From: clyder@GN.APC.ORG
Date: Fri May 23 2003 - 16:29:01 EDT
My impression of Kliman's 'anti-dualist' interpretation of the transformation problem was that it did involve a conflation of value with exchange value. Quoting Paul Zarembka <zarembka@BUFFALO.EDU>: > Sorry, my typo. It should have been "neither Rubin nor Kliman", not > Laibman (but he doesn't wish to confuse value with exchange value either). > > Paul > > *********************************************************************** > "Confronting 9-11, Ideologies of Race, and Eminent Economists", Vol. 20 > RESEARCH IN POLITICAL ECONOMY, Paul Zarembka, editor, Elsevier Science > ******************** http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/PZarembka > > On Fri, 23 May 2003 glevy@PRATT.EDU wrote: > > > Paul Z wrote on May 23: > > > > >> Value is first identified with exchange value, ... > > > But neither Rubin nor Laibman do this. See: > > > Rubin, I. I. 1927, "Abstract Labor and Value in Marx's System", > > > translated by K. Gilbert, Capital and Class, Volume 5, Summer 1978, pp. > > > 107-139. > > > Kliman, A. J. 2000, Marx's Concept of Intrinsic Value", Historical > > > Materialism, No. 6, pp. 89-113. > > > > Did you mean to write "neither Rubin nor Laibman nor Kliman" > > or when you wrote 'Laibman' was that a typo and did you intend > > to write 'Kliman'? > > > > I don't recall, off-hand, the title of the paper by David L > > that included a critique of other interpretations, including > > VFT and the TSSI, but I recall that it was presented at a > > IWGVT a few years ago -- although it's not at the IWGVT web > > site, I believe. > > > > In solidarity, Jerry > > > > > > > >
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