Analysis of financialization and capital abstraction in modern capitalism.

Thinking, Fast and Slow — Daniel Kahneman
Explains how the brain processes risk, uncertainty, and abstract decision-making.

Feeling & Knowing: Making Minds Conscious — Antonio Damasio
Connects consciousness to bodily regulation and feeling.

Pluriversal Politics: The Real and the Possible — Arturo Escobar
Frames territory as ontology and relational existence.

Rogério Haesbaert
Work on body-territory and territory-body relations.

De Felice, S. et al. (2025). Relational Neuroscience.
Shows integration of brain, body, and social interaction.

Grasso-Cladera, A. et al. (2024). Embodied Hyperscanning.
Integrates brain and body measures in real-time interaction.

Recent reviews on quorum sensing (2024–2025).
Provide biological grounding for the trans-scalar analogy of Human Quorum Sensing.







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Jackson Cionek

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