RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-26 Thread Drewk

I thank Ken Hanley for his thoughtful and interesting post.  I
think we are getting somewhere.


Ken:  "I see that I have indeed misunderstood your remarks.
However, you still seem to commit a petitio since in reply you
insist that what you identify as a fallacy is such when that is
part of the issue "

As I understand it, a petitio principii refers to an invalid
argument.  I agree that if what I wrote is taken as an argument,
it begs the question.  But I'm not sure that I made an argument.
I thought I was just asserting (without support) that the analogy
exemplifies the fallacy.

I didn't think an argument was required because I thought (and
think) that I had already provided the argument.  The fallacy is a
fallacy because a premise is missing.  I don't see that an analogy
can refute this kind of argument.  At most, it can make us suspect
that there *might be* an error in the argument.


Ken:  "In the first sentence I was not reading "can't" as a
logical "can't" but I gather that is what you intend, that there
is an internal inconsistency that entails that what is said cannot
be true."

Yes, that was my intent.  (The sentence in question is "If you
claim that something someone said can't be right, you have to show
that there is *no* interpretation under which it is right."  It
was part of my defense of the statement, earlier in my post, that
"The people who claim(ed) to prove that Marx committed these
errors and such actually just have methodological, philosophical,
and other disagreements with him.  They have not proven what they
claim to prove -- *internal inconsistency*, i.e., that Marx does
not 'make sense within [his] own framework.'")


Ken:  "By the way if there is simply an error in Keyne's, on a
certain interpretation, the claim would surely be  more accurate
that  what he said was not true as a matter of fact. There may not
be any logical inconsistency."

Doesn't it depend on the case?  Some critics claim he was wrong
about the way things are; others claim that the General Theory
doesn't hang together on its own terms -- e.g., because one cannot
coherently affirm the "classical" doctrine of labor supply while
rejecting the "classical" doctrine of labor demand.


Ken:  "I agree that there is a sense in which if there is some
other possible interpretation according to which what is said is
not inconsistent this would be sufficient to disprove the claim
that what Keynes or Marx or whomever said can't be true. I assume
this is what "making sense" is supposed to mean."

Good!  Yes,  by "making sense" I meant what you say, given that
we're talking about "what is said" as a whole.  I don't think that
an interpretation which resolves an apparent inconsistency in
argument A, but leaves or creates inconsistencies in arguments B,
C, ...  disproves a claim that a (whole) theory is internally
inconsistent.


Ken:  I read "can't" as meaning extremely unlikely or implausible,
in conflict with what seems well established. I didnt think of it
as "logically impossible" which is what you seem to mean.  I look
at the gas gauge and it shows almost empty. That can't be right I
say because I just filled it up last night. Well of course it
could be. I could have had my gas stolen etc. That sort of
"can't"."

Yes, I agree that this is another sense of "can't," as the word is
actually used.  But it isn't what's meant when Marx's (or Keynes')
theory is alleged to be internally inconsistent.  Anyway, I see
now why you thought I was referring to Keynes' claims about
reality rather than to the internal inconsistency of his theory.


Ken:  "That being so your interpretation of my remarks as
exhibiting your "fallacy" is incorrect because I am not using
"can't" as you understand it."

I don't see this.  Your analogy disclosed that, IF one interprets
"can't" as you did, what I said was in error.  The analogy was
evidently meant to show that I did make an error.  It didn't show
this because it didn't establish that your interpretation of my
use of "can't" was correct.


Ken:  "1) It seems to me that you impose a too stringent
requirement when you require that a person prove that their
interpretation is correct as a precondition to claiming correctly
that there is an inconsistency in what someone says and so it cant
be true. Why?"

Ah!  You're right.  I *wrote* "If you claim that something someone
said can't be right, you have to show that there is *no*
interpretation under which it is right," but I *meant* "If you
claim TO PROVE that "


Ken:  "a) In some cases there may be universal agreement what is
the correct interpretation and so proof would seem unnecessary at
least until such time that someone presents an objection."

This seems right to me.  The point I was *trying* to make is that
proof of internal inconsistency requires proof of the correctness
of the interpretation under which there is internal inconsistency.
(I realize there is an exception -- cases in which whether
something is internally consistent is indep

Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-25 Thread Ken Hanly
urdum.  It is
> a bait and switch.  (What's the Latin for bait and switch?)

COMMENT:  X's claim is intended to be in words. "Those who believe strongly
enough in Shazzam will not be harmed etc." There are various
interpretations of what X says. I interpret what is said as meaning that
persons who believe (strongly) in Shazzam will not be killed in battle. But
there is another interpretation ,X's, that whenever this happens it is
because the belief is not strong enough. That there is this interpretation
according to your view shows that my claim that X's claim can't be right, is
disproven. Well it is in a logical sense. But it is not disproven in the gas
tank sense of "can't I would hold.
>
> 2.  I indicated that it was illegitimate to use one possible
> interpretation of what Keynes said to conclude that s/he "can't be
> right."  To arrive at that conclusion, one needs to show that
> there is *no* interpretation possible under which what Keynes said
> is right.  Nothing I wrote states or implies that the existence of
> another interpretation proves that the first interpretation is
> incorrect.  In Ken's analogy, however, the existence of another
> interpretation (according to which X's statement makes sense)
> supposedly disproves his own interpretation of X.  Another bait
> and switch.

Well this is because I wasnt thinking of "can't" as the logical "can't". But
surely you are claiming that the existence of another interpretation that is
consistent shows that the claim that what is said can't be true is
incorrect. In my example analagously what is shown is that my claim in the
gas can sense of "can't" must be incorrect. But my point is that it would
seem odd to claim it is incorrect just on the ground there was an
alternative interpretation that makes sense. Of course you are correct it
does show this in your sense of "can't"
>
> 3.  Nothing I wrote states or implies that the existence of
> another interpretation proves that Keynes' critics are wrong about
> the substantive matter.  In Ken's analogy, however, the existence
> of an interpretation of objective events according to which X is
> not necessarily wrong about the substantive matter supposedly
> disproves Ken's claim that X is wrong.  Still another bait and
> switch.
COMMENT:
You are correct but I intended no bait and switch. What appears as such is
caused by my misinterpretation of  "cant".
>
>
> Andrew Kliman
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ken Hanly
> Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 5:37 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [PEN-L:23984] Re: RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof
> regarding
> surplus value and profit
>
>
> Let's suppose that X claims that if people believe strongly enough
> in the
> power of  the deity Shazam that enemy bullets will not harm them
> when they
> go into battle. I point out that as a matter of  fact lots of
> believers in
> Shazam have been killed by enemy bullets in battle. A defender of
> Shazam
> claims that this is just my interpretation. There is another
> interpertretation to the effect that those who were harmed did not
> believe
> strongly enough in Shazam. So the believer in Shazam has proved
> that my
> intepretation is incorrect since there is another intepretation
> in which
> the defender of Shazam's view makes sense ---and this disproves my
> claim.
>
> Cheers, Ken Hanly
>
>
>>
>
>




RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-24 Thread Drewk

Here's why Ken Hanly's supposed analogy is ludicrous.

1.  I was dealing with cases in which there are various possible
interpretations of what someone said.  In Ken's analogy, by
assumption, there are not various possible interpretations of what
someone (X) says.  Rather, there are various interpretations of
certain other events.  This is not a reductio ad absurdum.  It is
a bait and switch.  (What's the Latin for bait and switch?)

