Zhiyong Dong, a member of the faculty at Northwest University in the People's Republic of China, is our newest subscriber. A very complete explanation of his research interests, dissertation and publications follows: ------------------------------------ I am at present an associate professor at the Department of Administration and Philosophy, Northwest University, P. R. China. I used to be a history lecturer for ten years, that is from 1982 to 1992, at the same university. I completed my six-year study at the Queen's University of Belfast and was awarded a degree of Ph.D. by the same university two years ago. I have been interested in political economy, history, philosophy, economics, Marxism, etc. I have published more than twenty academic papers in established journals in China. At this moment, I am working on the research project of absolute value. The concept of absolute value was put forward for the first time in human history by David Ricardo in his book On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation. However, no one has explained clearly what absolute value is and if there exists absolute value at all since the publication of the book. I believe that I have resolved the problem of how to measure correctly the quantity of abstract labour in my doctorate dissertation. On this foundation, I believe, it is not difficult to pluck one of the diamonds in the crown of economics, that is, to explain clearly what absolute value is and if there exists absolute value at all. The main task to carry out the project of absolute value is to infer and prove that the absolute value embodied in the same commodities, say one ton of wheat, in the same market is the same, no matter how different the methods or tools used by the producers and no matter how much time the producers used in producing them. This fact ultimately leads to the fact that the same commodities in the same market have the same price. By explaining clearly what absolute value is and how absolute value is expressed, we may have a much better understanding of the reasons why the distinction of average income between the different communities can be compa red and expressed by the same measurement (currency), such as American dollars or British sterling, etc.; why the real gross national product of a nation can increase much faster than the increase of the number in the labour force in the sense of the number of working population; why there has been inflation; why wage inflation can slow as unemployment falls for years; whether it is wise to practise the policy of "welfare state"; whether it is necessary to increase the minimum wage according to the increase of efficiency in productivity. In the new light of the theory of absolute value, the relevant economists may put forward some better ideas to the politicians who are deciding the economical policies of their communities to deal with the issues of social security, government investment, public ownership of property, state-run enterprise, privatisation, interest rates, inflation, recession, international competition, unification of the district economy, unification of the global economy, etc., in the circumstances that both the domestic economical intercourse and international economical intercourse have to be carried out through the medium of money. What is more, the defects of the theory of labore-value postulated and developed by Adam Smith, David Ricardo and Karl Marx could also be revealed thoroughly in the new light of the theory of absolute value. I hope this project can be completed in one year and the output can be published as a book in English ultimately. However, my English is not good enough to make it published in English. Therefore I am trying to find a collaborator who knows much about traditional theories of labor-value and who is a native speaker of English. I am also trying to find a collaborator who is a native speaker of English, who knows much about theories of human rights, who is a native speaker of English and who is interested in collaborating with me 1) in developing my doctorate dissertation into a series of papers for publication and being the other author of them; 2) in developing my doctorate dissertation into a book for publication and being the other author of it; 3) in finding the proper journals and publishing house for the publication of them. The title of my doctorate dissertation is The Ownership of the Person and the Concept of Human Rights. This paper claims that it is ownership of the person that is the most fundamentally economical system or institution in human society, but not the ownership of the means of production as traditional Marxists argue. It is because that it is the dominant ownership of the person which a community has gained that determines the social nature of the community. For instance, the reason for us to classify the ancient Rome Empire as a slavery society is that the dominant ownership of the person which the ancient Rome Empire had gained was slavery ownership of the person. Meanwhile, one can not distinguish a slavery society from a civil society from the aspect of the ownership of the means of production, because