Do you have any ideas on how this could be countered? — JerseyFlight
America has engaged in more wealth redistribution than all the Marxist and Socialist countries combined! — JerseyFlight
The fact is that functioning capitalist societies have not impoverished the physician, the lawyer or even the man of science (with poets I don't know). — ssu
If they defend capitalism, they can't be Marxists. It would be contradictory to everything Marx wrote and predicted. Whether or not they benefit from it is another matter. We're discussing whether Marx was right, not whether he was honest. Don't get off topic.They may benefit from the current economic hegemony, — NOS4A2
Why do you want to know? Would anything happen if I was? I think you should know from what I've written. There are some things I think Marx was right about and some things I don't. Does that make me a Marxist?Are you a Marxist? — NOS4A2
Marx wanted class distinction to disappear by adjusting social and economic rules in such a way everyone becomes part of the same class. — Benkei
Democracy is also perverted when it is controlled by a social group. If all the candidates for elections represent the interests of the industrial-military complex, as Eisenhower called it, and the possibilities of an alternative are blocked by the system, democracy is nothing but a sham. We elect the same people to do what others we have not elected demand of them. This is capitalist democracy, according to Marx. Was he right? In large part, I'm afraid.We have had a lot of experience of these "other democracies" and how democracy is killed by this method when there isn't actual representation of any others than those firm believers of the right cause. — ssu
You live in the Land of Cocaigne, surely. All the efforts of the conservative parties in Europe, especially since the fall of the communist bloc, are aimed at widening the gap between the rich and the poor, at degrade working conditions and at dismantling social services. To put it euphemistically, this is the neoliberal programme. According to reports from international bodies, this is exactly what is happening.All I have to do is to look at my conservative party in this country and how it supports the welfare state — ssu
If you don't read what the rest of us write, the debate becomes a Marx's dialog -- Groucho Marx,of course. I repeat:"Only by forcible overthrow" doesn't seem like this "disappearance" would be peaceful. — ssu
But he did not think that the process would be very peaceful. Exploiters don't like to have their means of exploitation taken away from them and they have enough power to defend themselves violently. The way he had done it in Europe (France especially during the communes of 1848 and 1871) made this very clear. — David Mo
There are plenty of communists. — NOS4A2
Further, your objection, like so many other objections in this domain, begins with the false metaphysical assumption of the predestined evil of human nature. — JerseyFlight
Exactly! But it's even worse because the defenders of capitalism play with two cards: neo-Darwinism and contractualism. When it suits them, they appeal to the contractualist card to show off capitalism's pacifying virtues (Steve Pinker). When things don't work out, they claim the competitive Darwinian basis of capitalism. What are we left with? Can we or can we not?If you're trying to claim a kind of genetic determinism, specifically social Darwinism, friend you have it all wrong. — JerseyFlight
How Americans think income should be distributed, how they think it is distributed, and how it actually is distributed: — Pfhorrest
Obviously. Marx was not a liberal Democrat. He thought that parliamentary democracy was an instrument in the hands of the bourgeois class and that other types of democracy must be sought that would put an end to exploitation. This is the alphabet of Marxism.Yet democracy was only a tool for the proletariat, to get power. Others classes have to fall under the lead of the proletariat. This shows clearly how Marx isn't at all a democrat or believes in democracy. — ssu
If one analyzes the role of European social democracy after Marx there is no doubt that he was right, from his assumptions."Communists must unremittingly struggle against these bourgeois socialists because they work for the enemies of communists and protect the society which communists aim to overthrow." — ssu
Don't be melodramatic: Marx didn't want to "kill" an entire class. He wanted the bourgeois class to disappear as a class because it was living off the exploitation of humanity. In his opinion this would happen "naturally" when private ownership of the means of production disappears. But he did not think that the process would be very peaceful. The exploiters don't like to have their means of exploitation taken away from them and they have enough power to defend themselves violently. The way he had done it in Europe (France especially during the communes of 1848 and 1871) made this very clear.And neither did the Communists that took up arms and were eager to kill the class enemy. — ssu
You could say that. But you can find interesting things as long as you know how to separate the straw from the grain. And complement it with other sources. Information demands effort, it doesn't come to you like manna.The daily press? The daily press is primarily a farce. — whollyrolling
