[ 3 / biz / cgl / ck / diy / fa / ic / jp / lit / sci / vr / vt ] [ index / top / reports ] [ become a patron ] [ status ]
2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/lit/ - Literature


View post   

File: 200 KB, 800x1147, Karl_Marx_001.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10640923 No.10640923 [Reply] [Original]

Was he intelligent? - How intelligent was he? A genius? Why did it all go so wrong? What went right? Did it go wrong?

>> No.10640968

his materialist approach to history is god tier

>> No.10640984

his critiques of capitalism were extremely precise and thorough
his ideas of a stateless, classless society were fucking retarded

>> No.10640988

>>10640968
it makes me hard as fuck.

>> No.10641048

>>10640923
>Was he intelligent?
Yes. He wasen't a dumb fuck, especial because of his approuch to hegelian taught and epycurism.

- How intelligent was he? A genius?
Too much. He was smart, but wasen't this Einstein .

Why did it all go so wrong?
It depends of what you are talking. His life? His political activism? His theorys?The first is simples: he was a bad father and husband. Maybe a reflection of the middle-class mentality he never truly gave up. The second is also simples: when you are dealing with autocratic authority (like Prussia) you need to know when you need to chill. He never chilled, so he got rekt. The third one is because socialism dosen't work. When you kill freedom for equality, you are having neither of those.

>What went right?
He's insights in early capitalism were one of the reasons many of the policy makers and the capitalists themselfs need to chance for a more humanistic approuch. The fear they had over losing their power because of ground-floor workers was enought reason for social policies start to try making the average worker less prone to strike.

Did it go wrong?
What? His legacy? No. Marxism is one of the cornerstones to understand the 20th century, and Marx himself is one important piece of his time.
Not only that, his critic of capitalistic system was one of the reasons it inovated itself and keeps alive to this day.

>> No.10641056

>>10640923
Can someone explain to me how a Marxist state will be both stateless AND equal? What if I want to save some of my shit, accumulate it, and make advantageous trades, until I have way more shit than most people. Without a state how exactly can I be stopped?

>> No.10641127

>where did it all go wrong
Complex issue, but regarding socialist states in the 20th century, I'd say they got into a desperate situation after the failure of western european revolutions, and ended up as a few poor countries in the USSR sphere encircled by the capitalist West. At that point they could have given up and settled for vague social democratic promises, or continued trying to build socialism nationally, with all the disadvantages this implies. Many would disagree but it was a noble attempt and achieved more than anyone actually expected ; in the end, socialism wasn't toppled because of its inherent economic unworkability - plenty of literature proves this - but other reasons.

>> No.10641173

>>10641056
There's no more speculation left to do at that point in history. The workers own the means of production, and technological advances make it easy enough to produce everything everyone needs.

>> No.10641181

>>10641173
But what if I want to own more things?

>> No.10641195

>whole theory depends on a populist revolt
>make a fairly impenetrable book for the masses, with lots of ramblings and controversies against people they wouldn't give a shit about

>> No.10641200

>>10641056
>>10641181
You'd get executed.

>> No.10641208

>>10641173
>this is what commies actually believe

>> No.10641211

>>10641200
By who? For what?

>> No.10641214

>>10641173
>and technological advances make it easy enough to produce everything everyone needs.
it's these bullshit handwaves that kept me off marxism for good. that's still outright impossible even after a century and a half after marx

>> No.10641221

>>10641208
They're completely retarded. They genuinely think all of human behaviour can reset itself into some imaginary utopian ideal of cooperation.

>> No.10641223

>>10641181
You want a hundred jackets for example?
I don't know how this new form of production would work with the environment tho, I barely read this stuff so far, comrade.

>> No.10641225

>>10641223
No, I want to save up my wages, make good trades with people, and then have enough money to buy tons of hookers. How can I be stopped from accumulating tons of money if there's no state?

>> No.10641228

>>10641211
by the ruling hierarchy, since having a democracy is impossible
for your greed

>> No.10641231

>>10641221
I was more bugged by the fact that he thinks that we could have a planned economy if we really wanted.