most of the means of production of both societies were possessed and owned by a handle of people. I have been wishing to develop my doctorate dissertation into a series of papers and a book for publication in English for a long time. But, my English is not up to that. Therefore I have to find a collaborator who knows much about theories of human rights and who is a native speaker of English. <snip, JL> The scholars who are interested in collaborating with me can get the whole doctorate dissertation of mine through email if they tell me their email addresses. My e-mail address is: dongzy@nwu.edu.cn Please find the enclosed titles of my publications and the table of contents of my doctorate dissertation. I would be grateful to you if you could transmit the above information about me to the members concerned for my candidacy in the email list and if you could transmit the above messages of mine about my looking for collaborator to the members of OPE-L mail list as soon as possible. With my best wishes, Yours sincerely, Zhiyong Dong -------- Dr. Zhiyong Dong The Department of Administration and Philosophy Northwest University Xian, Shaanxi, 710069, P. R. China Tel: 86+(029)8303478 E-mail: dongzy@nwu.edu.cn PUBLICATIONS: 1. Dong Zhi-Yong, "Measurement of Concrete Labour and Concrete Labour-power", Yunnan Social Sciences, pp. 8-15, No. 6, 1999, The Social Academy of Yunnan Province, P. R. China. 2. Dong Zhi-Yong, "Absolute Abstract Labour-power and Relative Abstract Labour-power", Jiangsu Social Sciences, pp. 134-140, No. 6, 1999, The Scholar Union of the Social and Philosophical Sciences in Jiangsu Province, P. R. China. 3. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The British Policy towards Tibet during World War II", Studies of Anti-Japanese War, (Quarterly Journal), No. 1 of 1994, pp. 55-70, Peking; Xinhuawenzhai,. (Monthly Journal), No. 7 of 1994, Peking. 4. Dong Zhi-Yong & Zhou Weizhou, "The Policies of World Powers towards Tibet round about the Liberation of Tibet", Journal of Tibetan College, (Quarterly Journal), No. 2 and No. 3 of 1994, pp. 67-75, 69-82, Xianyang, Shaanxi, P. R. China. 5. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Trade between Tibet and British India from 1912 to 1950", Studies of History of Chinese Borderland, (Quarterly Journal), No. 4 of 1993, pp. 64-72, Peking. 6. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Issue of Import of Indian Tea into Tibet", China Tibetology, (Quarterly Journal), No. 3 of 1993, pp. 69-82, Peking. 7. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Trade between Tibet and British India before 1912", Studies of History of Chinese Borderland, (Quarterly Journal), pp. 85-92, No. 2 of 1992, Peking. 8. Dong Zhi-Yong, "On the So-called British-Tibetan Trade Convention 1914", Studies of Modern History, (Bimonthly Journal), pp. 123-152, No. 6 of 1992, Peking. 9. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Illegal Occupation of British India over the Chinese Territory to the South of the McMahon Line", Reports on History of Chinese Borderland, (Quarterly Journal), pp. 1-16, No. of 1992,, and pp. 25-40, No 2 of 1992, Peking. 10. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The British Policy towards Xinjiang before 1864", Studies of the History of Northwest China, (Annual Journal), pp. 56-85, No. 3 of 1989, Sanqin Publishing House, Xian, Shaanxi, P. R. China. 11. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Survey of the Southern Border of Xinjiang Province by Li Yuan-Bing and Ai-Ying between 1890-1892", Reports on History of Chinese Borderland, (Quarterly Journal), No. 4 of 1989, Peking. 12. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The British-Russian Rivalry and Partition of Pamir", Reports on History of Chinese Borderland, (Quarterly Journal), pp. 91-106, No. 1 of 1987, Peking. 13. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The British Policy towards Xinjiang between 1864 and 1871", Studies of the History of Northwest China, (Annual Journal), pp. 68-86, No. 1 of 1986, Sanqin Publishing House, Xian, Shaanxi, P. R. China. 14. Dong Zhi-Yong, "Riot against Christianity in Pingli County and the Monument to the Suppression of the Riot", Wenbo (Bimonthly Journal), No. 5 of 1985, Xian, Shaanxi, P. R. China. 15. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Policy of World Powers towards the Sino-Russian Negotiation over the Area of Yili between 1872 and 1881", Sino-foreign Relations in Modern Time, pp. 108-135, People's Publishing House of Sichuan, Chengdu, Sichuan, P. R. China, 1985. 16. Dong Zhi-Yong, "On Gordon"s Visit to China in 1880", Materials of the History of Northwest China, (Semi-annual Journal), pp. 68-74, No. 1 of 1984, Institute of the History of Northwest China, Northwest University, Xian, Shaanxi, P. R. China. 17. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Policy of the Chinese Government towards the Sino-Russian Negotiation over the Area of Yili between 1872 and 1881", Materials of the History of Northwest China, (Semi-annual Journal), pp. 78-84, No. 2 of 1983, Institute of the History of Northwest China, Northwest University, Xian, Shaanxi, P. R. China. 