2.  I indicated that it was illegitimate to use one possible
interpretation of what Keynes said to conclude that s/he "can't be
right."  To arrive at that conclusion, one needs to show that
there is *no* interpretation possible under which what Keynes said
is right.  Nothing I wrote states or implies that the existence of
another interpretation proves that the first interpretation is
incorrect.  In Ken's analogy, however, the existence of another
interpretation (according to which X's statement makes sense)
supposedly disproves his own interpretation of X.  Another bait
and switch.

3.  Nothing I wrote states or implies that the existence of
another interpretation proves that Keynes' critics are wrong about
the substantive matter.  In Ken's analogy, however, the existence
of an interpretation of objective events according to which X is
not necessarily wrong about the substantive matter supposedly
disproves Ken's claim that X is wrong.  Still another bait and
switch.


Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ken Hanly
Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 5:37 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23984] Re: RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof
regarding
surplus value and profit


Let's suppose that X claims that if people believe strongly enough
in the
power of  the deity Shazam that enemy bullets will not harm them
when they
go into battle. I point out that as a matter of  fact lots of
believers in
Shazam have been killed by enemy bullets in battle. A defender of
Shazam
claims that this is just my interpretation. There is another
interpertretation to the effect that those who were harmed did not
believe
strongly enough in Shazam. So the believer in Shazam has proved
that my
intepretation is incorrect since there is another intepretation
in which
the defender of Shazam's view makes sense ---and this disproves my
claim.

Cheers, Ken Hanly


If you claim that something someone said can't be right, you have
to show that there is *no* interpretation under which it is right.
It just doesn't wash to say, "here's my interpretation of Keynes.
Under my interpretation, there is this error, that internal
inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed this error, that
internal inconsistency, etc."  There's a missing premise, namely
that one's interpretation has been proven to be correct.  But to
disprove the claim, all one needs to do is show that there's some
possible other interpretation according to which it makes sense.







Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-24 Thread Ken Hanly

COMMENT 1  Andrew Kliman's post is a PERFECT example of the fallacy of
petitio principii or begging the question.
One basic form of this fallacy consists in assuming as true what is being
questioned. I questioned his identification of a certain argument as
fallacious by attempting to show that the argument he uses to establish it
as fallacious is not valid. That was the point of  the analogy. It was also
meant as a reductio. In his reply Andrew claims that my remarks are a
perfect example of the fallacy he pointed to. But they can only be a perfect
example of that if  what he pointed to is a fallacy. But that was the
question that is at issue. So his reply assumes as true what is being
debated. If what he says is true then I am wrong no matter whether my
response perfectly exemplifies his fallacy or is more like a Mother Goose
rhyme.

COMMENT 2  Kliman's response does not prove that my response is a PERFECT
example of  the fallacy he points out.

Why? Because his response  is fallacious: a) because it is a petitio and b)
if what Kliman points out is a fallacy,  his own comments exemplify that
fallacy and hence are fallacious for that reason as well.

Prove 2 b) please..

Kliman interprets my remarks as an interpretation of his remarks as
ludicrous. But no proof or even evidence is given for this.
 He certainly hasnt even begun the monumental task of showing that there is
"no" interpretation under which I might be right.

Since he hasnt proved this it follows that his own argument is a PERFECT
example of the fallacy he points out. But if his argument is fallacious then
it does not prove that my own argument is a PERFECT example of  his fallacy.

Cheers, Ken Hanly
-
> Ken Hanly's post (see below) is a PERFECT example of the fallacy I
> pointed to.
>
> I wrote:  "If you claim that something someone said can't be
> right, you have to show that there is *no* interpretation under
> which it is right.  It just doesn't wash to say, 'here's my
> interpretation of Keynes. Under my interpretation, there is this
> error, that internal  inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed
> this error, that internal inconsistency, etc.'  There's a missing
> premise, namely that one's interpretation has been proven to be
> correct."
>
> Ken has interpreted my comment and has used his interpretation to
> construct what he apparently thinks is an analogy.  The "analogy"
> discloses that, under his interpretation, what I said was in
> error.  Ergo, Ken suggests, I made an error.
>
> But this doesn't wash, because he hasn't shown that his
> interpretation of my comment is correct.
>
> It isn't.  In fact, it is ludicrous.
>
>
> Andrew Kliman
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ken Hanly
> Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 5:37 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [PEN-L:23984] Re: RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof
> regarding
> surplus value and profit
>
>
> Let's suppose that X claims that if people believe strongly enough
> in the
> power of  the deity Shazam that enemy bullets will not harm them
> when they
> go into battle. I point out that as a matter of  fact lots of
> believers in
> Shazam have been killed by enemy bullets in battle. A defender of
> Shazam
> claims that this is just my interpretation. There is another
> interpertretation to the effect that those who were harmed did not
> believe
> strongly enough in Shazam. So the believer in Shazam has proved
> that my
> intepretation is incorrect since there is another intepretation
> in which
> the defender of Shazam's view makes sense ---and this disproves my
> claim.
>
> Cheers, Ken Hanly
>
>
> If you claim that something someone said can't be right, you have
> to show that there is *no* interpretation under which it is right.
> It just doesn't wash to say, "here's my interpretation of Keynes.
> Under my interpretation, there is this error, that internal
> inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed this error, that
> internal inconsistency, etc."  There's a missing premise, namely
> that one's interpretation has been proven to be correct.  But to
> disprove the claim, all one needs to do is show that there's some
> possible other interpretation according to which it makes sense.
>
>
>




RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-23 Thread Drewk

Ken Hanly's post (see below) is a PERFECT example of the fallacy I
pointed to.

I wrote:  "If you claim that something someone said can't be
right, you have to show that there is *no* interpretation under
which it is right.  It just doesn't wash to say, 'here's my
interpretation of Keynes. Under my interpretation, there is this
error, that internal  inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed
this error, that internal inconsistency, etc.'  There's a missing
premise, namely that one's interpretation has been proven to be
correct."

Ken has interpreted my comment and has used his interpretation to
construct what he apparently thinks is an analogy.  The "analogy"
discloses that, under his interpretation, what I said was in
error.  Ergo, Ken suggests, I made an error.

But this doesn't wash, because he hasn't shown that his
interpretation of my comment is correct.

It isn't.  In fact, it is ludicrous.


Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ken Hanly
Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 5:37 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23984] Re: RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof
regarding
surplus value and profit


Let's suppose that X claims that if people believe strongly enough
in the
power of  the deity Shazam that enemy bullets will not harm them
when they
go into battle. I point out that as a matter of  fact lots of
believers in
Shazam have been killed by enemy bullets in battle. A defender of
Shazam
claims that this is just my interpretation. There is another
interpertretation to the effect that those who were harmed did not
believe
strongly enough in Shazam. So the believer in Shazam has proved
that my
intepretation is incorrect since there is another intepretation
in which
the defender of Shazam's view makes sense ---and this disproves my
claim.

Cheers, Ken Hanly


If you claim that something someone said can't be right, you have
to show that there is *no* interpretation under which it is right.
It just doesn't wash to say, "here's my interpretation of Keynes.
Under my interpretation, there is this error, that internal
inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed this error, that
internal inconsistency, etc."  There's a missing premise, namely
that one's interpretation has been proven to be correct.  But to
disprove the claim, all one needs to do is show that there's some
possible other interpretation according to which it makes sense.






Re: RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-14 Thread Ken Hanly

Let's suppose that X claims that if people believe strongly enough in the
power of  the deity Shazam that enemy bullets will not harm them when they
go into battle. I point out that as a matter of  fact lots of believers in
Shazam have been killed by enemy bullets in battle. A defender of Shazam
claims that this is just my interpretation. There is another
interpertretation to the effect that those who were harmed did not believe
strongly enough in Shazam. So the believer in Shazam has proved that my
intepretation is incorrect since there is another intepretation  in which
the defender of Shazam's view makes sense ---and this disproves my claim.