>> No.10641243

>>10641221
>utopian ideal of cooperation.
We already co-operate, and that's how we survive. The interests of everyone is interconnected, it becomes "union of egoists" tier if you really want to stick with individualism.

>> No.10641248

>>10641228
So the ruling hierarchy are just guys with pistols? Or do they command some sort of army/executioner to kill me? What differentiates this from a state exactly?

>> No.10641251

>>10641225
Non-Agression Principle...wait, wrong delusional system.

>> No.10641253

>>10641231
We have already transitioned from feudalism to capitalism, my man. Imagine how strange that old world looks now.

>> No.10641255

>>10641243
We both cooperate and compete. We don't all solely cooperate; that wouldn't work; that's not human nature. Go take a look at other primates as well. You might find it very enlightening to actually observe the natural world.

>> No.10641257

>>10641056
>Marxist state
>state
The state structure serves one classes interests over another, so it's contradictory to say.
How can you even trade something that isn't privately owned? If you're going to trade it, then it's not even personal property of yours anymore. It's produced by labour and not privately owned to be traded off by one individual or more -- it's no longer produced for the purpose of being a commodity.

"Within the co-operative society based on common ownership of the means of production, the producers do not exchange their products; just as little does the labor employed on the products appear here as the value of these products, as a material quality possessed by them, since now, in contrast to capitalist society, individual labor no longer exists in an indirect fashion but directly as a component part of total labor. The phrase "proceeds of labor", objectionable also today on account of its ambiguity, thus loses all meaning."

"In spite of this advance, this equal right is still constantly stigmatized by a bourgeois limitation. The right of the producers is proportional to the labor they supply; the equality consists in the fact that measurement is made with an equal standard, labor.

But one man is superior to another physically, or mentally, and supplies more labor in the same time, or can labor for a longer time; and labor, to serve as a measure, must be defined by its duration or intensity, otherwise it ceases to be a standard of measurement. This equal right is an unequal right for unequal labor. It recognizes no class differences, because everyone is only a worker like everyone else; but it tacitly recognizes unequal individual endowment, and thus productive capacity, as a natural privilege. It is, therefore, a right of inequality, in its content, like every right. Right, by its very nature, can consist only in the application of an equal standard; but unequal individuals (and they would not be different individuals if they were not unequal) are measurable only by an equal standard insofar as they are brought under an equal point of view, are taken from one definite side only – for instance, in the present case, are regarded only as workers and nothing more is seen in them, everything else being ignored. Further, one worker is married, another is not; one has more children than another, and so on and so forth. Thus, with an equal performance of labor, and hence an equal in the social consumption fund, one will in fact receive more than another, one will be richer than another, and so on. To avoid all these defects, right, instead of being equal, would have to be unequal."

Both quotes are from https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1875/gotha/ch01.htm

>>10641225
there's a reason the IWW had said "abolition of the wages system".

>> No.10641264

>>10641243
capitalism is a runaway system that leads to massive waste and unprecedented concentrations of power. Capitalism is not neutral, it has a logic of its own, abstract accumulation of capital is prioritised over everything else

>> No.10641267

>>10641251
hahaha, I remember watching some retarded Stefan Molyneux video where he was seriously arguing that in a 'free society' it would be impossible for an individual to amass arms because that would violate the NAP and everybody would join together to kick him or her out of society. Like an NAP bomb would go off in their brains and they'd all act automatically to 'diffuse the threat'. It was pretty fucking retarded, and Marxists are actually way worse, which is amazing.

>> No.10641274

>>10641257
>How can you even trade something that isn't privately owned? If you're going to trade it, then it's not even personal property of yours anymore. It's produced by labour and not privately owned to be traded off by one individual or more -- it's no longer produced for the purpose of being a commodity.

But what if I have it and someone wants it? And I'll give it to them in exchange for something else? And if they won't give me something else than I'll just keep it? What then?