That's weird. I haven't seen those people you say. My sources are journalists and activists who are not among the 1% who benefit from exploitation.Let me just add here that the people I've heard complaining about the conditions of outsource factories are primarily "the 1% wealthy elite", — whollyrolling
Again, you have no idea who you're speaking to and know nothing of my character. — whollyrolling
I'm not interested in your character but in what you say. And there's nothing leftist in what you say.I was a "left-wing liberal" my entire life. — whollyrolling
We are discussing that, because it is part of Marx's predictions about the evolution of capitalism. The worldwide concentration of capital is one of the few that has come true.As far as your commentary on media and the wealthy 1% "elite"--I agree with some of it, but that isn't what we were discussing. — whollyrolling
This is one of the classic excuses of the exploiter: I pay them a shitty salary, the working conditions are infamous, but they must thank me: I give them work. And I'm getting richer and richer. Everybody is happy, is it not?For one thing, and you need to be more specific about location, the nations to which these manufacturing tasks are outsourced are impoverished and in need of work, — whollyrolling
Well, it looks like you do. In any case, the maquiladoras and other industries established in the third world by Western companies are an essential part of capitalism. It's global capitalism, you know. In many of the corrupt countries what keep the business going it is the local bourgeois class (capitalism) that benefits along with the transnational corporations. And they are democracies endorsed by the American Friend and the rest of the gang. Nowadays you have to present things with a good facade, even if they are as rotten as ever underneath. Ballots are made, they are put in ballot boxes and the usual ones with different collars win. That's nice and it quiets down some well-meaning critics. "The People want it." This is what Marx rightly - in this case - denounced .And let me be clear that I do not condone sweatshops, but that's a whole other conversation. — whollyrolling
You don't see why. I've never spoken to someone who defends or promotes Marxism and also "sees why". — whollyrolling
To which territories or circumstances are you directing our attention? — whollyrolling
This is the lesson taught by the media that produce bourgeois propaganda. There's another way of looking at it:The West has used human nature to curb some of humanity's barbarism, to bring about a state of relative peace and order, as well as individual wealth and autonomy--and not exclusively in the West. — whollyrolling
It is as simple as when thinking to implement into reality Plato's ideal society, where people are divided into workers, soldiers and philosophy kings. You really are so naive to think that the class of the "philosopher kings" will be the most wise, virtuous and selfless and corruption can be rooted away by them living communally and modestly? — ssu
hence it really isn't about democracy and the rights of minorities that Marx is interested about. — ssu
Capital owners can easily avoid the violence of communist revolutionaries — Pfhorrest
If communism adheres to those tenets, then why does the state take everything for itself and leave common people destitute, and why are the state and its closest affiliates, for example organized crime syndicates and puppet CEO's, the only ones who benefit, and only as long as they are in total ideological alignment with the regime. — whollyrolling
Are you talking about the Palestinians? Or Pinochet? Or about...No, what I'm talking about is armed military personnel fire a gun into your coworker's head so that you will get back to work. What I'm talking about is you're removed from your home at gunpoint, all your possessions are seized by a government of wealthy elitists, and you end up living in a ghetto, or in a gulag. — whollyrolling
How naive of you!I’ll take him at his word. — NOS4A2
This doesn't always work. What does " bring up Hitler" mean?I think it’s better to bring people up than to pull people down. — NOS4A2
Given that the bourgeoisie controls the economy, culture and the capitalist state apparatus, and given that capitalism is primarily responsible for how bad things are for many people, this is what matters.Perhaps it’s not the bourgeoisie that needs our attention. — NOS4A2
I don't understand why Marx should have predicted Pol Pot. Is preaching the the struggle against the exploitation of man by man leading straightforwardly to Stalinism? I don't see why.I'm referring to the Communist Manifesto and the inhumanity which Marx, if he had even the sense of a goldfish, must have foreseen. — whollyrolling
but also I sincerely believe the purpose of philosophy is to serve human beings — Hippyhead
I assume that you are not providing a reasoning or evidence, but a feeling. I can share that feeling more or less, but it's not a basis on which we can argue.It's my sense — Hippyhead