Cheers, Ken Hanly


If you claim that something someone said can't be right, you have
to show that there is *no* interpretation under which it is right.
It just doesn't wash to say, "here's my interpretation of Keynes.
Under my interpretation, there is this error, that internal
inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed this error, that
internal inconsistency, etc."  There's a missing premise, namely
that one's interpretation has been proven to be correct.  But to
disprove the claim, all one needs to do is show that there's some
possible other interpretation according to which it makes sense.





marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-14 Thread Charles Brown

marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit


Drewk,

>From what you explain, it seems to me you might want to say that Marx is being 
>mischaracterized or distorted, rather than suppressed. Although, there was to be a 
>book burning of Russian books in D.C. recently (? :>)),  I think that Marx's actual 
>words are still widely available.

Charles







RE: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-14 Thread Davies, Daniel



-Original Message-
From: Michael Perelman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 14 March 2002 01:28
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23950] Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and
profit

>.  So, let's call a halt to
>this.

sorry; ifI could withdraw my previous reply to it I would (catching
up with messages after a gruelling marketing trip)

dd


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marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Justin Schwartz

>
>
>Drewk wrote:
> >
> > Justin, Gil,  Michael,  Doug:
> >
> > I am still waiting for my questions and challenges to be answered.
> > If you can refute me, do so.  If not, admit that you cannot.
> >

Andrew, I haven't the energy or inclination to debate with you or Charles on 
the matter. I've read your work and learned from it, but I don't agree. I'm 
not an economist, I'm a practicing lawyer, I do econ on the side. I mainly 
thought about this stuff ages ago when I was a prof (stuill not an 
economist, I was a philosophy professor) and had the time to think about 
things that didn't interest me directly and I wasn't getting paid to do. I 
came to the conlusion that, so far as I could understand it, the Sraffan 
criqtique was about right, and it dovetailed with my own conclsuion that as 
far as I could see, you can say everything I wanted to say in Marx without 
value theory, That was not arrived at by an internal critique but by the 
experience of saying it without VT. I still am not taht interested in VT, 
but I'm not going to admit "defeat"; lots of people I respect, including 
Gil, seem to agree with me, and I will defer to them. If I was more 
interested, I'd try again. But I suspect that nonething anyone could say 
would sway you. jks

_
Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com




Re: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Michael Perelman

I agree with Carrol about the absurdity about expecting that all
challenges must be answered, but I hope that the whole thread has stopped.

On Wed, Mar 13, 2002 at 09:18:44PM -0600, Carrol Cox wrote:
> 
> 
> Drewk wrote:
> > 
> > Justin, Gil,  Michael,  Doug:
> > 
> > I am still waiting for my questions and challenges to be answered.
> > If you can refute me, do so.  If not, admit that you cannot.
> > 
> 
> That is not how maillists work or ought to work. I've added people to my
> kill file who got too insistent that their arguments should be responded
> to or that others should read the articles they base their arguments on.
> On a maillist one responds to the posts that one chooses to respond to,
> pretty arbitrarily. Obligation of this sort belongs in the classroom.
> 
> Carrol
> 

-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Carrol Cox



Drewk wrote:
> 
> Justin, Gil,  Michael,  Doug:
> 
> I am still waiting for my questions and challenges to be answered.
> If you can refute me, do so.  If not, admit that you cannot.
> 

That is not how maillists work or ought to work. I've added people to my
kill file who got too insistent that their arguments should be responded
to or that others should read the articles they base their arguments on.
On a maillist one responds to the posts that one chooses to respond to,
pretty arbitrarily. Obligation of this sort belongs in the classroom.

Carrol




Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Michael Perelman

Please, if anyone wants to carry on with this discussion, let's do it off
list.

On Wed, Mar 13, 2002 at 08:10:13PM -0500, Drewk wrote:
> Justin, Gil,  Michael,  Doug:
> 
> I am still waiting for my questions and challenges to be answered.
> If you can refute me, do so.  If not, admit that you cannot.
> 
> Silence = suppression of Marx.  Diversion = suppression of Marx.
> Sarcastic dismissal = suppression of Marx..
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Andrew Kliman
> 

-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Michael Perelman

I don't have much energy for disputes now.  A recent basketball injury has
cause the loss of a wisdom tooth today.  Please, I think that Mat is
correct.  The idea of marxists intentionally supressing marxism does not
seem realistic to me.  There are marxists whose marxism seems ill-founded to
me and whose ideas have consequences of which I disapprove, but I cannot
think of any marxist who is supressing marxism.

We should drop this line.  Only a few people have been involved and some
valuable members have dropped off in disgust.  So, let's call a halt to
this.

Also, the debate between Charles and Gil does not seem to be going anywhere.

"Forstater, Mathew" wrote:

> Drewk, you seem to think that "proof" is something everyone agrees on.
> One person's proof is another's obfuscation, suppression, etc., as you
> yourself admit. I don't know the details of the history of your
> interaction with other points of view, so I don't know whether others
> have totally ignored your "disproofs" or not.  Maybe they have. My
> experience is that these kinds of disagreements are usually based on
> methodological issues, philosophical issues, differences in emphases,
> and the like, so that usually, though not always, people more or less
> make sense within their own framework.  There are exceptions, of course.
> Anyway, if these threads are intended to get people out to your sessions
> at the Easterns, like the one with Gary Mongiovi presenting the Sraffian
> critique of your work, and you and Alan Freeman responding, then it's
> worked for me. I'll be there. Mat
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Drewk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 11:18 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [PEN-L:23914] RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value
> and profit
>
> I agree that "Not all disagreement is maliciously motivated
> attempt to "suppress" the truth."  So how do we decide in a
> particular case whether it *is* a suppression of the truth?   (I
> leave aside the issue of motives.)
>
> It is one thing to claim to prove error or internal inconsistency
> when one can prove it.  It is another thing to claim it when one
> cannot.  When the alleged proofs have been disproved and one
> *continues* to claim it, that is clearly an instance of
> suppression and clearly an ideological attack.  When one does not
> retract the falsified "proofs" in the face of disproof, that is
> clearly an instance of suppression and clearly an ideological
> attack.  None of this has anything to do with "disagreement."
>
> Am I right or not?  If not, why not?
>
> It is one thing to claim to that one can jettison Marx's own value
> theory, and still hold that surplus-labor is the sole source of
> profit, when one can prove it.  It is another thing to claim it
> when one cannot.  When the alleged proofs of this proposition have
> been disproved and one *continues* to claim it, that is clearly an
> instance of suppression and clearly an ideological attack.  When
> one does not retract the falsified "proofs" in the face of
> disproof, that is clearly an instance of suppression and clearly
> an ideological attack.  Again, none of this has anything to do
> with "disagreement."
>
> Am I right or not?  If not, why not?
>
> Andrew Kliman
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Justin
> Schwartz
> Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 10:26 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [PEN-L:23905] Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus
> value and
> profit
>
> >
> >This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of
> Marx --
> >his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is what
> >people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly disingenuous
> >to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.
> >
> >
> >Andrew Kliman
> >
>
> That's right, Andrew. We all know you have correctly understood
> Marx, and we
> grasp clearly what your perspective, I mean his perspective is,
> and we know
> that it id true. But because we are in league with Satan,
> wesupress it. I
> mean, for heaven's sake, be serious. Not all disagreement is
> maliciously
> motivated attempt to "suppress" the truth. I am sure that Roemer
> and Gil and
>   Roberto (and  me) do our best to understand Marx, among other
> things, but
> sometimes that is not good enough. With Roemer, clearly it isn't.
> Gil's
> another story. And moreover we may just honestly disgree both with
> your
> reading as toits accuracy as a

RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

Justin, Gil,  Michael,  Doug:

I am still waiting for my questions and challenges to be answered.
If you can refute me, do so.  If not, admit that you cannot.