>> No.10641288

>>10641257
>there's a reason the IWW had said "abolition of the wages system"
So what's the motivation to work really hard? To give 110%? To innovate, create new things, go out on a limb, etc, etc? Sounds like this Marxist utopian future means a bunch of bland shit all produced poorly in a factory and then given out very inefficiently. I'd rather just buy shit dude, even working minimum wage today I have access to more luxuries than Karl Marx could have dreamed of.

>> No.10641308

>>10641253
>unprecedented concentrations of power
https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficiente_di_Gini#/media/File:Gini_since_WWII.svg
>abstract accumulation of capital is prioritised over everything else
What are laws

>> No.10641312

>Low IQ:
Marx is against capitalism.
>Medium IQ:
Marx is in favour of communism.
>High IQ:
Marx is in favour of capitalism, which he views as a completely necessary historical period.

>> No.10641313

>>10641257
>there's a reason the IWW had said "abolition of the wages system"
Will there be, for example, restaurants under communism? How will I get to choose between good or bad restaurants? Will all restaurants be run by the state? Will there be any incentive for any of them to provide me with good food?

>> No.10641325

>>10641255
>Natural
It would be natural if we stayed in the primordial pond and evolved into pondscum as well.

>> No.10641335

It’s outright astonishing to me that anybody could actually think he was outright stupid or crazy or whatever. Like at the very least he did get a PhD in philosophy, could read, write, and speak German, French, and English, speak Yiddish, and read Latin and Ancient Greek. He knew his Shakespeare, Balzac, and Goethe, the fact that he refers to capitalists are Vampires, dead capital as zombies and so on reflects is awareness of the trend of gothic horror of authors like Mary Shelley. Entire studies have been written on analyzing all the cultural and literary references which are absolutely ripe in the first volume of Capital, in fact a recent marxologist has written a books trying to make a case that Marx structured Capital based on Dante, whom he loved. Marx also was scientifically literate, he knew calculus, he was an instant adopter and supporter of Darwin when Origin of Species was publish, in-fact seeing Darwin as providing massive support for his own Materialist Conception of History.

I say this just to make the point that even if you think he was basically wrong about everything, I think it’s impossible to argue that man was some sort of dunce.

His most important contribution, which I don’t think is diminished one bit today is the materialist conception of history. While I wouldn’t go as far as to say that Marx created a “science” is history, I think he can be fairly attributed with the creation of ‘history’ as a real academic discipline and not just well to draw human stories from. I constantly see the failure to include a material understanding of history in analysis in the news, politics, it’s everywhere, the inability to understand that forces of history have led to the present, and that there is no gap between the past and the present is a fundamental failure in how most people talk about and understand the world. I think the best proof of how good this aspect of Marxism is is clearly evident in how profoundly influential British 20th century Marxist historians, for a period of time even right wingers had to begrudgingly acknowledge that most of the best historians alive were Marxists.

>> No.10641338

>>10641325
But we evolved from apes. What's natural is the reality we inhabit. That reality doesn't allow for global, massive, and totally edenic cooperation. We're genuinely apes. Maybe in a few hundred billion ideas communism will be a good fit for human nature.

>> No.10641343

>>10641338
years*

>> No.10641352

>>10641335
>I think the best proof of how good this aspect of Marxism is is clearly evident in how profoundly influential British 20th century Marxist historians, for a period of time even right wingers had to begrudgingly acknowledge that most of the best historians alive were Marxists.

In the 20th century it wasn't blatantly obvious yet how retarded Marxism was. I still doubt your claim though. Also the ide

>> No.10641358

>>10641312
Everybody who is a Marxist should understand that Marx say capitalism as historically progressive, but ultimately had contradictions which would lead to a different system. This wouldn’t necessarily be socialism, but he hoped it would be. He recognizes there are not guarantees and that it’s not determined. Or I should say, he say the fall of capitalism as something that as eventually going to happen for sure, it’s what comes next where all bets are off. As he says ‘each mode of production either ends in one class coming to dominate the other, or their mutual ruin’. He fully acknowledges that everything is just destroyed is one possibility. ‘Socialism or barbarism’ as they say.

