In [OPE-L:4808] Rakesh wrote: > Just to play around with the analogy to quantum mechanics again (as I read > through David Z Albert's Quantum Mechanics and Experience). Monetary > measurement forces a collapse of commodities into one of two eigenstates: > value or no value. That is, a commodity undergoes a change from one state to > another in the process of measurement. We can say that inventories can be > represented by a superposition of these eigenstates! > Of course there are at least two places where the analogy breaks down. <snip> Andras Brody, in _Proportions, prices and planning_ (Akademiai Kiado and North-Holland, 1970), attempted to apply eigenvalue-eigenvector analysis (in the resolution of matrices). In this, he was heavily influenced by Wassily Leontief (who wrote a short "Preface" in which, among other things, he lamented that Marx employed "esoteric Hegelian terminology"). Although theories of money and rent are not considered ("neither do we enter deeply into problems of technological change" - p. 9), the methodology employed is consistent with that used by at least some of the writers who have employed linear production theory and what Fred and you have been calling the "standard interpretation". (Fred: do you agree?) Brody claimed that "the eigenequation can represent deterministic or causal relations of the sort that the classical economists, Smith, Ricardo and Marx, set up. It can also be used in a teleological and optimizing approach such as that of the marginalist schools" (Ibid, p. 10). Brody's book was widely read (for a mathematical academic text) and was influential in the 1970's. Not too many Marxists have referred to it lately, though. Indeed, I can't recall his theories ever being discussed in the close to 11,200 (!) posts on OPE-L. In solidarity, Jerry
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