Silence = suppression of Marx.  Diversion = suppression of Marx.
Sarcastic dismissal = suppression of Marx..




Andrew Kliman




RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

I'm not sure what the below is in response to, but briefly:

Marx generally thought that market prices tend to fluctuate around
equal-profit rate prices -- classical equilibrium prices.  (I
would dispute your reading of the end of Vol. II and Ch. 9 of Vol.
III if I had time.)  Such prices have theoretical interest to me.
They do not exert any force -- they are the outcome of the
workings of various forces.  Real magnitudes determine derivative
magnitudes like averages, not v.v.

All of this has zip to do with the "equilibrium" -- stationary --
prices and the associated "equilibrium" profit rate of
simultaneism that we critique.  Do not confuse the two.

The latter is of no interest whatsoever.


I have no position on the rest.  I'd need to study the question
carefully.

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Rakesh
Bhandari
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 5:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23942] Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus
value and
profit


Since Andrew said he wasn't getting all his incoming messages, I
shall repost the following questions (of course if John E or
Manuel
or Gary or Mat has answers, I would appreciate it):


And one can reply: well didn't Marx himself make such an
assumption
of classical natural or equilibrium prices in his own reproduction
schemes and transformation analyses? Do equilibrium prices not
exert
*any* force at *any* point in the course of capital accumulation
or
the business cycle? Are they of *no* theoretical interest
*whatsoever*? Isn't it towards an equilibrium point based on the
new
adopted technology that the economy is moving in Schumpeter's
recession phase of the cycle? Or do Andrew and Alan Freeman reject
this Schumpeterian assumption just as it is rejected by Alan's
father
Chris Freeman, perhaps the leading economic student of science and
technology in second half of the 20th century?

Rakesh

ps Andrew I'll copy your paper at the library since I won't be
able to read it.










Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Rakesh Bhandari

Since Andrew said he wasn't getting all his incoming messages, I 
shall repost the following questions (of course if John E or Manuel 
or Gary or Mat has answers, I would appreciate it):


And one can reply: well didn't Marx himself make such an assumption 
of classical natural or equilibrium prices in his own reproduction 
schemes and transformation analyses? Do equilibrium prices not exert 
*any* force at *any* point in the course of capital accumulation or 
the business cycle? Are they of *no* theoretical interest 
*whatsoever*? Isn't it towards an equilibrium point based on the new 
adopted technology that the economy is moving in Schumpeter's 
recession phase of the cycle? Or do Andrew and Alan Freeman reject 
this Schumpeterian assumption just as it is rejected by Alan's father 
Chris Freeman, perhaps the leading economic student of science and 
technology in second half of the 20th century?

Rakesh

ps Andrew I'll copy your paper at the library since I won't be able to read it.









RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

I appreciated Mat Forstater's post.  I agree with most of what he
says


"Drewk, you seem to think that "proof" is something everyone
agrees on."

No, I actually don't, since, as you say:

"My experience is that these kinds of disagreements are usually
based on methodological issues, philosophical issues, differences
in emphases, and the like, so that usually, though not always,
people more or less make sense within their own framework."

This is EXACTLY the point.  EXACTLY.  The people who claim(ed) to
prove that Marx committed these errors and such actually just have
methodological, philosophical, and other disagreements with him.
They have not proven what they claim to prove -- *internal
inconsistency*, i.e., that Marx does not "make sense within [his]
own framework."



Please keep in mind that all of the proofs by proponents of the
temporal single-system interpretation of Marx's value theory are
actually disproofs.  E.g., Marx's critics say they have proven
that, even without his value theory, surplus-labor can be shown to
be necessary and sufficient for profit.  I've disproved this.

I mention this because there's a fundamental asymmetry between
proofs and disproofs. One should indeed be very skeptical about
claims to prove something.  What's usually at issue are instead
"disagreements ... based on methodological issues, philosophical
issues, differences in emphases, and the like."  It is much more
plausible that someone who claims to disprove something is right.

If you claim that something someone said can't be right, you have
to show that there is *no* interpretation under which it is right.
It just doesn't wash to say, "here's my interpretation of Keynes.
Under my interpretation, there is this error, that internal
inconsistency, etc.  Ergo, Keynes committed this error, that
internal inconsistency, etc."  There's a missing premise, namely
that one's interpretation has been proven to be correct.  But to
disprove the claim, all one needs to do is show that there's some
possible other interpretation according to which it makes sense.

Also, when one proves that something is necessary or impossible,
the proof is valid only if it holds in all possible cases, while
the presentation of even a single counterinstance is enough to
disprove the claim.  People understand this, but they often fail
to understand an important implication:   one is not permitted to
make methodological choices when one constructs a proof, if doing
so restricts the set of cases under consideration.

For instance, Marx's critics are entitled to favor models in which
all physical surpluses (or net products) of everything are always
positive.  Their methodological reasons for this might be good or
they might be bad, but that's irrelevant.  They simply cannot use
these models to "prove" that even without Marx's value theory,
surplus-labor can be shown to be necessary and sufficient for
profit.   They prove no such thing.  They prove merely that
surplus-labor and profit happen to coexist under a very
restrictive set of circumstances.


"I don't know whether others have totally ignored your "disproofs"
or not."

I wouldn't say "totally." But I would say there's only one
individual (besides us) who has more or less forthrightly
acknowledged that any of our disproofs is correct.  In _Research
in Political Economy_, Vol. 18 (2000), Duncan Foley wrote:  “I
understand Freeman and Kliman to be arguing that Okishio’s theorem
as literally stated is wrong because it is possible for the money
and labor rates of profit to fall under the circumstances
specified in its hypotheses.  I accept their examples as
establishing this possibility.”   But people still keep going
around asserting that the Okishio theorem is true, and that it
disproves Marx's original version of his law of the tendential
fall in the profit rate.  And certainly no one else has chosen to
back Foley up.


"Anyway, if these threads are intended to get people out to your
sessions at the Easterns, like the one with Gary Mongiovi
presenting the Sraffian critique of your work, and you and Alan
Freeman responding, then it's worked for me."

Actually, that wasn't my intent -- I intervened in an existing
thread simply in order to correct an incorrect statement Gil
Skillman made -- but I'll look forward to seeing you (again)
there.

Andrew Kliman




RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

Rakesh Bhandari wrote:

"I have not read your paper, and cannot assess your claims."

I'll be happy to send you, or anyone else, an electronic copy upon
request.  You need to be able to read math written in MSWord's
"equation editor 3."


"what are the consequences on accumulation from this greater
physical quantity of means of production and wage goods?"

This is a very complex issue that I have no time to address now.


"Are you in fact keeping both the value and the use value or
physical dimensions in mind when analyzing the accumulation
process?"

Yes, but I've written less about the accumulation process than you
may think.  Refutations of the Okishio theorem and the displaying
of possible profit rate paths different from the path of the
"material rate of profit" don't count as analyses of the actual
accumulation process, in my book.