>> No.10641364

>>10641338
Human society has changed a lot, even recently in the last 100 years, you need to be a pretty stubborn traditionalist to claim human nature is unchangable.

>> No.10641368
File: 32 KB, 500x326, Miguel Serrano - Dalai Lama.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10641368

>>10640923
Broke: Read Das Kapital by Marx, listen to chapo trap house, post on reddit and start taking tranny pills
Bespoke: Read SIEGE by James Mason and NOS by Miguel Serrano, be alpha as fuck, become NS revolutionary, kill your mailman and destroy ZOG

>> No.10641383

>>10641335
Goebbels also got a PhD in philosophy, so what?

>> No.10641414

http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/~cottrell/socialism_book/

Read Towards A New Socialism, it's the most workable and honest application of Marxist ideas towards a proposed socialist economy. There's no capitulation to markets, it takes the LTV seriously as a method of calculating production with modern computing. They convincingly show that the old arguments presented by anti-marxists in the "socialist calculation debate" are invalid, it is indeed possible to set up a complex planned economy. The only obstacle is one of political struggle, not some idiotic right-wing notion of human nature.

>> No.10641488

>>10641383
Would you say he was stupid? I wouldn’t. The question was about genius.

>>10641368
Shocking to me that anybody can read more than 10 pages of Esoteric Hitlerism and not recognize how transparent the con is.

>>10641352
To be specific, I mean the use of Historical Materialism as a methodology for historical analysis and writing, not Marxism writ large, which I guess would include his economic theory, philosophy, or politics.

Look up historians like Eric Hobsbawm, CLR James, Christopher Hill, Timothy Mason, GEM de Ste. Croix, EP Thompson, Brian Manning, Raphael Samuel, and George Rudé.

It is unambiguous and undeniable that for a long time Historical materialist as a historiographic method absolutely dominated and was completely setting the terms of the debates among historians. While not all the particular theories and theses all these people believed are still accepted, in the middle of the 20th century their work was unavoidable and clearly superior to work coming from anywhere else.

My roommate is finishing up his degree in history and he tells me that Marxism as a method is actually coming back in a big way because of its usefulness in historical analysis. Basically after Marxism went out of vogue, what replaced it was all sorts of postmodern nonsense, and weird particularist microhistories. He was showing me how people were writing what they called “sensory histories”, since after Marxism nobody felt confident enough to write any sort of narrative or explaination for anything, they instead turned to trying to give ‘sensory snapshots’ into what a place would have been like in a certain time period. Literally they had him reading a book about what 1890s Montreal would have “smelled like”. That’s history after Historical Materialism fell out of favor.

>> No.10641510

>>10641414
It’s a bit frustrating to me that many Marxists don’t take seriously how technology changes how we consider politics. To me something like blockchain clearly points towards not a future where everybody uses a crypto currency, but as the fundamental basis technology for making a distributed system for coordinating economic planning and accounting within it. In the near future it would be feasible to have a system where all purchases are automatically relayed to a distribution centre and when things get low a truck is automatically loaded and drives itself to the outlet.

>> No.10641524

>>10641488
>Shocking to me that anybody can read more than 10 pages of Esoteric Hitlerism and not recognize how transparent the con is.

I used to be like you kiddo. but the cultus garbage becomes pretty convincing after a while. There is an unspeakable power contained in esotericism and cultic ritual. I spend my days smoking weed, watching Manson videos and meditating on the Black Sun and the Archetype of the Fuhrer. My conviction is total and absolute, I am ready to Die for the Immortal Cause of Hitlerism and National Socialism.

>> No.10641531

>>10641488
The debates around the French Revolution are probably the best defence of Marxist historiography. A class-based approach dominated ever since Lefebvre and other based dudes hashed it out, and the main revisionist school has been a total mess, basically saying "it was very complex, we can't define a narrative". Well fuck that, apparently historical judgments are only okay if the matter is politically unquestionable.

