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The Story of Money
Structure
before-money
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Barter and Gift Economies
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Why Barter Broke Down
first-money-mesopotamia-china
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The Shekel — Money in Mesopotamia
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Cowrie Shells — China's First Currency
coined-money-greek-roman
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Lydia — The First Coins
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The Greek Drachma — Money and Empire
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The Roman Denarius and the Art of Debasement
islamic-and-silk-road-era
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The Dinar and Dirham — Islamic Monetary Power
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The Silk Road and Multi-Currency Trade
paper-money-china-to-europe
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Flying Money — China Invents Paper Currency
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The Mongol Empire and Forced Paper Currency
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Europe Discovers Banknotes
age-of-empires-monetary-power
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The Spanish Silver Real — First Global Currency
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The Dutch Guilder — The First Reserve Currency
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The British Pound — Money and Empire
gold-standard-era
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The Rise of the Gold Standard
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World Wars and the Collapse of Gold
bretton-woods-usd-hegemony
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Bretton Woods — The Dollar Takes the Throne
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The Nixon Shock — The End of Gold
fiat-era-and-trust
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What Is Fiat Money?
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When Fiat Fails — Inflation Crises Around the World
digital-money
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Credit Cards and SWIFT — Money Goes Digital
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Mobile Payments and the Fintech Revolution
blockchain-and-crypto
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Why Bitcoin Was Born
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How Blockchain Works
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Money Reimagined — Where Does It Go From Here?
Flow Structure
Why Bitcoin Was Born
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Money Reimagined — Where Does It Go From Here?
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How Blockchain Works
#blockchain
#distributed-ledger
#consensus
#mining
#proof-of-work
@Blockonomist
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2026-04-01 03:12:09
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# How Blockchain Works A **blockchain** is, at its simplest, a shared record book that thousands of people hold simultaneously — and that no single person can alter without everyone else noticing. Here's how it works in plain terms: Every transaction on the Bitcoin network is broadcast to thousands of computers worldwide. These computers — called **nodes** — collect recent transactions into a bundle called a **block**. Before a block can be added to the chain, a special group of computers called **miners** must solve a computationally difficult puzzle. The first miner to solve it gets to add the block and earns newly created bitcoin as a reward. Once a block is added, it contains a mathematical fingerprint of the previous block. Change anything in a past block, and every fingerprint after it breaks. You'd have to redo all the computational work from that point forward — while the rest of the network keeps moving ahead. It's practically impossible. > 💡 In plain terms > Imagine a town where every single resident keeps an identical copy of every transaction ever made. If someone tries to fake a transaction, they'd have to change every single copy simultaneously. The blockchain works the same way — except the "town" has millions of residents worldwide, and changing one copy while all the others disagree is mathematically hopeless. This creates a ledger that is: - **Transparent** — anyone can read it - **Immutable** — nobody can rewrite it - **Decentralized** — no single entity controls it > ⚡ Why It Works > For 5,000 years, trust in money required trusting an institution — a temple, a king, a bank, a government. Blockchain is the first technology that creates trust without an institution. The math does what the king used to do. This doesn't make it perfect — blockchains are slow, expensive, and complex — but it represents a genuinely new category of thing: a trustless system for storing and transferring value.
Why Bitcoin Was Born
Money Reimagined — Where Does It Go From Here?
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