Essays on Marx's Theory Of Value

According to the prevailing theories of economists, economics has replaced political economy, and economics deals with scarcity, prices and resource allocation. In the definition of Paul Samuelson, "economics - or political economy as it used to be called...is the study of how men and society choose, with or without the use of money, to employ scarce resources, which could have alternative uses, to produce various commodities over time and distribute them for consumption, now and in the future, among various people and groups in society."

If economics is indeed merely a new name for political economy, and if the subject matter which was once covered under the heading of political economy is now covered by economics, the economics has replaced political economy. However, if the subject matter of political economy is not the same as that of economics, then the "replacement" of political economy is actually an omission of a field of knowledge. If economics answers different questions from those raised by political economy and if the omitted questions refer to the form and the quality of human life within the dominant social-economic system, then this omission can be called a "great evasion".

Economic theorist and historian I.I. Rubin suggested a definition of political economy which has nothing in common with the definition of economics quoted above. According to Rubin, "Political economy deals with human working activity, not from the standpoint of its technical methods and instruments of labour, but from the standpoint of its social form. It deals with production relations which are established among people in the process of production." In terms of this definition, political economy is not the study of prices or of scarce resources; it is the study of social relations, a study of culture.

Rubin's book was first published in the Soviet Union, and was never re-issued after 1928. This is the first and only English edition. The translators are Miloŝ Samardźija and Fredy Perlman. The book also includes an outstanding introductory essay Commodity Fetishism by Fredy Perlman.

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Essays on Marx's Theory Of Value

According to the prevailing theories of economists, economics has replaced political economy, and economics deals with scarcity, prices and resource allocation. In the definition of Paul Samuelson, "economics - or political economy as it used to be called...is the study of how men and society choose, with or without the use of money, to employ scarce resources, which could have alternative uses, to produce various commodities over time and distribute them for consumption, now and in the future, among various people and groups in society."

If economics is indeed merely a new name for political economy, and if the subject matter which was once covered under the heading of political economy is now covered by economics, the economics has replaced political economy. However, if the subject matter of political economy is not the same as that of economics, then the "replacement" of political economy is actually an omission of a field of knowledge. If economics answers different questions from those raised by political economy and if the omitted questions refer to the form and the quality of human life within the dominant social-economic system, then this omission can be called a "great evasion".

Economic theorist and historian I.I. Rubin suggested a definition of political economy which has nothing in common with the definition of economics quoted above. According to Rubin, "Political economy deals with human working activity, not from the standpoint of its technical methods and instruments of labour, but from the standpoint of its social form. It deals with production relations which are established among people in the process of production." In terms of this definition, political economy is not the study of prices or of scarce resources; it is the study of social relations, a study of culture.

Rubin's book was first published in the Soviet Union, and was never re-issued after 1928. This is the first and only English edition. The translators are Miloŝ Samardźija and Fredy Perlman. The book also includes an outstanding introductory essay Commodity Fetishism by Fredy Perlman.

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Essays on Marx's Theory Of Value

Essays on Marx's Theory Of Value

by Isaac Rubin
Essays on Marx's Theory Of Value

Essays on Marx's Theory Of Value

by Isaac Rubin

Paperback(First English ed.)

$28.00 
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Overview

According to the prevailing theories of economists, economics has replaced political economy, and economics deals with scarcity, prices and resource allocation. In the definition of Paul Samuelson, "economics - or political economy as it used to be called...is the study of how men and society choose, with or without the use of money, to employ scarce resources, which could have alternative uses, to produce various commodities over time and distribute them for consumption, now and in the future, among various people and groups in society."

If economics is indeed merely a new name for political economy, and if the subject matter which was once covered under the heading of political economy is now covered by economics, the economics has replaced political economy. However, if the subject matter of political economy is not the same as that of economics, then the "replacement" of political economy is actually an omission of a field of knowledge. If economics answers different questions from those raised by political economy and if the omitted questions refer to the form and the quality of human life within the dominant social-economic system, then this omission can be called a "great evasion".

Economic theorist and historian I.I. Rubin suggested a definition of political economy which has nothing in common with the definition of economics quoted above. According to Rubin, "Political economy deals with human working activity, not from the standpoint of its technical methods and instruments of labour, but from the standpoint of its social form. It deals with production relations which are established among people in the process of production." In terms of this definition, political economy is not the study of prices or of scarce resources; it is the study of social relations, a study of culture.

Rubin's book was first published in the Soviet Union, and was never re-issued after 1928. This is the first and only English edition. The translators are Miloŝ Samardźija and Fredy Perlman. The book also includes an outstanding introductory essay Commodity Fetishism by Fredy Perlman.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780919618183
Publisher: Black Rose Books
Publication date: 12/01/1973
Series: Black Rose Books ; D13
Edition description: First English ed.
Pages: 275
Sales rank: 767,280
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.80(d)

Table of Contents

Introduction: Commodity Fetishism by Fredy Perlman.

Essays on Marx's Theory of Value

Introduction

Part I: Marx's Theory of Commodity Fetishism
Chapter One: Objective Basis of Commodity Fetishism
Chapter Two: The Production Process and its Social Form
Chapter Three: Reification of Production Relations Among People and Personification of Things
Chapter Four: Thing and Social Function (Form)
Chapter Five: Production Relations and Material Categories
Chapter Six: Struve on the Theory of Commodity Fetishism
Chapter Seven; Marx's Development of the Theory of Commodity Fetishism

Part II: Marx's Labor Theory of Value
Chapter Eight: Basic Characteristics of Marx's Theory of Value
Chapter Nine: Value as the Regulator of Production
Chapter Ten: Equality of Commodity Producers and Equality of Commodities
Chapter Eleven: Equality of Commodities and Equality of Labor
Chapter Twelve: Content and Form of Value
Chapter Thirteen: Social Labor
Chapter Fourteen: Abstract Labor
Chapter Fifteen: Qualified Labor
Chapter Sixteen: Socially-Necessary Labor
Chapter Seventeen: Value and Social Need
1. Value and Demand
2. Value and Proportional Distribution of Labor
3. Value and Volume of Production
4.Demand and Supply Equation
Chapter Eighteen: Value and Production Price
1. Distribution and Equilibrium of Capital
2. Distribution of Capital and Distribution of Labor
3. Production Price
4. Labor Value and Production Price
5. Historical Foundations of the Labor Theory of Value
Chapter Nineteen: Productive Labor
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