From: Paul Zarembka (zarembka@BUFFALO.EDU)
Date: Thu Jan 10 2008 - 08:41:01 EST
Dave, Dave, I haven't yet been able to forward to you the main 2000 article and I now I realize, after Jerry's comment, that we are dealing with this issue piecemeal and we are missing the substance of my work. Paul C. is focusing on physical means of production as accumulation; he was quite clear about that (use of labor values notwithstanding). I don't. That is my objection to his sentence. Paul C., Same for your comment: "I have always seen what Paul Z as focussing on as 'extended reproduction of capitalist social relations' not accumulation." You have figured out what I'm doing in a dismissable form. Folks are picking up an objection, conditioned by their own prior use of 'accumulation of capital' filed in their head, and avoiding the deeper problems I am raising. As I said, I'm working on a book on accumulation of capital. The reason why it is taking so long to complete is because it is a hard nut to crack effectively given how 'accumulation of capital' is loosely used in many different ways within marxism. Paul Z. --On 1/10/2008 9:33 AM +0100 Dave Zachariah wrote: > Paul Z wrote: > >> In contrast, in my >> three-page entry I argue that a focus upon "an increase in the amount of >> physical means of production within an economy or its firms ... is the >> usage in neoclassical or mainstream economics". > > But this is not any substantive criticism of what Paul C was saying. The > growth of the means of production in terms of labour-value can hardly be > said to be mainstream economics. > > (Even if it were, merely labeling it as such is not a valid objection to > its usage.) > > //Dave Z > > ************************************************************************ (Vol.23) THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF 9-11-2001 -- U.S. softcover forthcoming video summary at http://snowshoefilms.com (Vol.24) TRANSITIONS IN LATIN AMERICA AND IN POLAND AND SYRIA ********************* http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/PZarembka
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