>> No.10641548

>>10641181

>I don't understand the difference between personal property and private property or the means of production because I've never read Marx

Read Marx

>> No.10641579

>>10641524
Lol you had me going there for a second.

>> No.10641582

>>10641510
capitalists ignore things such as labor and power relationships for an utopia of abstract rationality where everyone gets to be his own enterpreneur somehow. Where are you going to get money to buy soylent capsules from Amazon if emperor Bezos has automated all production? Even if you ignore the imminent ecological and geopolitical collapse, and the fact its economically rational for the technocrat elite to depopulate us, your utopia implies an useless bugman existence my dude, trading shitcoins for a chance to buy Starwars XXIII merchandise of Amazon, all while being being under complete corporate surveillance

>> No.10641588

>>10641582
Here we see a classic example of the commie mind in the 21st century: I don't like the world, therefore the world is going to collapse.

>> No.10641599

People on lit take marxism seriously... This board has a lot of growing up to do.

>> No.10641607

>>10641599
>t. enlightened jordan peterson fan

>> No.10641620

>>10641607
This is so sad.

>> No.10641652

>>10641599
Every serious academic worth his salt takes Marxism seriously, my dude.
Even as a critic, it takes a wide reading to get properly acquainted with the Marxist tradition to offer a worthwhile rebuttal. As a Marxist I will gladly read any good critics, but they are so rare because they don't know what the fuck they're talking about. Unless you're willing to put in the work to become the next Kolakowski, don't bother pretending you've refuted Marxism.

>> No.10641672

>>10641599
Maybe you aren’t that familiar with literature and its study but Marxist analysis is huge and continues to persist. Read Althusser or Fredric Jameson. The Political Unconscious is one of the greatest works of literary theory ever written. If you ever take a course of literary theory you will probably have the textbook written by Marxist Terry Eagleton. Why wouldn’t you expect /lit/ to take Marx seriously?

Also is there not no greater, more overt example of pure ideology then the imposition to “grow up”? ‘I am mature, unlike these child-like fool, because I have accepted the contingent structures of our society to be permanent, unchangable, and indeed natural.’ When you believe you’ve stepped ‘outside’ ideology, this is when you are in-fact deepest in its control.

>> No.10641694

>>10641652
Literally when smart people come to me (a Marxist) and ask what the best through introduction to Marxism is, I point them to Main Currents of Marxism. If they are just plebs there are other more basic introductions, but as far a reasonable advanced introduction, Kolakowski is the master. It’s a testament to his intellectual honesty and skill that he managed to write a book about Marxism that both it’s critics and supporters point to as being a landmark.

>> No.10641705
File: 362 KB, 1910x1000, 104071786-RTX2QM5I.1910x1000.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10641705

>>10641672
Meanwhile...

>> No.10641706

>never had a job
>supported by his rich best friend
How do marxshits defend this? Seriously.

>> No.10641730

>>10641288
lol

>> No.10641767
File: 24 KB, 532x320, 1517513187772-lit.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10641767

>journalism isn't a job
I guess those ~500 articles that he wrote for the New York Daily Tribune don't count.

>> No.10641784
File: 20 KB, 289x372, com.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10641784

>>10640923
>Was he intelligent?
No. Nothing he wrote came to be, he had no idea what he was talking about.

He was a NEET who lived off of his rich capitalist friend. Marxism is a joke that will never be taken seriously by anyone.

Marx = Failure

>> No.10641792

>the proletariat is going to overthrow capitalism
>the proletariat doesn't exist anymore
How do marxists cope with this?

>> No.10641800

>>10641706
>Repeats the same lie that he didn’t have a job..
Think about this, if you were coming up with revolutionary advances in political and economic thought, thought which threatened the ruling powers of the day, how else would you get support for that? It’s not like he could just get a university post, or any civil servant job. So he was a journalist for cash and by and large depended on a patron. One of the big points in Marxism is that you can’t just extract yourself from the system, it’s very nature means you have to play ball in some way.