And many others become more and more complicated when we go deeper into them. For example: I intuitively understand Rutherford's atomic model, but when we go deeper into quantum mechanics I read more and understand less. Is it Niels Bohr's fault or the complexity of the theories about the atom?I would counter that many things are complicated on the surface, but if one digs deep enough the bottom line is usually pretty straightforward and can be expressed in every day language. — Hippyhead
Do you mean George Washington or David Ben Gurion (I guess)?I'm not sure what you mean by "perversion" here. What violent overthrow of authority leaves in its wake is a violent regime. — whollyrolling
As a description of what happened in China before and during the revolution I find it a bit simplistic and confusing.You can't peaceably murder authority, peaceably rob a hundred million people of home and livelihood, and then peaceably persuade them into productivity on behalf of a state which just murdered their leaders and robbed them of all their possessions. — whollyrolling
Mao was a devout Marxist — NOS4A2
But mostly I’m speaking about the concept of one class appropriating the land of another, the euphemism “nationalization”, which always brings about the contrary to Marx’s predictions. — NOS4A2
The nationalization of property does not mean the abnegation of private property. — JerseyFlight
I've never read Heideggers lectures on Parmenides. Would Zeno's paradox demonstrate a concealment of being for him? — Gregory
What is the purpose of philosophy? — Hippyhead
Like Zeno, I think Heidegger started with the world — Gregory
To claim that these activities, when conducted in a ready-to-hand manner (in a sense "unconsciously" or transparently), involve "knowledge" is misleading — Xtrix
Put "understanding of Being" if you like it better. Or "un-concealing". You won't deny that these are Heideggerian terms.I understand. But again, what on earth is "knowledge of Being"? — Xtrix
Of course "degenerated" implies a value judgment, but it is not moral, as you suppose. You can make mistakes in the Mont Blanc path and never reach the top, but that does not mean you are a bad person.f Heidegger makes any kind of value judgment, — Xtrix
Parmenides thinks being, but is still guided in his interpretation of it by temporality (as anyone has to be, as Dasein -- who's meaning is temporality), in the sense of "presencing", which has dominated ever since. — Xtrix
In the course of this history certain distinctive domains of Being
have come into view and have served as the primary guides for subsequent
problematics : the ego cogito of Descartes, the subject, the "I", reason,
spirit, person. But these all remain uninterrogated as to their Being and
its structure, in accordance with the thoroughgoing way in which the
question of Being has been neglected. (22/44)
With the 'cogito sum' Descartes had claimed that he was putting philo
sophy on a new and firm footing. But what he left undetermined when he
began in this 'radical' way, was the kind of Being which belongs to the
res cogitans, or-more precisely-the meaning of the Being of the 'sum'. (...)The seemingly new beginning which Descartes proposed for philosophizing has revealed
itself as the implantation of a baleful prejudice, which has kept later
generations from making any thematic ontological analytic of the 'mind'
such as would take the question of Being as a clue and
would at the same time come to grips critically with the traditional
ancient ontology (24-25/45-46)
I think that's enough of a sample.If, however, this is not possible, we must then demonstrate explicitly not only that Descartes' conception of the world is ontologically defective, but that his Interpretation and the foundations
on which it is based have led him to pass over both the phenomenon of the world and the Being of those entities within-the-world which are proximally ready-to-hand. (95/128)
Because while an interpretation may very well be perverted regarding it's interpretation of what the Greeks originally believed (and hence "wrong" as incorrect, inaccurate, etc), in and of itself it is just as "valid" to interpret Being as "God," — Xtrix
Heidegger is not against science or technology. He's not against God or substance, either. — Xtrix
Because something ontical is made to underlie the ontological, the expression "substantia" functions sometimes with a signification which is ontological, sometimes with one which is ontical, but mostly with one which is hazily ontico-ontological. Behind this slight difference of signification, however, there lies hidden a failure to master the basic problem of Being. To treat this adequately, we must 'track down' the equivocations in the right way. (94/127)
This is because the goddess told him to consider the world and how change doesn't make sense. — Gregory
I'm sorry to say, but the one who hasn't read it (or hasn't understood it) is you.You obviously haven't read Parmenides's poem. The goddess guides him to pure Being through beings of the world — Gregory
(2.1.)Come now, I will tell thee - and do thou hearken to my saying and carry it away - the only two ways of search that can be thought of. The first, namely, that It is, and that it is impossible for anything not to be, is the way of conviction, (2.5.)for truth is its companion. The other, namely, that It is not, and that something must needs not be, - that, I tell thee, is a wholly untrustworthy path.
