superrific
Legend of ZZL
- Messages
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1. Why would you take from Marx when there are plenty of other more contemporary sources that are more learned? I like Marx just fine. I'm not remotely a Marxist and have never been; I think he was a perspicacious critic and initiated a discourse in philosophy that was fruitful so long as it remained philosophy. Still, there are other theorists who have insights better suited to our world.I’m a Marxist, so I approach the question from Marx’s understanding of capitalism: a system that orders social production primarily based on private ownership and class subjugation. Value begetting more value.
I’m not interested in arguing about people’s various definitions of capitalism.
2. You say that we can't even imagine a world different than capitalism -- but if you're using that definition of capitalism, then we don't have to imagine because we are already living it. The Marxist view of capitalism requires commodification and alienation of labor. Even in its time, that was an incomplete account of economics. It bears little resemblance to the economy in which we live today.
There is no place in Marxist theory -- none that I know of, at least -- for management, or what Galbraith called the technocracy. In today's economy, about 30% of so of people work in managerial roles.
There is also little place in Marx's theory for technological development. Look at your definition and tell me how it applies to the largest companies in the world, like Google, Apple, Meta, TSM, NVidia. Where is the class subjugation there? What would class subjugation even look like?