18. Dong Zhi-Yong, "The Policy of the Chinese Government towards Russia between 1895 and 1905¡¯, Materials of the History of Northwest China, (Semi-annual Journal), pp. 93-98, No. 2 of 1981, Institute of the History of Northwest China, Northwest University, Xian, Shaanxi, P. R. China. Employment: Animal Specimen Collector, Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Zoology, P. R. China ,Aug. 1973- Dec. 1976 OWNERSHIP OF THE PERSON AND THE CONCEPT OF HUMAN RIGHTS by Zhiyong Dong A thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Philosophical and Anthropological Studies College of Humanities The Queen’s University of Belfast November 1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS iv INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER 1: LABOUR 3 Section 1: Current Definitions of Labour 3 Section 2: The Essence of Labour 5 Section 3: Multi-Moment Activities 12 Section 4: The Unity of Single-Moment Activity and Multi-Moment Activity 17 Section 5: The Difference between Labour and Other Multi-Moment Activities 21 CHAPTER 2: LABOUR-POWER 29 Section 1: The Essence and Function of Labour-Power 29 Section 2: Individual Labour 31 1. Individual labour 32 2. Extended individual labour 32 Section 3: Individual labour-power 35 1. Individual labour-power 35 2. Extended individual labour-power 35 Section 4: Concrete Labour 36 Section 5: The Expression of the Quantity of Concrete Labour and its Measurement 42 Section 6: Concrete Labour-Power 45 Section 7: Abstract Labour 47 Section 8: Absolute Abstract Labour and Absolute Abstract Labour-Power 51 Section 9: Relative Abstract Labour and Relative Abstract Labour-Power 56 Section 10: The Quantity of Abstract Labour and Measurement of Abstract Labour-Power 62 CHAPTER 3: COLLECTIVE LABOUR AND THE DIVISION OF LABOUR 73 Section 1: Collective Labour and the Division of Labour 73 Section 2: Two Processes of Division of Labour 77 CHAPTER 4: THE OWNERSHIP OF LABOUR-POWER 81 Section 1: Ownership 81 Section 2: The Distribution and Ownership of Products and Services 84 Section 3: The Ownership of Labour-Power 91 Section 4: Existent Forms of the Ownership of Labour-Power 95 1. Primitive ownership of labour-power 95 2. Self-ownership of labour-power 101 3. Slave-ownership of labour-power 102 4. Feudal ownership of labour-power 104 5. The civil ownership of labour-power 112 6. Individual ownership of labour-power 116 7. Partial social ownership of labour-power 117 CHAPTER 5: OWNERSHIP OF THE PERSON 121 Section 1: Ownership of the Living Body of Human Beings 121 1. Self-ownership of the living body of human beings 123 2. Slave ownership of the living body of human beings 124 3. Feudal ownership of the living body of human beings 125 4. Individual ownership of the living body of human beings 127 Section 2: Ownership of the Marriage Right 134 1. Self-ownership of the marriage right 137 2. Feudal ownership of the marriage right 141 3. Slave ownership of the marriage right 146 4. Individual ownership of the marriage right 148 Section 3: Ownership of the Person and Social Hierarchies 150 1. Primitive ownership of the person 153 2. Self-ownership of the person 154 3. Slave ownership of the person 155 4. Feudal ownership of the person 156 5. Civil ownership of the person 157 6. Individual ownership of the person 161 Section 4: The Relationship between Ownership of the Person and the Social Nature of Society 164 CHAPTER 6: THE CONCEPT OF HUMAN RIGHTS 170 Section 1: The Nature of the Concept of Human Rights 170 Section 2: Historical Conditions for the Emergence of the Concept of Human Rights 178 CONCLUSION 197 BIBLIOGRAPHY 198 Acknowledgements I firstly must thank Professor Bernard Cullen, my supervisor. Without his continuous encouragement and support for more than eight years, this thesis could not have been completed at all. His close reading of several drafts saved me from many logical and linguistic mistakes. Special thanks should be given to Mr John Laverty for his generous help in reading the draft of the whole thesis and correcting many linguistic mistakes. I owe very much to Dr Colin Harper of The University of Ulster, who read the draft of the first, fifth and sixth chapters and corrected some linguistic mistakes I had made. I should also thank Dr Ian Leask, who read the draft of the fourth chapter and corrected many linguistic mistakes. Many thanks should be given to my friends Mr Alex Luke and Mrs Anne Luke, who corrected a number of linguistic mistakes I had made. I gratefully acknowledge the assistance given by Ms Miriam Dudley, of the Law Library of the Queen’s University of Belfast, and Ms Hilja McMahon, of the Main Library of the Queen’s University of Belfast. They patiently and willingly helped me by acquiring many materials and books necessary for the writing of this thesis. Of course, I am solely responsible for all defects remaining in the final version of the thesis. ------------------------------------------- A question: are there many economists and economics students in China now who are studying Marx and Marxian political economy? Zhiyong Dong: welcome aboard! In solidarity, Jerry
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