Questions
1. Relationship between the worker, the process, and the object (p. 287)
2. Valorization [verwertet] - what work is this concept doing? (p. 303)
3. Why is temporality the framing for labour? Is it historical? Why not explain in terms of compensation rather than length of the work day?
4. Does enslaved labor produce value? Is the 'value' of enslaved labour the socially average necessary labour-time to produce an enslaved worker? (p. 303)
5. Distinction between creating value and valorization (p. 302)
6. What is Marx's relationship to humanism, i.e., the commitment to the distinctness of the human as "tool-making animal" (p. 286) or as the labouring animal (p. 283)?
7. Marx writes: "Through this movement he acts upon external nature and changes it, and in this way he simultaneously changes his own nature" (p. 283). What is the limit to the plasticity, malleability, perfectability, etc. of human nature?
Discussion
- Two senses of instrument on (p. 285) - both hand instrument and the entire world as resource [Q6 and Q7]
- Some animals minimally use instruments
- Franklin's conception of tool-making; Bergson later treats it as making tools to make tools and so on
- Bees and spiders act on instict rather than having concepts or ideas of tools
- When is labour present? - Reaching for the apple is labour; does the body become an instrument
- Bodily organs become instruments on p. 28
- Is breathing labouring? Do the lungs become instruments?
- They change nature into a resource
- "Labour is, first of all, a process between man and nature, a process by which man, through his own actions, mediates, regulates and controls the metabolism between himself and nature. He confronts the materials of nature as a force of nature. H e sets i n motion the natural forces which belong to his own body, his arms, legs, head and hands, in order to appropriate the materials of nature in a form adapted to his own needs. Through this movement he acts upon external nature and changes it, and in this way he simultaneously changes his own nature." (p. 283)
- Metabolism as biological
- But given bee/spider examples, it cannot be instinctual or involuntary (?)
- Biological underdetermination (from Soren Mau) - some biological elements but also socially malleable
- Co-determination of instruments/technology and society/humanity
- But environment still becomes instruments or resources
- The difference between humans and bees is that humans are conscious of our use of tools/materials (p. 284)
- The kick-back transforms our nature - therefore, still some tech determinism
- Or in communism, we have full control over kick-back, we would control the effects to purposefully transform ourselves
- Intention in labour "Man's activity, via the instruments of labour, effects an alteration in the object of labour which was intended from the outset." (p. 287)
- What about "unrest" in the worker affecting the object of labour? (p. 287) [Q1]
- "During the labour process, the worker's labour constantly un der goes a transformation, from the form of unrest [Unruhe] into that of being [Sein], from the form of motion [Bewegung] into that of objectivity [Gegenständlichkeit]." (p. 296)
- Instrumentalism without technological determinism (?)
- Not some inexorable technological determinism which undermines agency
- But still some instrumentalism without being "straight-line instrumentalism" (see Ihde/Winner)
- Maybe not a coherent view - but less deterministic than the fragment on machines
- Technological change does not separate us from our true selves - no alienation from a species-being; now, our nature changes with technology
- Does the alienation critique hold?
- Alienation from the products of labour in Capital
- But less normative force than the EPM position that one experiences alienation from oneself or one's species-being
- Difference of value and valorization [Q2 & Q5]
- "Our capitalist has two objectives: in the first place, he wants to produce a use-value which has exchange-value, i.e. an article destined to be sold, a commodity; and secondly he wants to produce a commodity greater in value than the sum of the values of the commodities used to produce it, namely the means of production and the labour-power he purchased with his good money on the open market. His aim is to produce not only a use-value, but a commodity; not only use-value, but value; and not just value, but also surplus-value." (p. 293).
- "The road to hell is paved with good intentions, and he might just as well have intended to make money without producing at all." (p. 299)
- Look back to p. 36 for a definition
- "The formula ' capital value in search of additional value' is now understood as capital organizing a process of self-valorization ( Verwertung), a process of constant searching for increases in its own value through the unity of the, labour process and the process of production of in creased value."
- Constant process of investment and wealth-generation
- While pre-capitalist wealth was held - idle class versus capitalist class
- More than the extraction of surplus-value (?)
- Distinction of value versus valorization
- "If we now compare the process of creating value with the process of valorization, we see that the latter is nothing but the con tinuation of the former beyond a definite point. If the process is not carried beyond the point where the value paid by the capitalist for the labour-power is replaced by an exact equivalent, it is simply a process of creating value ; but if it is continued beyond that point, it becomes a process of valorization." (p. 302)
- So is it profit/surplus value (?)
- Is valorization profit-making or reinvestment of profit?
- Difference between production process and capitalist produciton process (p. 304)
- Capitalism is different from making use-values, its about the value exceeding what it should be when you consider the average socially necessary labour time
- Temporality as part of Marx's theory or an artifact of 19th century philosophy [Q3]
- But it has to be temporal because it comes from the average socially necessary labour-time
- Wage is just an expression of the value as labour-time
- Marx has indexed value to come from labour-time. So, wages would be an expression of this value
- Labour power sold for a period or time - exchange of time for money