>>10641705
It was definitely their allegiance to Marxism which led to pegging there whole financial system to oil, the fact in their economy which is fucking them...

>> No.10641808
File: 644 KB, 940x627, highgatecmt.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10641808

>>10641792
>people who depend on the sale of their labour-power for a wage don't exist
Absolutely brutal, Marx is crying inside his grave right now wishing he could come back and become a liberal.

>> No.10641815

>>10641808
>Every worker is a proletarian
Mein sides

>> No.10641824

>>10641800
but that in fact proves Marx was indeed a hypocrite,motivated, mainly, by jealousy towards the real innovators and job creators of his time. Are you Marxists going to tell me the useless sub-80 iq proles working on retail contribute more to society than people like Jeff Bezos or Elon Musk?

>> No.10641864

>>10641824
>job creators
Has a more ideological term ever been invented?

>> No.10641867

>>10641824
Lol yeah, I am. All the thinking and “innovation”, they mean nothing without labour.

But besides that, Marx’s point isn’t a moral one, is a logical and economic one. When a class has a monopoly on the ownership of the means of production they don’t give wages which are equal to the value created by the worker, this is a coerced unequal exchange that underlies all capitalism and is the reason for massive accumulation. Marxists don’t begrudge management making money, a CEO does a legitimate job in maintainaing the function of a firm, they all deserve pay because they contribute to the production of the value of commodities. It’s the people who are mere “owners” and still for some reason feel entitled to anything.

>> No.10641914
File: 202 KB, 900x670, pierre-joseph-proudhon-and-his-children-gustave-courbet.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10641914

>A new challenger appears

>> No.10641921

>>10641864
lol do you think jobs come from thin air?

>> No.10641937

>>10641867
that argument is rendered invalid by the fact we can replace the workers with robots. Face it, most people are useless eaters who produce nothing of worth

>> No.10641950

>>10641921
Do you think socialist countries that expropriated the capitalists didn't have jobs?

>> No.10641972

>>10641950
lmao they didn't even have food tbhh

>> No.10641987

Marx was a spoiled, self centered, and envious piece of shit and his philosophy reflects that. He didn't even give a shit about his mom dying because she stopped funding his layabout lifestyle when he was in his 30's.

>> No.10641992

>>10640923
>intelligent
yes
>genius
yes
>what went wrong
He was too romantic, too perfectionist, and far too empirically oriented. As far as life goes, his 'boils' apparently weren't boils, but some god awful disease that very few people have and is basically a living hell, so I don't hold his bum life as his fault.

>what went right
Grundrisse/Capital are the only work after Hegel which was genuinely Hegelian to the core.

>> No.10641994

>>10641383
yes and he crated the most advanced, complex and efficient mediatic system ever created at that point

>> No.10642009

>>10641994
Who, Goebbels?

>> No.10642012

>>10641588
he doesn’t sound a commie to me at all, you’re stupid. anon is a situationist!

>> No.10642043

>>10642009
yes

>> No.10642062
File: 474 KB, 1959x1306, prole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10642062

>>10641792
>the proletariat doesn't exist anymore
sure, bud

>> No.10642077

>>10642062
just wait till we invent a robot able to disrupt the textile industry. Face it, the proletariat is in the way out, it's all about the enterpreneur and the innovator nowadays.

>> No.10642101

>>10642077
because we all can be enterpreneurs and innovators

>> No.10642113

>>10642101
only the smartest hardest working and most useful of us can aspire to such a thing. the rest should be thankful, accept their subordinate status, consume and avoid causing much trouble.

>> No.10642146

>>10642113
>should
but we won't

>> No.10642162

>>10641992
The best thing Marx did was take Hegel's method but reject Hegel.