Andrew Kliman


P.S.  For some reason, a lot of my mail is vanishing before it
hits my Inbox, so there might be posts that I haven't replied to
because I haven't seen them.  I've retrieved a couple from the
archives already.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Rakesh
Bhandari
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 12:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23918] Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus
value and
profit


Andrew writes:

>"A" physical surplus and "the" physical surplus mean exactly the
>same thing in this context.


ok

>
>I do not deny, but affirm "that with rising productivity there is
>indeed some rough sense in which we can say that [a falling] mass
>of
>surplus value [corresponds to] a greater physical quantity of
>means of production and wage goods."  This is the ESSENCE of
>anti-physicalism.

ok but then what are the consequences on accumulation from this
greater physical quantity of means of production and wage goods?
Are
you in fact keeping both the value and the use value or physical
dimensions in mind when analyzing the accumulation process? I
think
you have bent the stick too far in the value direction.



>
>A "rough sense" is fine for many purposes, but not for looking at
>whether surplus-labor is the sole source of profit.

ok. Again I have not read your paper, and cannot assess your
claims.
My knowledge of the Fundamental Marxian Theory derives from
Catephores' book.

RB






RE: Re: RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

Doug Henwood wrote:

"the 'real Marx' is being suppressed by Marxists and other
radicals? That's ridiculous."

This is a distortion of my claim.  Deal with my actual claim,
which concerns the failure to acknowledge that the false proofs of
internal inconsistency and error have been disproved, the
repetition of the claims of internal inconsistency and error
despite the disproofs, and my characterization of this as
suppression.  If my claim is ridiculous, it should be easy for you
to disprove.  Go ahead, do so.  Put your money where your mouth
is.


"When Antonio Callari told the IWGVT that they used value theory
as a substitute for politics, there wasn't a peep of reaction from
the crowd. Nor was there when Bertell Ollman told them (at the
same session) they didn't understand how alienated their
categories were. Sad, very sad."

This mischaracterizes what was said.  Neither spoke a negative
word about the IWGVT.  I largely agreed with Ollman's comments,
which dealt with the way economists in general construe Marx.

You may despise my politics, but you can't say that I use value
theory as a substitute for it.

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Doug Henwood
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 9:47 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23903] Re: RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding
surplus
value and profit


Drewk wrote:

>The silence about this issue is deafening.
>
>What's the sound of one side suppressing Marx?  You have only to
>listen to the silence.

Wow, heavy. You mean if this suppression hadn't occurred, we'd be
living under socialism by now?

Doug





RE: RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Max Sawicky


I've been suppressed this way for years, so I can identify.

--mbs



> What's the sound of one side suppressing Marx?  You have only to
> listen to the silence.
> Andrew Kliman




RE: RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Forstater, Mathew

Drewk, you seem to think that "proof" is something everyone agrees on.
One person's proof is another's obfuscation, suppression, etc., as you
yourself admit. I don't know the details of the history of your
interaction with other points of view, so I don't know whether others
have totally ignored your "disproofs" or not.  Maybe they have. My
experience is that these kinds of disagreements are usually based on
methodological issues, philosophical issues, differences in emphases,
and the like, so that usually, though not always, people more or less
make sense within their own framework.  There are exceptions, of course.
Anyway, if these threads are intended to get people out to your sessions
at the Easterns, like the one with Gary Mongiovi presenting the Sraffian
critique of your work, and you and Alan Freeman responding, then it's
worked for me. I'll be there. Mat

-Original Message-
From: Drewk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 11:18 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23914] RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value
and profit

I agree that "Not all disagreement is maliciously motivated
attempt to "suppress" the truth."  So how do we decide in a
particular case whether it *is* a suppression of the truth?   (I
leave aside the issue of motives.)

It is one thing to claim to prove error or internal inconsistency
when one can prove it.  It is another thing to claim it when one
cannot.  When the alleged proofs have been disproved and one
*continues* to claim it, that is clearly an instance of
suppression and clearly an ideological attack.  When one does not
retract the falsified "proofs" in the face of disproof, that is
clearly an instance of suppression and clearly an ideological
attack.  None of this has anything to do with "disagreement."

Am I right or not?  If not, why not?

It is one thing to claim to that one can jettison Marx's own value
theory, and still hold that surplus-labor is the sole source of
profit, when one can prove it.  It is another thing to claim it
when one cannot.  When the alleged proofs of this proposition have
been disproved and one *continues* to claim it, that is clearly an
instance of suppression and clearly an ideological attack.  When
one does not retract the falsified "proofs" in the face of
disproof, that is clearly an instance of suppression and clearly
an ideological attack.  Again, none of this has anything to do
with "disagreement."

Am I right or not?  If not, why not?

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Justin
Schwartz
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 10:26 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23905] Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus
value and
profit




>
>This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of
Marx --
>his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is what
>people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly disingenuous
>to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.
>
>
>Andrew Kliman
>

That's right, Andrew. We all know you have correctly understood
Marx, and we
grasp clearly what your perspective, I mean his perspective is,
and we know
that it id true. But because we are in league with Satan,
wesupress it. I
mean, for heaven's sake, be serious. Not all disagreement is
maliciously
motivated attempt to "suppress" the truth. I am sure that Roemer
and Gil and
  Roberto (and  me) do our best to understand Marx, among other
things, but
sometimes that is not good enough. With Roemer, clearly it isn't.
Gil's
another story. And moreover we may just honestly disgree both with
your
reading as toits accuracy as a reading of Marx, and as to its
adequacy to
the world. We can do these things without "suppressing" anything.
Roemer et
al would be delighted to have Marx's view applied, also explained.
Of course
we still might disagree.

jks

_
Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device:
http://mobile.msn.com




Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Rakesh Bhandari

Andrew writes:

>"A" physical surplus and "the" physical surplus mean exactly the
>same thing in this context.


ok

>
>I do not deny, but affirm "that with rising productivity there is
>indeed some rough sense in which we can say that [a falling] mass
>of
>surplus value [corresponds to] a greater physical quantity of
>means of production and wage goods."  This is the ESSENCE of
>anti-physicalism.

ok but then what are the consequences on accumulation from this 
greater physical quantity of means of production and wage goods? Are 
you in fact keeping both the value and the use value or physical 
dimensions in mind when analyzing the accumulation process? I think 
you have bent the stick too far in the value direction.



>
>A "rough sense" is fine for many purposes, but not for looking at
>whether surplus-labor is the sole source of profit.

ok. Again I have not read your paper, and cannot assess your claims. 
My knowledge of the Fundamental Marxian Theory derives from 
Catephores' book.

RB





RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

"A" physical surplus and "the" physical surplus mean exactly the
same thing in this context.

I do not deny, but affirm "that with rising productivity there is
indeed some rough sense in which we can say that [a falling] mass
of
surplus value [corresponds to] a greater physical quantity of
means of production and wage goods."  This is the ESSENCE of
anti-physicalism.

A "rough sense" is fine for many purposes, but not for looking at
whether surplus-labor is the sole source of profit.

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Rakesh
Bhandari
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 11:56 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23911] Re: RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding
surplus
value and profit


>I actually do deny the existence of a physical surplus, in the
>real world.

ok Andrew you deny the existence of A physical surplus.



>
>The concept is appealing, but ultimately meaningless.  Physical
>things are heterogeneous, and there are surpluses of some,
>deficits of others.  There cannot be any "the" physical surplus.

now you deny the existence of THE physical surplus.

Granted there is not a single dimension in which this physical
surplus can be expressed.

Granted that with technical progress--say computers--it would be
difficult for example to determine how many more computer means of
production in which the surplus value is embodied.

But I think it's a mistake to deny that with rising productivity
there is indeed some rough sense in which we can say that the mass
of
surplus value even if it falls falls relative to the advanced
capital
is in fact being expressed in a greater physical quantity of means
of
production and wage goods, even if we have no precise measure for
that physical quantity.