(…) (7.1.)For this shall never be proved, that the things that are not are; and do thou restrain thy thought from this way of inquiry. Nor let habit force thee to cast a wandering eye upon this devious track, or to turn thither thy resounding ear or thy (7.5.) tongue; but do thou judge the subtle refutation of their discourse uttered by me. — Parmenides' Poem
(6.1.)It needs to be that what can be thought and spoken of is; for it is possible for it to be, and it is not possible for, what is nothing to be. — Ibid
I'm sorry to say you didn't understand the meaning of my quote. I had included it so that you would see that your idea that Heidegger does not speak of a knowledge, interpretation, etc. that is "right" is false. The term "right", although rarely used in Being and Time, also appears in the sense of "correct".has nothing to do with your claim. Why? Because here Heidegger is talking about Dasein, and specifically about how to analyze it — Xtrix
I'm not doing an exegesis of Heidegger, but a critique. This criticism refers to his use and abuse of language. If he says that to understand is not to know, I would think it was nonsense. Can you separate the two things?He doesn't use the word "knowledge" for many reasons, as I mentioned above — Xtrix
Any interpretation which is to contribute understanding, must already have understood what is to be interpreted. This is a fact that has always been remarked, even if only in the area of derivative ways of understanding and interpretation, such as philological Interpretation. The latter belongs within the range of scientific knowledge. — T&B: 151/192
The logos of the phenomenology of Dasein has the character of a herménuein, through which the authentic meaning of Being, and also those basic structures of Being which Dasein itself possesses, are made known to Dasein's understanding of Being. — B&T: 37/62)
Or we can interpret this as his saying "The Greeks had the truth of being, — Xtrix
It is.If the truth is the unveiling of Being, — David Mo
It isn't. — Xtrix
The 'Being-true' of the lógos as aletheia means that inlegéin as apophaínesthai, the entities of which one is talking must be taken out of their hiddenness ; one must let them be seen as something unbidden that is, they must be discovered. — Ibid, 32/56
We are not discussing the meaning of Heidegger's philosophy, but a series of partial issues that do not need the understanding of time to be resolved.It's exactly what we're discussing, because we're discussing Heidegger, and you cannot possibly understand him if you don't understand his claims about time. — Xtrix
And no, Parmenides is not "guided by things." The claim in that passage is that he is guided by legein, or "noein," which is the simple awareness of something present-at-hand. — Xtrix
Is it clear enough?Heidegger calls this mode of Being presence-at-hand, and he sometimes refers to present-at-hand entities as ‘Things’. — Wheeler, Michael, Martin Heidegger, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
And perverted because of its interpretation as substance.You most certainly can, because that's in essence the heart of Western philosophy: presence. Heidegger says so himself -- i.e., that this has been how Being has been interpreted since the early Greeks. — Xtrix
Greece after the Presocratics, Rome, the Middle Ages, modernity—has asserted a metaphysics and, therefore, is placed in a specific relationship to what-is as a whole. Metaphysics inquires about the being of beings, but it reduces being to a being; it does not think of being as being. Insofar as being itself is obliterated in it, metaphysics is nihilism. The metaphysics of Plato is no less nihilistic than that of Nietzsche. Consequently, Heidegger tries to demonstrate the nihilism of metaphysics in his account of the history of being, which he considers as the history of being’s oblivion. His attempt to overcome metaphysics is not based on a common-sense positing of a different set of values or the setting out of an alternative worldview, but rather is related to his concept of history, the central theme of which is the repetition of the possibilities for existence. This repetition consists in thinking being back to the primordial beginning of the West—to the early Greek experience of being as presencing—and repeating this beginning, so that the Western world can begin anew. — W. J. Korab-Karpowicz: Martin Heidegger (1889—1976), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Says the person who doesn't understand. — Xtrix
Of course, it only says what interpretation is blind, perverted and concealing. Which is not the same as saying it' s wrong, according to you. Where' s the difference? I don't see it anywhere. Please explain it.Not to go through them and point out how they're all "wrong," — Xtrix
Only by presenting this entity in the right way can we have any understanding of its Being. No matter how provisional our analysis may be, it always requires the assurance that we have started correctly. — Heidegger: (T&B, 43/69)
There is no "knowledge of the truth" mentioned, at all. — Xtrix
n the age of the first and definitive unfolding of Western philosophy among the Greeks, when questioning about beings as such and as a whole received its true inception, beings were called phusis.