>> No.10642197

FRIENDLY REMINDER THAT ALL POSTING ITT WHO HAVEN'T READ BEYOND THE MANIFESTO ARE CHARLATANS

t. Katie Hopkins

>> No.10642206

>>10641264
> capitalism is a runaway system that leads to massive waste
Define waste.
> unprecedented concentrations of power
I can think of many precedents to much larger extremes than both the corporatist system we have today and certainly eclipsing anything possible under a free market.
> abstract accumulation of capital is prioritised over everything else
Value is subjective, you don't know what people prioritise you don't know what they value, you are a child that can't even understand the basic motivations of your fellow man, get the fuck out.

>> No.10642243

hate to shill, but if you want to find out, come read with us.

>>10642232

>> No.10642388

>>10642206
>Value is subjective, you don't know what people prioritise you don't know what they value, you are a child that can't even understand the basic motivations of your fellow man
you really need to get into the nitty gritty of human psychology to know that shelter, food, water and clothing are the most basic priorities

>> No.10642397

>>10642206
and what about advertising? preferences don't exist in a vacuum, on the contrary, the powers that be spend billions shaping those preferences through their tightening monopoly on communication.

>> No.10642429

>>10640923
Karl Marx was brilliant and much of his analysis is applicable today.

However, it's probably much more important to discuss the ways Marxist theoretical innovations influenced history, sociology, anthropology, literary studies, and the ways we view social and economic organization.

>> No.10642439

>>10642397
Persuasion isn't immoral and doesn't take away moral agency/free will just like spanking your kids doesn't necessitate the adoption of a view of then spanking or not spanking your own kids, it's an influence but still a choice.

We persuade people everyday, is it immoral for women to put on makeup to change our preferences? Or guys to seduce girls? Or parents to manipulate children? Or children persuasing parents? Or workers persuading clients or their boss? All of society, social interaction and human life involves persuasion, I don't see how it's immoral unless in the way it's used but not generally.

>>10642388
Which is fair enough, reminds me of Maslows hierarchy of needs, but for someone to say "abstract accumulation of capital prioritized over everything else" merely because money represents so many things we find important, like labour, resources, time, basic needs, our wants etc ignores all the complexities of human action within the economic system, Mises spent decades looking into it and people are too quick to assume shallow observations are true.

>> No.10642448

>>10642439
what about persuading people to overthrow capitalism? and what about the assymetry between the lonely consumer and the crushing weight of mass culture?

>> No.10642483

>>10642448
>what about persuading people to overthrow capitalism?
Well, you're invited to go ahead and try.
>and what about the assymetry between the lonely consumer and the crushing weight of mass culture?
There are many ways around this - gathering around communities of interest (ie /lit/), reading publications and blogs to reflect your opinions - if anything, I'd say that mass culture as traditionally understood is unbundling into communities focused on some trivial interest or other.

>> No.10642497

>>10642439
>but for someone to say "abstract accumulation of capital prioritized over everything else" merely because money represents so many things we find important, like labour, resources, time, basic needs, our wants etc ignores all the complexities of human action within the economic system
listen I sincerely don't give a solitary shit about all those complexities
I see that we're getting closer and closer to a possible extinction event because the system we're in doesn't reward long-term thinking, or at least doesn't reward it appropriately
economics should serve humanity, not the other way around

>> No.10642499

>>10642448
> what about persuading people to overthrow capitalism?
Totally understandable, if you persuade enough people you're essentially changing the culture which is the same thing I want. I want to live in a society that the underlying culture values freedom and voluntaryism.

>> No.10642505

>>10642497
>economics should serve humanity
It doesn't? The systems that preceded capitalism weren't fair at all, they tended to be far more brutal. What's this possible extinction event you're talking about?

>> No.10642522

>>10642497
> economics should serve humanity, not the other way around
It does. Economics in the form of merely studying how humans act when interacting economically does serve us, it serves to explain to use the incentives and ideas behind what people do and how trying to meddle and manipulate this process of millions of individuals interacting has very bad consequences, like for example the short term incentives of politicians, the incentive of taking from others for your own benefit through the state due to legalizing and justifying coersion and plunder.

Those complexities are the most important thing, because they show us how little we actually know about the world and how our egotistical naive meddling is destructive.