If you deny this, you miss a crucial source of the elasticity and
explosiveness of accumulation.

My criticism of the TSS school again is that it is anti
physicalist.

And again here is Marx on the matter:

Here is an example of Marx's ability to understand the surplus in
both its aspects:


...the development of labour productivity contributes to an
increase
in the existing capital value, since it increases the mass and
diversity of use values in which the same exchange value is
represented, and which form the material substratum, the objective
elements of this capital, the substantial objects of which
constant
capital consists directly and variable capital at least
indirectly.
The same capital and the same labour produce more things that can
be
transformed into capital, quite apart from the exchange value.
These
things can serve to absorb additional labour, and thus additional
surplus labour also, and can in this way form additional capital.
The
mass of labour  that capital can command does not depend on the
its
value but rather on the mass of raw and ancillary materials, of
machinery and elements of fixed capital, and of means of
subsistence,
out of which it is composed, whatever their value may be. SINCE
THE
MASS OF LABOUR APPLIED THUS GROWS, AND THE MASS OF SURPLUS LABOUR
WITH IT, THE VALUE OF THE CAPITAL REPRODUCED AND THE SURPLUS VALUE
NEWLY ADDED TO IT GROWS AS WELL.  Capital 3, p. 356-7. vintage

Rakesh









RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

The issue, Michael, has nothing to do with differing about what
Marx said.  It has to do with false PROOFS that what he said are
logically incoherent, in error, etc.  Those false proofs have been
disproved.  When the disproofs are not acknowledged, when the
historical record is not corrected, when the allegations of error
and internal inconsistency continue even after the alleged proofs
have been disproved, then is that not suppression?  If not, how
would you explain it?

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Michael
Perelman
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 11:15 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23908] Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus
value and
profit


Andrew, people can differ to you about what Marx says, but that
does not
mean that they are conspiring to suppress Marx.  For example,
Justin knows
that I strongly disagree with his reading of Marx, but I do not
dream that
he is trying to suppress Marx.

Your accusation could never be proven, but only asserted.  And the
repetitive assertion of suppression serves no positive purpose.

On Wed, Mar 13, 2002 at 08:36:51AM -0500, Drewk wrote:
> Rakesh Bhandari wrote:
>
> "Much economic criticism of Marx aims at showing that the labor
> theory
> of value is not a reasonable working hypothesis in a complex
> capitalist economy (the hoary transformation problem) so it
> shouldn't
> even be allowed to be applied to analysis and serious problems.
> This
> is not something serious scholars do, it is something
> propagandists,
> hacks and worse of all metaphysicians do."
>
>
> This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of
Marx --
> his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is
what
> people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly
disingenuous
> to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.
>
>
> Andrew Kliman
>

--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]





RE: Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

I agree that "Not all disagreement is maliciously motivated
attempt to "suppress" the truth."  So how do we decide in a
particular case whether it *is* a suppression of the truth?   (I
leave aside the issue of motives.)

It is one thing to claim to prove error or internal inconsistency
when one can prove it.  It is another thing to claim it when one
cannot.  When the alleged proofs have been disproved and one
*continues* to claim it, that is clearly an instance of
suppression and clearly an ideological attack.  When one does not
retract the falsified "proofs" in the face of disproof, that is
clearly an instance of suppression and clearly an ideological
attack.  None of this has anything to do with "disagreement."

Am I right or not?  If not, why not?

It is one thing to claim to that one can jettison Marx's own value
theory, and still hold that surplus-labor is the sole source of
profit, when one can prove it.  It is another thing to claim it
when one cannot.  When the alleged proofs of this proposition have
been disproved and one *continues* to claim it, that is clearly an
instance of suppression and clearly an ideological attack.  When
one does not retract the falsified "proofs" in the face of
disproof, that is clearly an instance of suppression and clearly
an ideological attack.  Again, none of this has anything to do
with "disagreement."

Am I right or not?  If not, why not?

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Justin
Schwartz
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 10:26 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23905] Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus
value and
profit




>
>This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of
Marx --
>his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is what
>people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly disingenuous
>to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.
>
>
>Andrew Kliman
>

That's right, Andrew. We all know you have correctly understood
Marx, and we
grasp clearly what your perspective, I mean his perspective is,
and we know
that it id true. But because we are in league with Satan,
wesupress it. I
mean, for heaven's sake, be serious. Not all disagreement is
maliciously
motivated attempt to "suppress" the truth. I am sure that Roemer
and Gil and
  Roberto (and  me) do our best to understand Marx, among other
things, but
sometimes that is not good enough. With Roemer, clearly it isn't.
Gil's
another story. And moreover we may just honestly disgree both with
your
reading as toits accuracy as a reading of Marx, and as to its
adequacy to
the world. We can do these things without "suppressing" anything.
Roemer et
al would be delighted to have Marx's view applied, also explained.
Of course
we still might disagree.

jks

_
Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device:
http://mobile.msn.com





RE: Re: RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

I don't deal in counterfactuals.  Instead of diverting the issue,
why not deal with it?

Andrew Kliman

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Doug Henwood
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 9:47 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23903] Re: RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding
surplus
value and profit


Drewk wrote:

>The silence about this issue is deafening.
>
>What's the sound of one side suppressing Marx?  You have only to
>listen to the silence.

Wow, heavy. You mean if this suppression hadn't occurred, we'd be
living under socialism by now?

Doug





marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Charles Brown

 marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit
by Gil Skillman
12 March 2002 21:53 UTC  

Charles, you write
>
>CB: Your argument for this is probably in your previous posts, but could you 
>reiterate it ?  Does it follow from something else that surplus value is a 
>necessary condition for profit ?  Marx makes surplus value part of the 
>definition of profit.
>

First things first:  where does Marx make surplus value part of his
definition of profit?

^^

CB: There is also this.

Capital Vol. III

Part I. The Conversion of Surplus-Value into Profit and of the Rate of Surplus-Value 
into the Rate of Profit
Chapter 1. Cost-Price and profit

-clip-
 
In its assumed capacity of offspring of the aggregate advanced capital, surplus-value 
takes the converted form of profit. Hence, a certain value is capital when it is 
invested with a view to producing profit [4], or, there is profit because a certain 
value was employed as capital. Suppose profit is p. Then the formula C=c+v+s=k+s turns 
into the formula C=k+p, or the value of a commodity=cost-price+ profit.

The profit, such as it is represented here, is thus the same as surplus-value, only in 
a mystified form that is nonetheless a necessary outgrowth of the capitalist mode of 
production. The genesis of the mutation of values that occurs in the course of the 
production process, must be transferred from the variable portion of the capital to 
the total capital, because there is no apparent distinction between constant and 
variable capital in the assumed formation of the cost-price. Because at one pole the 
price of labour-power assumes the transmuted form of wages, surplus-value appears at 
the opposite pole in the transmuted form of profit




Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Michael Perelman

Andrew, people can differ to you about what Marx says, but that does not
mean that they are conspiring to suppress Marx.  For example, Justin knows
that I strongly disagree with his reading of Marx, but I do not dream that
he is trying to suppress Marx.

Your accusation could never be proven, but only asserted.  And the
repetitive assertion of suppression serves no positive purpose.