This fundamental Greek word for beings is usually translated as "nature." We use the Latin translation natura, which really means "to be born," ''birth." But with this Latin translation, the originary content of the Greek word phusis is already thrust aside, the authentic philosophical naming force of the Greek word is destroyed. This is true not only of the Latin translation of this word but of all other translations of Greek philosophical language into Roman — Heidegger: ItM:10/14
Heraclitus, to whom one ascribes the doctrine of becoming, in stark contrast to Parmenides, in truth says the same as Parmenides. He would not be one of the greatest of the great Greeks if he said anything else. One simply must not interpret his doctrine of becoming according to the notions of a nineteenth-century Darwinist. Certainly, subsequent presentations of the opposition between Being and becoming never attained the uniquely self-contained self-sufficiency of Parmenides' saying. In that great era, the saying of the Being of beings contained within itself the [concealed] essence of Being of which it spoke. The secret of greatness consists in such historical necessity. — Ibid: 74/103
If we pay attention to what has been said, then we will discover the inner connection between Being and seeming. But we can grasp this connection fully only if we understand "Being" in a correspondingly originary way, and here this means in a Greek way. — Ibid:76/106
With those or similar words he says it repeatedly. If the truth is the unveiling of Being, the Presocratics were much closer to it. That's why Heidegger comes back and interprets his texts over and over again. If not, why does he do it? Is it not because he hopes to regain a path (beginning or way in his words) that has been lost? In the texts I have quoted here he says that the "Greeks" were closer to Being than anything that came after. Isn't proximity to Being a criterion of truth in Heideger? Of course it is.Heidegger never puts it as "truth of being." — Xtrix
Aquinas is just as "wrong" as Parmenides. They both view being as something present-at-hand. — Xtrix
Heidegger, then, denies that the categories of subject and object characterize our most basic way of encountering entities. He maintains, however, that they apply to a derivative kind of encounter. When Dasein engages in, for example, the practices of natural science, when sensing takes place purely in the service of reflective or philosophical contemplation, or when philosophers claim to have identified certain context-free metaphysical building blocks of the universe (e.g., points of pure extension, monads), the entities under study are phenomenologically removed from the settings of everyday equipmental practice and are thereby revealed as fully fledged independent objects, that is, as the bearers of certain context-general determinate or measurable properties (size in metres, weight in kilos etc.). Heidegger calls this mode of Being presence-at-hand, and he sometimes refers to present-at-hand entities as ‘Things’. — Wheeler, Michael, Martin Heidegger, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
The Greeks did not have "knowledge of the truth" as if there's truth "out there" to be known. — Xtrix
Later it becomes a matter of logos as assertion, as correct propositions and correspondence of that which is present-at-hand. — Xtrix
At the same time, however, we must not overlook the fact that while this way of understanding Being (the way which is closest to us) is one which the Greeks were the first to develop as a branch of knowledge and to master, the primordial understanding of truth was simultaneously alive among them, even if pre-ontologically, and it even held its own against the concealment implicit in their ontology-at least in Aristotle. — Heidegger: Being and Time, Oxford, 2001, p. 225/268
Well, you're laughing at Heidegger himself.Any concealing or downgraded translation of Heraclitus and Parmenides in terms of substantia meant the loss of the right way of understanding Being. — David Mo
The "right way." It's almost laughable to put it like this. — Xtrix
The primordial phenomenon of truth has been covered up by Dasein' s very understanding of Being-that understanding which is proximally the one that prevails, and which even today has not been surmounted explicitly and in principle. At the same time, however, we must not overlook the fact that while this way of understanding Being (the way which is closest to us) is one which the Greeks were the first to develop as a branch of knowledge and to master, the primordial understanding of truth was simultaneously alive among them, even if pre-ontologically, and it even held its own against the concealment implicit in their ontology-at least in Aristotle. — Heidegger: Being and Time, Oxford, 2001, p. 225/268
Objects and substances (beings) have properties. Being has no properties. — Xtrix
The advent of beings lies in the destiny of being. — Heidegger: Letter on Humanism, Op. Cit. p. 252
Parmenides and Heraclitus had it "right" (though we're not sure what the "it" refers to), and those after them have it "wrong." Excellent analysis. But not once in Heidegger. — Xtrix