Ajit wrote in [5641]: > To the best of my knowledge, I was the first > one, probably still the only one writing on value > theory, who took Beamish's work seriously and > commented on it in my 'A Critique of Part one of > *Capital* one: The Value Controversy > Revisited', RIPE, 1996. In my opinion, Ali > Rattansi's work on division of labor in Marx is > probably the best one Beamish believes that his book and Rattanasi's book 'complement each other'. Yet, he notes that the specific issue addressed by Rattanasi (the question of the evolution of Marx's thinking on the topic of the abolition of the division of labor) is different from the focus of his book (see Beamish, pp. 8-9). He addresses the significance of the division of labor for Marx's *method* shortly beforehand (Ibid, pp. 5-8). The reason I raised the Beamish book in connection with this thread is because, imo, he makes a very compelling case that one of Marx's central theoretical concerns from 1842 through the publication of Volume 1 was the division of labor in capitalist society. What I think is most noteworthy is Beamish's detailed sequential examination of all of Marx's writings on this subject throughout the period including his study notebooks, unpublished drafts, and correspondence. I don't think anyone can come away from a reading of the Beamish book with a belief that the issues surrounding conceptualizing the division of labor were deemed by Marx to be of only passing non-essential interest. This raises the question that I posed to our VFT comrades about the role of the division of labor (and related topics such as manufacture and machinery and 'modern industry') in dialectical systematic theory. In other words, why is there this 'gap' in the presentation? Do they view it as only non-essential historical detail? Is it merely "Vorstellung" (translated by Tony S as 'picture- thinking' or 'imaginary representation')? If so, then the Beamish book might suggest that they attach far less importance to that subject -- rightly or wrongly -- than did Marx. In solidarity, Jerry References: Rob Beamish _Marx, method, and the division of labor_, Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 1992 Ali Rattansi _Marx and the division of labor_, London, The Macmillan Press Ltd, 1982 (note that because of the difference in publication dates, Beamish had access to a number of important sources that Rattansi was not able to examine, e.g. Marx's study notebooks.)
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