On Wed, Mar 13, 2002 at 08:36:51AM -0500, Drewk wrote:
> Rakesh Bhandari wrote:
> 
> "Much economic criticism of Marx aims at showing that the labor
> theory
> of value is not a reasonable working hypothesis in a complex
> capitalist economy (the hoary transformation problem) so it
> shouldn't
> even be allowed to be applied to analysis and serious problems.
> This
> is not something serious scholars do, it is something
> propagandists,
> hacks and worse of all metaphysicians do."
> 
> 
> This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of Marx --
> his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is what
> people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly disingenuous
> to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.
> 
> 
> Andrew Kliman
> 

-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]




marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Charles Brown

 marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit
by Gil Skillman
12 March 2002 21:53 UTC


Charles, you write
>
>CB: Your argument for this is probably in your previous posts, but could you 
>reiterate it ?  Does it follow from something else that surplus value is a 
>necessary condition for profit ?  Marx makes surplus value part of the 
>definition of profit.
>

First things first:  where does Marx make surplus value part of his
definition of profit?

^^^

CB: Capital Vol. III


Chapter 2. The Rate of Profit
 

-clip-

The capitalist does not care whether it is considered that he advances constant 
capital to make a profit out of his variable capital, or that he advances variable 
capital to enhance the value of the constant capital; that he invests money in wages 
to raise the value of his machinery and raw materials, or that he invests money in 
machinery and raw materials to be able to exploit labour. Although it is only the 
variable portion of capital which creates surplus-value, it does so only if the other 
portions, the conditions of production, are likewise advanced. Seeing that the 
capitalist can exploit labour only by advancing constant capital and that he can turn 
his constant capital to good account only by advancing variable capital, he lumps them 
all together in his imagination, and much more so since the actual rate of his gain is 
not determined by its proportion to the variable, but to the total capital, not by the 
rate of surplus-value, but by the rate of profit. And the latter!
, as we shall see, may remain the same and yet express different rates of 
surplus-value.

The costs of the product include all the elements of its value paid by the capitalist 
or for which he has thrown an equivalent into production. These costs must be made 
good to preserve the capital or to reproduce it in its original magnitude.

The value contained in a commodity is equal to the labour-time expended in its 
production, and the sum of this labour consists of paid and unpaid portions. But for 
the capitalist the costs of the commodity consist only of that portion of the labour 
materialised in it for which he has paid. The surplus-labour contained in the 
commodity costs the capitalist nothing, although, like the paid portion, it costs the 
labourer his labour, and although it creates value and enters into the commodity as a 
value-creating element quite like paid labour. The capitalist's profit is derived from 
the fact that he has something to sell for which he has paid nothing. The 
surplus-value, or profit, consists precisely in the excess value of a commodity over 
its cost-price, i.e., the excess of the total labour embodied in the commodity over 
the paid labour embodied in it. The surplus-value, whatever its origin, is thus a 
surplus over the advanced total capital. The proportion of this surplus to the!
 total, capital is therefore expressed by the fraction s/C , in which C stands for 
total capital. We thus obtain the rate of profit s/C=s/(c+v), as distinct from the 
rate of surplus-value s/v.

The rate of surplus-value measured against the variable capital is called rate of 
surplus-value. The rate of surplus-value measured against the total capital is called 
rate of profit. These are two different measurements of the same entity, and owing to 
the difference of the two standards of measurement they express different proportions 
or relations of this entity.



Capital Vol. III

Part I. The Conversion of Surplus-Value into Profit and of the Rate of Surplus-Value 
into the Rate of Profit
Chapter 3. The Relation of the Rate of Profit to the Rate of Surplus-Value
 

Here, as at the close of the preceding chapter, and generally in this entire first 
part, we presume the amount of profit falling to a given capital to be equal to the 
total amount of surplus-value produced by means of this capital during a certain 
period of circulation. We thus leave aside for the present the fact that, on the one 
hand, this surplus-value may be broken up into various sub-forms, such as interest on 
capital, ground-rent, taxes, etc., and that, on the other, it is not, as a rule, 
identical with profit as appropriated by virtue of a general rate of profit, which 
will be discussed in the second part.

So far as the quantity of profit is assumed to be equal to that of surplus-value, its 
magnitude, and that of the rate of profit, is determined by ratios of simple figures 
given or ascertainable in every individual case. The analysis, therefore, first is 
carried on purely in the mathematical field.

We retain the designations used in Books I and II. Total capital C consists of 
constant capital c and variable capital v, and produces a surplus-value s. The ratio 
of this surplus-value to the advanced variable capital, or s/v, is called the rate of 
surplus-value and designated s'. Therefore s/v=s', and consequently s=s'v. If this 
surplus-value is related to the to

Re: RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Justin Schwartz



>
>This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of Marx --
>his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is what
>people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly disingenuous
>to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.
>
>
>Andrew Kliman
>

That's right, Andrew. We all know you have correctly understood Marx, and we 
grasp clearly what your perspective, I mean his perspective is, and we know 
that it id true. But because we are in league with Satan, wesupress it. I 
mean, for heaven's sake, be serious. Not all disagreement is maliciously 
motivated attempt to "suppress" the truth. I am sure that Roemer and Gil and 
  Roberto (and  me) do our best to understand Marx, among other things, but 
sometimes that is not good enough. With Roemer, clearly it isn't. Gil's 
another story. And moreover we may just honestly disgree both with your 
reading as toits accuracy as a reading of Marx, and as to its adequacy to 
the world. We can do these things without "suppressing" anything. Roemer et 
al would be delighted to have Marx's view applied, also explained. Of course 
we still might disagree.

jks

_
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RE: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

Rakesh Bhandari wrote:

"Much economic criticism of Marx aims at showing that the labor
theory
of value is not a reasonable working hypothesis in a complex
capitalist economy (the hoary transformation problem) so it
shouldn't
even be allowed to be applied to analysis and serious problems.
This
is not something serious scholars do, it is something
propagandists,
hacks and worse of all metaphysicians do."


This is precisely right.  This is why it is suppression of Marx --
his theory SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO BE APPLIED.  This is what
people like Roemer et al. say, and why it is utterly disingenuous
to say that they were/are just expressing a different viewpoint.


Andrew Kliman




RE: Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-13 Thread Drewk

I actually do deny the existence of a physical surplus, in the
real world.

The concept is appealing, but ultimately meaningless.  Physical
things are heterogeneous, and there are surpluses of some,
deficits of others.  There cannot be any "the" physical surplus.
The fake attempts to show that surplus-labor is necessary and
sufficient for profit *under simultaneous valuation* all fail
because of precisely this phenomenon.


To be precise, I actually have proved "only" that all of the
simultaneist interpretations of Marx -- specifically, simultaneist
definitions of profit and surplus-labor -- imply that
surplus-labor is neither necessary nor sufficient for profit.  I
have not claimed to prove that "the assumption of simultaneous
valuation *logically* precludes one from asserting that surplus
labor is a necessary and sufficient condition for positive
profit."


The silence about this issue is deafening.

What's the sound of one side suppressing Marx?  You have only to
listen to the silence.

