Tom Walker wrote:

> In section 6, chapter 15 of volume one of Capital, Marx
> takes on the insistence by "a whole series of bourgeois
> political economists" "that all machinery that displaces
> workmen, simultaneously and necessarily sets free an
> amount of capital adequate to employ the same identical
> workmen."

This is an important part of Marx's theory.  If machinery
cannot displace workers, then the immiseration as described
in chapter 25 cannot happen.

Then Tom continues:

> both Marx and Keynes indirectly repudiated the so-called
> Jevons Paradox

This is a very helpful observation which puts section 6 of
the machinery chapter into a new light for me.  I have
already collected textual evidence in the machinery chapter
that Marx did not appreciate how much the industrial
revolution was dependent on fossil fuels.  Some of the
things about the industrial revolution which Marx was not
aware of are in this book: Wrigley, E A, *Energy and the
English Industrial Revolution*, Cambridge University Press
2010,
http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/ebookviewer/ebook/nlebk_337687_AN

I am not sure if Marx repudiated the Jevons Paradox or if he
was not fully aware of it.  I think the absolute
immiseration did not happen because capital and labor both
could fall back on fossil fuels, capital for continued
profits and labor for rising standards of living despite the
pressure of capital.  In other words, when Marx was
repudiating/ignoring the Jevons Paradox, then Marx was
wrong and Jevons was right.  A modern treatment of the
rebound effect not as an issue in a static equilibrium but
as a growth issue is here:

Ayres, Robert U and Warr, Benjamin, "Energy Efficiency and
Economic Growth: The 'Rebound Effect’ as a Driver", a
chapter in the boook *Energy Efficiency and Sustainable
Consumption: The Rebound Effect*, Palgrave 2008, edited by
Horace Herring and Steve Sorrell.

I haven't seen this book chapter, our library does not have
this book, but I have seen and can recommend the book by Ayres,
Robert U. and Warr, Benjamin, *The Economic Growth Engine:
How Energy and Work Drive Material Prosperity* Edward Elgar
2009.
http://www.amazon.com/Economic-Growth-Engine-Material-Prosperity/dp/1848441827


Hans.
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