My stumbling notes from where I left off last time at about 350 to...
There's a part where Marx is trying to do the step-wise thing I just did above, but I'm getting lost as he jumps around too fast for me. p 368-370, or the part right before Notebook IV.
p 376 has the most succinct sentence to drawing the distinction between surplus-value and profit:
Just now the original capital of 100 was: 50-10-40. Produced surplus gain of 10 thalers (25% surplus time) Altogether 110 thalers
There's some bits in there that I don't follow right now. Especially has Marx is bouncing around between examples -- it's going too fast for me to follow immediately. But here I can see what he's talking about -- to figure surplus-value you have to look at the working day and split it into labor's reproduction, and surplus-value, whereas profit is figured with respect to the total firm , i.e. start with 100 thalers capital, end with 110 thalers: surplus-value at a 25% increase, while profit is at a 10% increase in the set up to distinguish between the two.
p400 -- coming to understand SNLT as the costs of reproducing labor setting the price of labor.
(the production of workers becomes cheaper, more workers can be produced in the same time, in proportion as necessary labour time becomes smaller or the time required for the production of living labour capacity becomes relatively smaller. These are identical statements)
An interesting question -- how many distinct processes are there? I can draw meaning out of a passage, but I mean -- at the end of the theory. Here thinking about the phrase "realization process", "production process", "exchange process" -- etc.
Basically, what's the final process map look like? Which processes are embedded in which? is there a consistent map between theses processes at any point in time of Marx's writings, or is it more like there are fair interpretations of what's written, and a more experimental-scientific spirit would be required to pin down the best map?
In the realization process, for instance, Marx has three processes. But there are many sub-processes at work within the three processes of 1) capital has maintained its value by means of exchange of money for living labor, 2) production-process (sub-process) whereby surplus value is created and accumulated to a commodity, then 3) demonetization, the commodity as container of objectified labor time that, if mismanaged, all value could go away i.e. one man owns 130 thalers worth linen (supposing I'm doing that right. I had some questions about how to add, but it seems to fit with Marx's 140 thalers math where he's including the 10 thalers worth of equipment as total capital) that then decay because of mismanagement, that then must be re-monetized in order to become the form of value once again. ie. sold for money.
p 407:
The creation by capital of absolute surplus value -- more objectified labour -- is conditional upon an expansion, specifically a constant expansion, of the sphere of circulation. The surplus value created at one point requires the creation of surplus value at another point, for which it may be exchanged; if only, initially, the production of more gold and silver, more money, so that, if surplus value cannot directly become capital again, it may exist in the form of money as the possibility of new capital
Another process map in the next paragraph:
On the other side, the production of relative surplus value i.e. production of surplus value based on the increase and development of the productive forces, requires the production of new consumption; requires that the consuming circle within circulation expands as did the productive circle previously. Firstly, quantitative expansion of existing consumption; secondly: creation of new needs by propagating existing ones in a wide circle; thirdly: production of new needs and discovery and creation of new use values
A tripartite division of moments for a process of consumption which has to follow along the process of production -- i.e. if we decrease SNLT for a given commodity then, in order to realize exchange rather than just have even more linen, you have to expand the number of persons who are consuming that linen. Otherwise, you'll have the same profit rates from before, and some extra linen that will rot.
I like this paragraph. p 409
Thus, just as production founded on capital creates universal industriousness on one side -- i.e. surplus labour, value-creating labour -- so does it create on the other side a system of general exploitation of the natural and human qualities, a system of general utility, utilising science itself just as much as all the physical and mental qualities, while there appears nothing higher in itself, nothing legitimate for itself, outside this circle of social production and exchange. Thus capital creates the bourgeois society, and the universal appropriation of nature as well as of the social bond itself by the members of society. Hence the great civilizing influence of capital; its production of a stage of society in comparison to which all earlier ones appear as mere local developments of humanity and as nature-idolatry For the first time, nature becomes purely an object for humankind, purely a matter of utility; ceases to be recognized as a power for itself; and the theoretical discovery of its autonomous laws appears merely as a ruse so as to subjugate it under human needs, whether as an object of consumption or as a means or production. In accord with this tendency, capital drives beyond national barriers and prejudices as much as beyond nature worship, as well as all traditional, confined, complacent, encrusted satisfactions of present needs, and reproductions of old ways of life. it is destructive towards all of this, and constantly revolutionizes it, tearing down all the barriers which hem in the development of the forces of production, the expansion of needs, the all-sided development of production, and the exploitation and exchange of natural and mental forces
In all the side notes and thoughts, this paragraph was a great little conclusion -- that capital, in its totality, is a revolutionary force which upends all previous ways of life and values in its pursuit of growth. (next paragraph talks about its internalt contradictions which lead to self-destruction... I'm not so optimistic
:P )
Reading though this notebook I'm struck by how much Marx's method resembles Aristotle's in that he's constantly responding to and summarizing previous economist's work, but then attempting to point out how they are a one-sided expression of his own general theory. "they got it right up to this point, where they disagreed with me"
:D
Hrm, here's a quote that might also help with "contradiction" in Marx:
as use value it is absolutely not measured by the labour time objectified in it, but rather a measuring rod is applied to it which lies outside its nature as exchange value
use-value as any need within a social system which is actually satisfied (at least under capital, where exchange is necessary), exchange-value as
realized price, rather than ideal price. Contradiction in that need is in units of number-commodity-consumed, and exchange is in units of labour-time (which has a relation to money through the system of circulation at a given time)
So there is a relation between two entities
with different units -- one set of units influences the other, and so there's a kind of "contradiction" in that neither use-value is exchange-value or vice-versa, but their identity simultaneously relies upon one another. I.e. without exchange-value there'd be no general use-value, even in simple circulation (the original problem of two incommensurate goods becoming commensurate through a third good, time). But, simultaneously, without actually satisfying real needs, the use-value would not have an exchange value. It'd be unproductive labor of the sort that falls out of circulation without even being consumed.
Something like that. It's honestly still the most confusing part of Marx's system for me. There are times when I feel the move is natural and others when I don't, and still can't figure out a real rule to it. My guess is there isn't a
real rule in terms of interpreting Marx, since Marx is a philosopher, but it still leaves the question there for anyone interested in Marx as a scientific system -- how to turn dialectics into something that's not just a philosophical move, but can actually be checked by others? Something that doesn't just rely upon a demonstration and a judgment call (though, that could also be the very thing that's needed, and leaving it at that unspecified level might be best!)
another contradiction at p 415:
The contradiction between production and realization -- of which capital, by its concept, is the unity -- has to be grasped more intrinsically than merely as the indifferent, seemingly reciprocally independent appearances of the individual moments of the process, or rather of the totality of processes
Though that
seems to make sense from everything -- in Hegelian fashion we could say that the contradiction between production-realization is a more developed form of the contradiction between use-exchange value (or whatever the appropriate mapping would be ... as I said I'm pretty uncertain what The Big Marxist Map really looks like)
Probably stop there for today. Looks like I'll be ready for tomorrow after all! 35 pages to go.