But this is where it gets interesting, while Marx is assuredly correct, the question arises, even though serious changes are required, will necessity be enough to bring about an intelligent restructuring? The danger is that though the needs exist, a chain of power determines to defy these needs regardless of the ramifications. — JerseyFlight
You may dispute that view on human nature off course, but ultimately it is an empirical claim and the evidence seems to be in favour of it. — ChatteringMonkey
will more and more render the nationalisation of land a "Social Necessity", against which no amount of talk about the rights of property can be of any avail. — JerseyFlight
Marx's statement is already a fact. Social necessity has rendered the restructuring of private property absolutely imperative in order to meet the needs of society. — JerseyFlight
Perhaps you could compare your OP with Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations. — A Seagull
Smith and Marx agree more than you'd probably think. — Pfhorrest
It is a social disaster waiting to happen. Unfortunately, a decent percentage of the population sees this as a non-problem. — Frank Apisa
Would it be correct to say that, on your view, Marx was a critic of ownership rights over means of production, but not over personal property (like a home, a television, etc.)? — Kornelius
I also really think we should bring out the criticism of the concept of 'human nature' into full focus. This is a concept that many people rely on when arguing, and it is not one that ever been clearly defined. — Kornelius
No my friend, what the evidence favors is that human personality structures are conditioned by 1) attachment systems and 2) quality and stability of environment, this includes food and shelter (the vital parts of the brain must develop and mature without trauma or nutrient deficiencies). There is no such thing as "human nature," (a psychological predisposition to which all humans are subject) this is a false metaphysics.
Anyhow, this thread is not about the myth of human nature, which fascism so desperately needs to hold onto in order to justify its primitive narrative of good versus evil.
It seems you are under the impression that Marx rejected private property. Where did you derive this idea? Can you provide a citation? Marx was against the unintelligibility of capitalist formations of private property -- because they don't make any sense when you think of them in terms of the well-being and needs of the species. Everyone is in need of space in order to live, capitalism negates this fact, segregates it and begins to use it as a tyranny, coercion-leverage.
If you think you have figured out the social world because you make use of the false metaphysical concept of "human nature..." all I can tell you is that you haven't even entered the room where the adults speak, you are in much need of a critical education. — JerseyFlight
And I'll say this once, if you continue the discussion in the same pompous vein, I'm done with it. — ChatteringMonkey
you'd know that there is strong tendency to appropriate things for themselves. — ChatteringMonkey
ChatteringMonkey even if we accept the view of human nature you briefly alluded to, it isn't clear which type of property you mean. I think most of what you say is an argument for limited personal property but is not an argument that extends to ownership over means of production, for example. — Kornelius
Thinking in terms of well-being and what we need as a species, won't work if it doesn't align with what we want. — ChatteringMonkey
What separates humans from other primates is that we look to the adults to obtain information about ourselves and our environment. What a human is and will be depends upon his environment, and here we use the term in the broadest possible sense, both physical and psychological. What you are claiming is not empirical, it is a fiction, humans become what they are as their brain develops and passes through concrete experience structures (see Allan Schore, Affect Regulation and the Origin of the Self). You are asserting that humans come preset, this is a superstition left over from religion. "Human Nature" does not exist, human brains exist, and they are exceedingly sensitive, what your brain experiences and how it develops determines who you are and what you become. If you abuse a child, neglect him, he will grow up to abuse others, he will be selfish, there will be many problems. Humans are not born predisposed to the negative. This is a religious assertion, not a scientific fact. — JerseyFlight
This proves that you can't even enter the room to talk with the adults, and this is why: it is the most basic knowledge of sociology and social psychology that human wants can be artificially generated. This is what consumer culture is all about, generating artificial needs. One thing people should not do is listen to any advice you have on how to approach the problems of the world, because you have clearly manifest that you don't even comprehend the most basic parts of the system. I'm not trying to be mean, this is a problem if you want to converse with any kind of authority. If I was you I would return to education, specifically psychology and sociology. — JerseyFlight
will to power. — ChatteringMonkey
Once again, more of the dark ages brought into the present. Will power as you speak of it does not exist, your will is determined by your motivation and motivation is caused by a plurality of psychological and physical factors. You cannot tell a brain lacking grey matter to simply try harder! This is my last exchange with you. You need to educate yourself and stop trying to see what will stick. I wish you all the best. :) — JerseyFlight
We can review past situations where the nationalization of property has occurred, for instance in Mao’s land reforms, and find that these types of “intelligent restructuring” often led to mass murder, famine, cannibalism and economic disaster. — NOS4A2
State or mob confiscation of land is barbarism of the highest order, no matter which cadre of intellectuals think the know how to do it best. — NOS4A2
Can you tell me what this has to do with Marx? Of course we should all stand against this kind of Right Wing totalitarianism, fascism is dangerous no matter what name it uses. Marx knew that qualitative democracy was the only real solution to political tyranny. Not sure where you locate democracy in Mao, Stalin or Hitler?
I was more so speaking about Marx’s idea of the nationalization of land. Mao saw such a necessity, nationalized the land—a euphemism for the confiscation of property by force—and did so with the most ruthless efficiency. As it turns out, the nationalization of land does not make living on other people's labor a thing of the past. As it turns out, the nationalization of land never made the class distinctions disappear, and state brutality, starvation and murder became the order of the day. — NOS4A2
As it turns out, the nationalization of land never made the class distinctions disappear, and state brutality, starvation and murder became the order of the day. — NOS4A2
The nationalization of property does not mean the abnegation of private property. — JerseyFlight
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