No one person can ever in their lifetime know the mind bogglingly large number of factors that go into all the products that they encounter and use. This alienation from factors of production is a problem as we are atomized from the sources of production- reduced to a tiny infinitesimal fraction of the larger pie. Without grandiose notions of free-fettered capitalism's amazing invisible hand or the overblown notions of alienation from labor in Marx rhetoric, is this a problem for modern humans? — schopenhauer1
1. The general public cares little about the origins of consumer items, which includes slave labor, unethical work practices, and environmental destruction. — NKBJ
is this a problem for modern humans? — schopenhauer1
No one person can ever in their lifetime know the mind bogglingly large number of factors that go into all the products that they encounter and use. This alienation from factors of production is a problem as we are atomized from the sources of production- reduced to a tiny infinitesimal fraction of the larger pie. Without grandiose notions of free-fettered capitalism's amazing invisible hand or the overblown notions of alienation from labor in Marx rhetoric, is this a problem for modern humans? — schopenhauer1
- My work would be a free manifestation of life,
hence an enjoyment of life.
Presupposing private property, my work is an alienation of life,
for I work in order to live,
in order to obtain for myself the means of life.
My work is not my life.
But what are they lacking? and why does the amazon warehouse strip them of that? and then, only then, what to do? — csalisbury
It's easy to decry things. It's very hard to explain how to make things better.) — csalisbury
True enough, manufacturing has become extraordinarily complex. But that isn't "alienation" exactly. Edited, Marx said,
- My work would be a free manifestation of life,
hence an enjoyment of life.
Presupposing private property, my work is an alienation of life,
for I work in order to live,
in order to obtain for myself the means of life.
My work is not my life.
If a man builds his own house, cultivates food on his own land, hunts his own game for food and leather, etc. his work and life would be a unity. Since the industrial revolution, the expansion of the capitalist economic system, urbanization, and so on -- fewer and fewer people have had any opportunity to experience a unity of work and life.
Almost all of us work for others, because we must. Production of all that we need and want is pretty much centralized and highly organized. We work in order to obtain the means of life, as Marx said -- food, clothing, shelter, heat, etc. But our work is not our life. We don't work for the sake of the work we do; we work so that we can buy bread.
That is the kind of alienation Marx was talking about. — Bitter Crank
The second meaning of alienation comes from, but perhaps not obviously, the fact of one's working in an office or factory that is private property and one is just a hired hand. It comes from the recognition that one, in fact, may not have a place in the world that can't be taken by someone else -- just about anybody else.
When we alienated, unhappy people have lost all our connections that bind us together, we are atomized. The next stage, after Alienation and Atomization, is Anomie, the lack of the usual social or ethical standards in an individual or group. — Bitter Crank
You are not going to like this, but it all goes back to why we have new humans in the first place. Why bring more people into the world to keep the MACHINE afloat? — schopenhauer1
I still don't get that one. — schopenhauer1
Do you think there is something intractable in life itself whichyour main solutions of better community and more projects to focus onanything we think of will not be able to fix? — schopenhauer1
I don't think the consumer's knowledge of a product's production method and sources is the issue.No one person can ever in their lifetime know the mind bogglingly large number of factors that go into all the products that they encounter and use. This alienation from factors of production is a problem as we are atomized from the sources of production- reduced to a tiny infinitesimal fraction of the larger pie. Without grandiose notions of free-fettered capitalism's amazing invisible hand or the overblown notions of alienation from labor in Marx rhetoric, is this a problem for modern humans?
Does it really all get purchased? And if so; how much of it ends up in the landfill within 10 years? — XTG
I don't think the consumer's knowledge of a product's production method and sources is the issue.
I believe you mean the manufacturer's or worker's alienation from the product and the fact that they only participate in a figurative segment or link in a much larger, sometimes transnational chain of production. — aporiap
I don't think many people think much into the goods they've bought. And there are different kinds of products and different levels of value or connection given to products. There are ones simply used for convenience and practical relevance, there are ones we feel express or reflect aspects of ourselves or groups of which we feel apart or drawn to- clothes, merchandise, music. There are ones we feel connection to or have other personal significance - trinket from grandma, dad's old mustang. I don't think removal from production process removes these feelings. What do you think is lost by this lack of knowledge of a product's origin?No, in a way, I do mean just that about product's production. Consumers don't know much about the very technology they use. Most people praise this as a good thing as it shows that the industrial market economy creates such specialization and labor division, that we can be thousands of steps removed from the process of production/distribution.
Again, I don't understand the jump from understanding of a product's origin to lack of connection to the product or the greater environment. Isn't that a prerequisite to purchasing a product - it having some significance or meaning to us? And that value can shift or change, grow or dissipate in time.There are almost an infinite amount of factors that go into making any individual product or utility. Everything we touch and experience in society has some story that didn't involve us, yet we utilize it. We are aliens from the world we inhabit.
So what is the consequence of this? We are simply pushed along by the innovations of others. Empty vessels with no real connection to our own artificial environment.
You want the STUFF (i.e. all the complex technologically created goods). > YOU must contribute now (since most people aren't technological pioneers through circumstance or lack of aptitude this means lever pushing for many). > You are beholden to the forces of technology because if you want the STUFF you need to contribute your bean counting and lever pushing > there is no way out except perhaps antinatalism — schopenhauer1
1. Do you mean if everyone decided not to work officially? I.e. they 'work' at home - cleaning their kitchens, flowering the garden, making food; but they refuse to work at their work places? I think if you mean that then probably we'd diverge into small working communities. Progress would slow, life expectancy would likely shorten.How about these questions:
What if everyone in the world decided not to work?
What is it we are trying to get out of life in the first place?
It's not always so rote. There are so many job and career options, there are so many ways to feel connected to a given job or career. You might teach or do therapy because you love to work with people or mentor others. You might prefer a family oriented, balanced, low competition life - so you prefer to work in blue collar sector. Sometimes there are barriers to carving a career, some of those barriers are unjust and should not be there -- but I think if we lived in a society where career opportunity was freely accessible and without significant barriers, I don't think people would be so limited by their work options.You want the STUFF (i.e. all the complex technologically created goods). > YOU must contribute now (since most people aren't technological pioneers through circumstance or lack of aptitude this means lever pushing for many). > You are beholden to the forces of technology because if you want the STUFF you need to contribute your bean counting and lever pushing > there is no way out except perhaps antinatalism
It's not always so rote. There are so many job and career options, there are so many ways to feel connected to a given job or career. You might teach or do therapy because you love to work with people or mentor others. You might prefer a family oriented, balanced, low competition life - so you prefer to work in blue collar sector. — aporiap
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.