What’s next, War and Peace? — I like sushi
My reading schedule is too full right now, especially to tackle something as big as Capital, unfortunately. — StreetlightX
I am planning on reading Mariana Mazzucato's The Value Of Everything sometime in the near future though, which is in a similar vein and that might interest you. — StreetlightX
It would be good to have this on the site, but only if you make an effort Wallows. Otherwise, it's going in the bin until someone willing to do it properly starts it again. — Baden
My reading schedule is too full right now, especially to tackle something as big as Capital, unfortunately.
— StreetlightX
Make some time.
EDIT: You're the only guy who would seem to tunnel through the work. — Wallows
Pacino is in the groove. “Sometimes I feel I know nothing about acting. Until you start. That’s what’s exciting for me. A new character. I often say: ‘Desire is more motivating than talent.’ I’ve seen people with great desire take it through. The truth is, it’s the same thing that is always was: you are feeling this new character, this new person, this new story.” — Al Pacino
I think 'effort' is the key here. — Amity
If you approach the machinations of what Economics means (resource management) without putting serious effort into the ‘humanity’ of emotional exchanges and values then the critique is going to do little more than initiate a ‘remake’ of Capitalism (mark 2) or the deconstruction of Capitalism without a sensible/applicable alternative given that ‘human’ value in relation to ‘goods’ is merely reduced to ‘labour’. — I like sushi
It’s almost scary how this text frames work for the sake of work as ‘useless’. — I like sushi
The ‘value’ of items as absent of value because they aren’t exchanged? Wtf? Maybe this is too early and I am always on the attack when I read any text for the first time. — I like sushi
Huh? I will not be reading Capital. I was talking about Mazzucato's book. Read whatever and whenever. I'll not be organizing anything. — StreetlightX
Yeah, I hope the above makes this question moot. — Wallows
He doesn’t deny the ‘use value’ as changing yet sets the ‘labour’/‘work’ as absent of any economic value unless there is an exchange of ‘wares’/‘goods’ ... — I like sushi
More complicated labor counts merely as potentiated or rather multiplied simple la- bor, so that a smaller amount of complicated labor is equal to a bigger amount of simple labor.
That this reduction is constantly being made is shown by experience.
A commodity may be the product of the most complicated labor, but its value equates it to the product of simple labor, therefore this value only represents a certain amount of simple labour.
The different proportions, in which differ- ent sorts of labor are reduced to simple la- bor as their standard, are established by a social process that goes on behind the backs of the producers and, consequently, seems to be fixed by custom.
For simplicity’s sake we shall henceforth consider every kind of labor-power to be immediately simple labor- power; by this we do no more than save our- selves the trouble of making the reduction
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