[OPE-L:8090] Re: Heisenberg, Marx and the uncertainty principle

From: Andrew Brown (Andrew@lubs.leeds.ac.uk)
Date: Mon Dec 02 2002 - 15:17:05 EST


Hi,

(1) I would be very interested to know your theoretical explanation 
for the correlations that you obtain.

(2) Have there been significant criticisms of your own, and other 
people's, results? Am I right in thiniking Andrew Kliman has offered 
some criticisms?

Thanks

Andy


Date sent:      	Mon,  2 Dec 2002 16:31:00 +0000
From:           	clyder@gn.apc.org
To:             	artefact@webcom.com, Michael Eldred <artefact@t-online.de>
Copies to:      	"OPE, List" <ope-l@galaxy.csuchico.edu>
Subject:        	[OPE-L:8089] Re: Re: Heisenberg, Marx and the uncertainty principle
Send reply to:  	ope-l@galaxy.csuchico.edu

> Quoting Michael Eldred <artefact@t-online.de>:
>  > > I would seriously dispute this. There is now a growing body
> > > of empirical literature which indicates a very close
> > > correspondance between actual sectoral prices in economies and the
> > > correponding labour values. The correlations revealed are
> > > remarkably strong by economic standards.
> > 
> > Interesting caveat: "by economic standards", also echoed by Paul
> > Cockshott's qualification: "as economic theories go". How do they
> > go?
> 
> Clyder and Paul Cockshott are the same person using different email
> accounts.
> 
> The correlations that I have obtained, give R^2 values of over
> 0.95 between sectoral labour values and sectoral prices. Shaik and
> Ochoa get similar results.
> 
> The results seem robust between countries, to my knowledge there
> is published data on the UK, USA, Italy, Jugoslavia an Mexico which
> give comparable results. Steedman has published results for Ireland
> and one of the Australian lander which give lower correlations but
> this is not unexpected given the greater influence of shot noise in
> smaller samples and also the influence of rent in these economies.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > 
> > > I would contend that economists rejection of the labour theory of
> > > value draws more from bourgeois class interest - horrified at the
> > > moral consequences of accepting it - than any scientific
> > > objectivity.
> > >
> > > > If established, such a quantitative law would have
> > > > indeed
> > > > provided the foundation for a ?theory of motion? of capitalist
> > > > economy
> > and
> > > > allowed reliable, predictive mathematical calculation of its
> > > > movements.
> > > >
> > >
> > > It has been established so the rest of your argument falls.
> > 
> > You find what you look for -- just as Galileo did when he rolled
> > balls on inclined planes. That's the way science in the modern age
> > works: it sets up its experiments to interrogate what is then given
> > to the set-up by way of data. It is successful precisely because it
> > does not question its preconceptions.
> > 
> 
> I think this is unfair on the empirical researchers. Until Shaik did
> his investigations I don't think anyone expected to get such a close
> fit between values and prices. His results certainly did not fit in
> with anyones initial preconceptions. They are so counter to the
> preconceptions of economists that their implications are only
> gradually being realised. It took considerable courage on his part to
> question the preconceptions that abounded about the labour theory of
> value being empirically invalid and ask : lets see if it really is
> invalid?
> 
> It is my experience of doing empirical investigations that they almost
> always teach you something new that would not have occured to you had
> you not gone to the trouble of doing them. 
> 
> > The phenomenon and experience of exchange -- and thus also its
> > concept -- is richer than you think.
> > 
> 
> I am sure that this is true, but unless you investigate actual price
> data you are left speculating about the properties of prices.
> 


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