Hello, OPE-L comrades.
Apologies for not getting more involved in many interesting discussions; I 
have been listening in!  On "Reorganizing OPE-L," I also (like Paul Z.) think 
Paul C. was joking the first time around, that no one wants to "ban" 
anything, that investigations in CAPITAL and investigations beyond CAPITAL 
are ongoing and intertwined.
A brief comment on the Heinrich discussion.  Those who have looked at his 
article (in SCIENCE & SOCIETY, Winter 1996-97), may also have come across the 
passage in "Editorial Perspectives" (which I had a hand in drafting, ;-) ;-))
which reads:
"We will not go into the details of Heinrich's comparison [between Vol. III 
and the MEGA manuscript] here, leaving that to the reader.  We will, however, 
break from our usual practice of refraining from editorial judgement in this 
space to record a shared opinion -- quite independent of our high appraisal 
of the author's scholarship and of the project of examining newly available 
texts -- that in the effort to cast suspicion on Engels and to drive a wedge 
between Engels and Marx, Heinrich (and others before him) have essentially 
come up with "dry holes" (to borrow a metaphor from 1996 election-year 
"whitewater" discourse in the United States!).  We find that the demonstrated 
differences between the 1864-65 mss. and Volume III of CAPITAL are not 
sufficient to cause us to reject the latter as one important and valid early 
text in the Marxian tradition, or to establish a distinction in principle 
between a revolutionary-critical-humanist Marx and a positivist-reductionist- 
determinist Engels."
Mike Lebowitz's posts have not convinced me that this view is wrong.  
Heinrich discovers, I think, two main ways in which Engels altered Marx's 
mss.: 1) Insertion of structure: paragraph breaks, section heads, chapter 
heads, and so forth; 2) Changing a number of tentative and open-ended 
expressions into a more definitive form, giving an impression of greater 
completeness.  We should remember, I think, that Marx's notebooks were his 
vehicle for research, his way of coming to terms with his subject.  They are 
works in progress, with questions laid in along the way to point to further 
inquiry.  Engels was charged with the task of rendering these texts into 
*outwardly* viable ones, just as Marx did with the texts that became Vol. I.  
I don't doubt that occasional damage was done to the dialectical 
sensitivities surrounding the theory, in both Marx's and Engels' editing.  
The idea that we will discover a whole new "continent" of Marx's thought if 
only we return to MEGA and scrap the suspect Vols. II and III of CAPITAL is 
wrong, I think, mainly for the implicit notion that we will advance Marxism 
by returning to some early pristine texts for revelations, rather than 
reworking the ideas ourselves.  In any case, does anyone think that Marx 
would have been better served if Engels has died earlier and all of the mss. 
had fallen into the hands of, e.g., Bernstein or Kautsky?
In solidarity,
     (david)
David Laibman
dlaibman@brooklyn.cuny.edu