Andrew Kliman



>Michael, no one disputes that surplus *labor* is a necessary
condition for
>both the existence of profit and the existence of surplus value.
It does
>not follow from this that surplus value has a "role" in the
creation of
>profit.  It could with equal (non-) logic be said that profit has
a "role"
>in the creation of surplus value.  Similarly, it does it follow
that
>"value... is  fundamental to price, in the sense that prices and
profits
>depend on what happens in the sphere of value."
>
>Gil




Re: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-12 Thread Rakesh Bhandari

>Michael writes:
>
>>One more short, but obvious point regarding profit and surplus value.
>>Marx did offer one simple "proof" of the role of surplus value in the
>>creation of profit.  Suppose, he says, that we take the working class as a
>>whole.  If the working-class did not produce anymore than it consumed,
>>profits would be impossible.
>
>Michael, no one disputes that surplus *labor* is a necessary condition for
>both the existence of profit and the existence of surplus value.  It does
>not follow from this that surplus value has a "role" in the creation of
>profit.  It could with equal (non-) logic be said that profit has a "role"
>in the creation of surplus value.  Similarly, it does it follow that
>"value... is  fundamental to price, in the sense that prices and profits
>depend on what happens in the sphere of value."  
>
>Gil

I have not read Andrew's paper, but it would be nice to be able to 
assess his provocative claim that the assumption of simultaneous 
valuation *logically* precludes one from asserting that surplus labor 
is a necessary and sufficient condition for positive profit.  Andrew 
seems to have a good taste for difficult, important and in this case 
fundamental problems in the so called modern interpretation of Marx

It would be helpful, I believe, if we could discuss as topics in the 
history of economic thought

(a) the idea of the surplus

(I would like to defend Marx's unappreciated idea, recovered by 
Grossmann, that it has two forms--a value form and a use value form, 
one the product of abstract, general homogenous labor and the other 
the product of concrete labor; Marx,  who was after Babbage perhaps 
the greatest 19th century economic student of science and technology, 
NEVER says that changes in the use value quantity of  physical 
surplus are conditioned solely on changes in the surplus quantity of 
abstract homogeneous, general social labor time ) and

(b) the methodology of comparative statics, in particular its working 
assumption of simultaneous valuation.

For topic a, there is a good, introductory discussion in Peter 
Lichtenstein's  An introduction to post-Keynesian and Marxian 
theories of value and price though I think he misses entirely Marx's 
discovery of the dual form of the surplus. And the existence of two 
surpluses comes up in Andrew and Freeman's work which studies the 
relationship between surplus *value* and the *physical* surplus. I 
have offered a criticism of their treatment.

I do not read them however to be denying the existence of a physical 
surplus but rather to be demonstrating that the attempt to calculate 
the profit rate based soley on the physical surplus (as well as a 
fixed distributional parameter) necessarily presupposes the dubious 
simultaneous assumtion of input=output prices and that such an 
assumption is at odds with both Marx dynamics vision and more 
importantly the dynamics of capital accumulation.

And one can reply: well didn't Marx himself make such an assumption 
of classical natural or equilibrium prices in his own reproduction 
schemes and transformation analyses? Do equilibrium prices not exert 
*any* force at *any* point in the course of capital accumulation or 
the business cycle? Are they of *no* theoretical interest 
*whatsoever*? Isn't it towards an equilibrium point based on the new 
adopted technology that the economy is moving in Schumpeter's 
recession phase of the cycle? Or do Andrew and Alan Freeman reject 
this Schumpeterian assumption just as it is rejected by Alan's father 
Chris Freeman, perhaps the leading economic student of science and 
technology in second half of the 20th century?

What would be a good introductory treatment to problem (b)?

Aside from logical claims, I thought Michael's (as well as Shane's) 
point was not that the labor theory of value is provable or deducible 
but rather that it is a reasonable working hypothesis which can be 
applied on the basis of the categories developed out of it to the 
empirical analysis of capitalist dynamics (Shane's dissertation) and 
in particular to the problems of capitalist crisis (Michael's 
qualitative value theory).

John E has added--and I was hoping for good replies--that it provides 
the best basis for aggregation and the analysis of totalities as well.

Much economic criticism of Marx aims at showing that the labor theory 
of value is not a reasonable working hypothesis in a complex 
capitalist economy (the hoary transformation problem) so it shouldn't 
even be allowed to be applied to analysis and serious problems. This 
is not something serious scholars do, it is something propagandists, 
hacks and worse of all metaphysicians do.

And so on.

Rakesh








Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-12 Thread Gil Skillman

Charles, you write
>
>CB: Your argument for this is probably in your previous posts, but could you 
>reiterate it ?  Does it follow from something else that surplus value is a 
>necessary condition for profit ?  Marx makes surplus value part of the 
>definition of profit.
>

First things first:  where does Marx make surplus value part of his
definition of profit?

>
> It could with equal (non-) logic be said that profit has a "role"
>in the creation of surplus value.  Similarly, it does it follow that
>"value... is  fundamental to price, in the sense that prices and profits
>depend on what happens in the sphere of value."   
>
>^^^
>
>CB: Is that "does not follow..."  ?

Yes

Gil




marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-12 Thread Charles Brown

 marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit
by Gil Skillman
12 March 2002 17:55 UTC  


Michael, no one disputes that surplus *labor* is a necessary condition for
both the existence of profit and the existence of surplus value.  It does
not follow from this that surplus value has a "role" in the creation of
profit. 

^

CB: Your argument for this is probably in your previous posts, but could you reiterate 
it ?  Does it follow from something else that surplus value is a necessary condition 
for profit ?  Marx makes surplus value part of the definition of profit.

^


 It could with equal (non-) logic be said that profit has a "role"
in the creation of surplus value.  Similarly, it does it follow that
"value... is  fundamental to price, in the sense that prices and profits
depend on what happens in the sphere of value."   

^^^

CB: Is that "does not follow..."  ?






RE: Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-12 Thread Drewk

All of the interpretations of Marx's value theory in which inputs
and outputs are valued (priced) simultaneously imply that
surplus-labor is *neither* necessary nor sufficient for positive
profit.

This is proved for even for economies without joint production,
that are able to reproduce themselves over time, in Andrew J.
Kliman, "Simultaneous Valuation vs the Exploitation Theory of
Profit," _Capital and Class_ 73, Spring 2001.

So there are lots of people who do dispute "that surplus *labor*
is a necessary condition for ... the existence of profit," by
virtue of adhering to the interpretations they hold.

Andrew Kliman

P.S.  I hope to say more about this and related matters in a week
or two, but I thought it necessary (and sufficient) to make this
factual correction here.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Gil Skillman
Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2002 12:52 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:23879] Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value
and
profit


Michael writes:

>One more short, but obvious point regarding profit and surplus
value.
>Marx did offer one simple "proof" of the role of surplus value in
the
>creation of profit.  Suppose, he says, that we take the working
class as a
>whole.  If the working-class did not produce anymore than it
consumed,
>profits would be impossible.

Michael, no one disputes that surplus *labor* is a necessary
condition for
both the existence of profit and the existence of surplus value.
It does
not follow from this that surplus value has a "role" in the
creation of
profit.  It could with equal (non-) logic be said that profit has
a "role"
in the creation of surplus value.  Similarly, it does it follow
that
"value... is  fundamental to price, in the sense that prices and
profits
depend on what happens in the sphere of value."

Gil





Re: marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-12 Thread Gil Skillman

Michael writes:

>One more short, but obvious point regarding profit and surplus value.
>Marx did offer one simple "proof" of the role of surplus value in the
>creation of profit.  Suppose, he says, that we take the working class as a
>whole.  If the working-class did not produce anymore than it consumed,
>profits would be impossible.

Michael, no one disputes that surplus *labor* is a necessary condition for
both the existence of profit and the existence of surplus value.  It does
not follow from this that surplus value has a "role" in the creation of
profit.  It could with equal (non-) logic be said that profit has a "role"
in the creation of surplus value.  Similarly, it does it follow that
"value... is  fundamental to price, in the sense that prices and profits
depend on what happens in the sphere of value."   

Gil




marx's proof regarding surplus value and profit

2002-03-11 Thread Michael Perelman

One more short, but obvious point regarding profit and surplus value.
Marx did offer one simple "proof" of the role of surplus value in the
creation of profit.  Suppose, he says, that we take the working class as a
whole.  If the working-class did not produce anymore than it consumed,
profits would be impossible.

Everyone here, of course, is familiar with this idea, but it is still
worth repeating.
 --

Michael Perelman Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]