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Another attempt to understand Andrew B's question. Let's say we are analyzing the preparation of a dish. To understand its attributes, we can refer to any combination of the following: its ingredients (material), its form (recipe), the specific cook (its material cause), or the reason it was prepared--say for an ordinary dinner or for a wedding (its final cause). Now Marx is saying that Ricardo understood commodity value only in terms of its magnitude which he understood to be caused by the quantity of matter realized therein. But Marx is saying that there are other attributes of commodities, mysterious ones indeed, and that they can only be explained by or are caused by the commodity form (and correlatively the relative and equivalent forms) imposed on products of labor. To explain these mysteries insofar as they are even recognized in terms of the commodity's matter (the classical labor theory of value) is positively misleading. Moreover, Marx is saying that the commodity form is the key to understanding the historicity of the capitalist mode of production, and this too the classical economists badly fumbled in their effort to make capitalism eternal and natural. Now of course Marx's analysis loses interest if there are not indeed interesting attributes that are 'caused' by the form of the commodity being imposed on products of labor. But I need to know if there has been any analysis of Marx's value form analysis in terms of the Aristotlean theory of causes--excpet for Murray's in Moseley and Campbell, eds. It strikes me that Marx is simply incomprehensible without understanding that he worked with an Aristotlean, not so much Hegelian, conception of scientific causality. Yours, Rakesh
- [OPE-L:3492] Re: valuation of imports, Jerry Levy Mon 12 Jun 2000, 15:02 GMT
- [OPE-L:3496] Re: Re: valuation of imports, Paul Cockshott Tue 13 Jun 2000, 09:01 GMT
- [OPE-L:3490] Re: Re: Re: Re: measurement of value, Andrew Brown Mon 12 Jun 2000, 13:14 GMT
- [OPE-L:3489] Re: Re: Re: measurement of value, Steve Keen Mon 12 Jun 2000, 13:01 GMT
- [OPE-L:3483] Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: measurement of value, Rakesh Bhandari Sun 11 Jun 2000, 17:02 GMT
- [OPE-L:3482] Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: measurement of value, Rakesh Bhandari Sun 11 Jun 2000, 15:29 GMT
- [OPE-L:3484] Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: measurement of value, Paul Cockshott Mon 12 Jun 2000, 09:51 GMT
- [OPE-L:3485] Re: measurement of value, Andrew Brown Mon 12 Jun 2000, 10:20 GMT
- [OPE-L:3486] Re: Re: measurement of value, Paul Cockshott Mon 12 Jun 2000, 11:09 GMT