From: John Holloway (johnholloway@prodigy.net.mx)
Date: Thu Nov 07 2002 - 11:26:25 EST
More on verb-entities and noun-entities. Surely the point of Marx's critique is to say that all social entities must be understood as verbs, i.e. that the distinction is not valid. John ---------- >From: John Holloway <johnholloway@prodigy.net.mx> >To: ope-l@galaxy.csuchico.edu >Subject: [OPE-L:7951] Re: Re: John Holloway on time >Date: Thu, Nov 7, 2002, 7:36 AM > >Dear Rakesh, > > Many thanks for your comments. > > Yes, I think I agree with what you say. Yes, alienated activity is prior >to the proletarians in the way that you say. To start from proletarians >independent of their activity is to treat them as victims, as objects; to >start from their activity, their doing, is to see them/us as subjects and >open the possiblity of revolution. > > Your verb-entities and noun-entities are interesting, though >verb-entities still involve a freezing of verbs as nouns, don't they. Could >we imagine a world of verbs? Could we write a comprehensible article without >nouns? Is that any more ridiculous than asking if we could live without >fetishes, if we could support the intensity of a self-determining society? >Or are we too damaged? > > In any case, I think that breaking down noun-entities is a precondition >for thinking about revolution. But that's what Marx says when he says that >capital is not a thing but a social relation. > > Your comments are very welcome - it's great to have things expressed the >other way around. > > John >---------- >>From: Rakesh Bhandari <rakeshb@stanford.edu> >>To: ope-l@galaxy.csuchico.edu >>Subject: [OPE-L:7908] Re: John Holloway on time >>Date: Tue, Nov 5, 2002, 1:36 AM >> > >> >>Dear John, >> >>I am sure unsure of what I say here that I hesitate to submit it. >>There may well be non sequitars and philosophical howlers, but I'll >>take a chance given our no citation policy. >> >> >>Well, I do agree of course that proletarian doing is the doing of >>workers and thus cannot have ontological or conceptual priority over >>the doers themselves; it would seem that this process of alienated >>labor is ownership attributable with respect to a substantial agent, >>viz. the worker. Of course some processes, e.g, the erosion of a >>shoreline or the vibrancy of a magnetic field, are not really the >>machinations of identifiable things/agents/substances. But the labor >>process is surely the doing of workers. Yet doesn't alienated >>laboring activity have (either conceptual or ontological) priority >>over proletarians since the latter are constituted by (or in and >>through) the former? Wouldn't Werner Bonefeld agree? >> >> I read you to mean that we can't understand proletarian labor simply >>as the activity of proletarians since the latter are a product of or >>constituted by the former. Proletarians do not only produce use >>values and surplus value but also constitute themselves and their >>condition. Unlike machines whose parts no matter how well they work >>together have nothing to do with building machines, proletarians as >>a class are in fact a self-organizing and self-reproducing entity. A >>machine implies an external agent, a machine maker; a living organism >>is self-organizing entity. In living activity Marx found a basis for >>a philosophy of vital materialism on the basis of which he broke with >>mechanical materialism implicit in the Englightenment and positivism. >> >> >> >> Marx discovered in the proletariat not only privation and exclusion >>but also the active principle or the activity which makes and remakes >>the world. As Marx and Engels say in reply to Feuerbach in the German >>Ideology, man is not a sensuous object but a sensuous activity. Marx >>defines man as a verb, not a noun; he is a philosopher of activity or >>process, not substance. >> >>If we consider storms and heat waves verb-entities rather than noun >>entities such as dogs and oranges, perhaps we should consider the >>proletariat as a self constituting verb entity, not a noun entity >>such as an agent or a thing. Perhaps thinking of the proletariat as a >>verb entity rather than a noun entity makes it easier to talk about >>what would be entailed by the self abolition of the proletariat (an >>expression also from the German Ideology)? What does the critique of >>nouns and perduring things in favor of the verbs or processes by >>which they are constituted suggest in terms of workers' understanding >>of their own ("noun") identities? That their own identities are not >>perduring things but no less results of their own alienated activity >>than commodities? Moishe Postone develops this theme, if I remember >>correctly. >> >>John, if these comments do not make any contact with what you are >>tying to say, please feel free to ignore them, and I shall leave >>behind the ideas which I have in my head from another mss. >> >> >>All the best, Rakesh >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >
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