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Marx on Capitalism: The Interaction-Recognition-Antinomy Thesis: Historical Materialism Book Series, cartea 168

Autor James Furner
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 sep 2018
In Marx on Capitalism, James Furner offers a new answer to the fundamental question of Marxism: can a thesis connecting capital, the state and classes with the desirability of socialism be developed from an analysis of the commodity? The Interaction-Recognition-Antinomy Thesis is anchored in a systematic retranslation of Marx’s writings. It provides an antinomy-based strategy for grounding the value of social humanity in working-class agency, facilitates a dialectical derivation of political representation, and condemns capitalism as unjust without appeal to rights.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004323315
ISBN-10: 9004323317
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Historical Materialism Book Series


Cuprins

AcknowledgementsReferences and Abbreviations
1 The Interaction-Recognition-Antinomy Thesis1The Interaction Component2The Recognition Component3The First Antinomy4The Second Antinomy5An Outline of the ArgumentAppendix: A Note on Translation
2 Analytical Marxism1The Project of Analytical Marxism2Dialectical Contradiction3Intrastructuration4Conclusion
3 Commodity Form Philosophy1Use-Value2Value3Commodities and Goods4Use-Values, Goods and Duties to the Whole5The Commodity, Dialectical Contradiction and Real Abstraction6Antinomies of the Commodity Form
4 Action1Capital’s Description of Human Labour2In-Order-To Motives and Because Motives3Orientation to an In-Order-To Motive4The Form of an In-Order-To Motive5Action and Abstraction
5 Social Relations1Marx’s General Remarks on Social Relations2Schütz’s Typology of Social Action3Interaction as a Relation of Mutual Affecting4The Problem of Normativity5An Interactional Conception of a Social Relation of Production6Some Objections7The Objection from Structure8The Objection from Consciousness9The Problem of Legality
6 System and Bearer1A Generalised Interactions Conception of Social Structure2Sociological Thought and the Concept of Social Role3The Features of a System4The Capitalist Structure as a System5The Capitalist Structure as a System (Continued)6Actors as Bearers
7 Purchase and Sale1Exchange2Independent Exchange of Products3Possession: Savigny and Marx4Commodities and Money
8 Exploitation1The Quantitative Marxist View of Exploitation2A Non-Normative Concept of Exploitation3Bazard, Marx and the Five Conditions for Exploitation4The Benefit Condition5The Harm Condition6The Causal Condition7The Consequence Condition8The Means-to-Ends Condition9The System Universalisability Conception of Exploitation10Capitalist Labour-Exploitation11The Exploitation and Need Problem12The Agency Problem13The Capitalism, Rights and Injustice Problem14Summary
9 Recognition and Self-Ownership1A Pragmatic Conception of Recognition2Possession, Private Property Ownership and Recognition3As-If Mutual Recognition in Purchase and Sale4Marx’s Concept of a Person5Security and Self-Ownership
10 Recognition and Bureaucratic Domination1Marx’s General Conception of Domination2Domination and the Will3Domination and Alien Will4Domination and Recognition5Marx’s Conception of Domination Restated6Formal and Real Subsumption7Domination and Formal Subsumption8Domination and Real Subsumption9The Recognition Condition and Occupational Identity10Summary
11 Antinomy and State Form1A Derivation of the Juridical Logic of Freedom of Choice2Individual Human Rights3The System of Capitalist Production and Popular Sovereignty4The Antinomy of Natural Rights and Popular Authorisation5Parliamentary Representation6The Separation of Powers
12 The Rights-Antinomy and Class Struggle1An Antagonistic Interdependency Conception of Classes2Class Antagonism at the Macro-Level3The Self-Consciousness of the Commodity4Capital’s Antinomy Passage: A Reconstruction5The Rights-Antinomy and the Capitalist Class Interest Claim6Interest Privilege and Possible Practical Awareness7The Rights-Antinomy, Recognition and Union Organisation8Working-Class Movements9A Resolution of Both Antinomies
Conclusion1Exploitation and Injustice2The Disappearance of Analytical Marxism3The State of Capitalist Society4Revolutionary Awareness
BibliographyIndex

Recenzii

‘This path-breaking work comes at the right moment. Since the world financial crisis of 2008 Marx is more actual than ever before. With a methodologically unique combination of phenomenological sociology, analytical Marxism and commodity form philosophy, Furner gives new life to the basic concepts of Marx. Interaction and exploitation, class struggle and recognition, system and real abstraction, self-organization and dialectical contradiction are at once analytical and normative instruments to understand and change modern capitalist society. Everybody who wants to understand the present crisis of capitalism, and to give it a turn to the better before it is too late, must read this fascinating book.’
- Hauke Brunkhorst, Professor of Sociology, University of Flensburg

‘An excellent account of the relevance of dialectical contradiction and antinomy to Marx’s project.’
- Jürgen Ritsert, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Goethe University Frankfurt

‘The presuppositions and contradictions of Analytical Marxism resulted in a movement away from Marxism and towards liberal political philosophy. But what if its originators understood the German idealist tradition and what if their philological skills were as good as their analytic ones? With its careful reconstruction of Marx’s concept of exploitation and with its detailed explanation of the relation of class to capitalism, Furner’s book marvelously answers this question: what one gets when one finds a philosopher of such talents is a compelling elaboration of central Marxian concepts, one that stakes out a tenable Marxian position within the landscape of contemporary political philosophy.’
- William S. Lewis, Professor of Philosophy, Skidmore College

‘An important contribution to the vexed debate about Marx and justice.’
- Jan Kandiyali, Assistant Professor in Philosophy, Istanbul Technical University

‘In this comprehensive, novel interpretation of Marx’s work, James Furner offers a timely reconstruction of Marx’s critique of capitalism.’
- Lawrence Hamilton, NRF/British Academy Research Professor in Political Theory, Witwatersrand and Cambridge

Notă biografică

James Furner, Ph.D., is the author of several articles on Marx and Kant.