Fear of extinction has been the case throughout most of human history, I'm not saying it's not a possibility but that possibility doesn't mean I have to adopt a pessimistic world view.

Capitalism in my opinion has served humanity, that is to say that people interacting voluntarily for mutual benefit has created the greatest benefits humans have ever experienced both materially and other. For the first time in human history we found that social interactions didn't have to be win/lose, we could trade instead of plunder, we could cooperate instead of fight.

Spontaneous order as they as say, muh n'visible hand brought out the best in humanity. The most beautiful sights, the best artists, the most profound thinkers, the most comforts, the most opportunities to get what we want/need and pursue higher goals.

I don't think something like this should be misrepresented by shallow insults like "accumulation of capital prioritized over everything else" without an ounce of understanding. The act of oversimplification is way too fucking common right now.

>> No.10642531

>>10642497
Not that, that's what you were doing.

>> No.10642553

Why do so many people become hysterical when workers want to benefit from the fruits of their labour?

>> No.10642559

>>10642553
They don't? Unlike capitalists, they don't have to bear opportunity costs, they get their money right away at the end of the month, on the regular.

>> No.10642567

>>10642553
workers take absolutely no risk and no initiative to innovate, so after this sloth is deducted from their output, they are compensated fairly, deal with it

>> No.10642582

>>10642553
Because workers selling their labour for a wage and than demaning the factory afterwards is like a woman having sex, regretting it the next day and not only claiming rape but wanting alimony and half of his shit when they haven't even had kids together.

It's like...sit the fuck down bitch and clean your room or else we're in hell and 20billion starved Ukrainians is what that looks like.

>> No.10642594

>>10642582
> than
then*

>> No.10642610

>>10642567
The risk workers take is the risk that their job will injury or kill them, something that in fact happen to thousands of workers every year, and is in-fact not something that your fucking entrepreneurs ever face. The working class has the choice between starving and risk being maimed on the job, how many CEOs died in a mine shaft last year?

>> No.10642634

>>10642610
> The working class has the choice between starving and risk being maimed on the job
Maybe 150 years ago, but thankfully accumulation in capital allowed investment in capital goods that increased productivity and made working easier/safer.

Today, everyone is at risk of a great many things, this is why we cooperate and interact with eachother for mutual benefit. Tit for tat so to speak. An admin assistant doesn't risk starvation or being mained in the west, whereas they still get paid and have their own risks, the employer may/may not get paid and have their own risks.

Stop trying to spread antagonism between people because of their economic choices you fucking post-modernist marxist dog. Leave people alone, you promote nothing but hatred and instability.

>> No.10642645

>>10642610
how many people WORKED in a mine shaft last year? you play right into trump's hands with your "muh coal" fetish, walmart is the biggest employer and then the health care industry after that, no one works in mines

>> No.10642661

>>10642559
>>10642567
>>10642582
Marx is describing a social relationship between worker and capitalist that exists. The worker does agree, they are compensated, and the worker may or may not feel exploited. His problem dosen't stem from a moral or legal grievance. He's just showing what begins as an innocent imbalance of power represented by the worker/capitalist relationship, after surplus is generated, the power (in this case wealth) increases significantly for one group but not necessarily for the other. He actually went so far as to say the relationship was inverse. He's pointing to a structural instability the system inflicts on every sphere of society.

>> No.10642680

>>10642661
I get the exponential acceleration of inequality but I really disagree with his surface logic leap of a surplus being generated. Do you know off the top of your head some good resources dealing with the criticisms of this particular part?

>> No.10642689

>>10642661
the surplus capital gets reinvested instead of pissed away on beer if they had given it all to their workers

>> No.10642741

read him but don't make him out to be some kind of godman with all the answers

>> No.10642867
File: 109 KB, 1050x550, keens1.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10642867

>philosopher tries economics

cute, try again sweetie

>> No.10642891

>>10642689
You have a source?

Of course you dont

>> No.10642904

>>10641312
go back to twitter

>> No.10642924

>>10642891
source: every privately owned factory ever built

bonus: every museum and built by a rich guy