It wouldn’t be “profit over everything”, there would be less short term thinking, more investment in communities and general welfare. — Xtrix
So yes, there will be some bias in any discussion of history. We can still put politics aside and agree on something as basic as the definition of capitalism, though. The only thing standing in our way is ego: the one thing that has always screwed leftists. — frank
What presuppositions do you think I have? — frank
The only thing standing in our way is ego: the one thing that has always screwed leftists. — frank
Interest, or the realization of profit, or increase in capital. without having to produce anything, seems to be the essence of capitalism. Of course this notion of interest or, what is essentially the same thing, rent, is intimately connected with the concept of ownership. If you are deemed to own something, then you can legitimately lend it, rent it or simply hang onto it and hope to sell it for profit. — Janus
The current problem, which some see as a crisis, for capitalism seems to be that the upward spiraling generation of mega-debt, which is acceptable only based on the premise that the future can be relied upon to be more prosperous than the past, seems to be sailing dangerously close to the wind, given overpopulation, resource depletion, habitat destruction, global warming and so on. — Janus
Programmatic or revolutionary thinking is doomed to failure in my view, and the only hope can come from full acknowledgement that the future cannot be predicted and controlled. — Janus
Interest, or the realization of profit, or increase in capital. without having to produce anything, seems to be the essence of capitalism. — Janus
but the OP's focus was to distinguish markets from capitalism above all — Streetlight
I think this is the first time in my posting on this philosophy forum that I have not successfully gotten the gist/understanding of the OP and further exposition on the OP on this thread. (I read the thread three times) And I don't mean to say that this is the fault of Streetlight. I mean, my reading comprehension, for some reason, is low when reading this thread. I take this seriously; and I don't have an answer. I'm sure this is a well thought-out thread. — L'éléphant
Dollars, at heart, are just a measurement system like inches. However, I can design a building with limitations inherent to the actual construction materials. I can design a million mile high skyscraper for example, but no one could ever build it. — ASmallTalentForWar
The headache with capitalism is the concept of profit tied to the accumulation of currency. If the currency is connected to some real economic base then that makes sense in that its accumulation will be restrained by real world transactional value. However, when it becomes solely imaginary numbers, then the association with currency and profit is not truly capitalist. — ASmallTalentForWar
Again, this is another thing that is straightforwardly wrong and ahistorical. Money is yet another thing that has been around long before capitalism.
So that's three things we can now say capitalism is not: markets, interest, and money. — Streetlight
Again, this is another thing that is straightforwardly wrong and ahistorical. Money is yet another thing that has been around long before capitalism. — Streetlight
It's about profit. — frank
At heart, the implication is that money is the proper measurement of economic activity, but that is only true is the currency of transaction is limited by the real activity of an economy. — ASmallTalentForWar
Essentially, capitalism is the attempt to separate economic power from aristocratic power. — ASmallTalentForWar
But this is straightforwardly wrong. Interest has been around long before capitalism has. — Streetlight
Historically, mega-debts just disappear during large scale economic contractions. Capitalism magnifies natural cycles of growth and decline. During booms, capitalists seem undefeatable. During busts we wonder why we ever thought living this way was intelligent. — frank
I think a new religion will eventually emerge and absorb concerns like environmental exploitation and global warming. — frank
Why do you see this as paramount? — frank
True again. But this is Eurocentric, isn't it? Or should we think of capitalism as an entirely European invention? — frank
The essence of capitalism is capital growth or profit, over and above any growth in actual products. — Janus
Therefore, to add efficiency to the progress of economic prosperity, create a system where anyone with a good idea can obtain the capital (in practical terms funding, but in conceptual terms, the legitimate ability to take action) to manifest that idea and then let the freedom of his fellow individuals (in the market in practical terms) either take advantage of the idea to their benefit - thus, success and profit - or determine that it is not in their benefit - thus failure, but without bloodshed. — ASmallTalentForWar
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