One of the things strongly emphasised by David Harvey and others is the unsustainability of capitalism, something that comes increasingly into focus as globalisation/neoliberalism drags on, is that it's physically impossible for there to be unending economic growth in a finite world, that this impossibility is fundamental to capitalism, that if it continues the result will be environmental destruction and war, that it will sooner or later be replaced either by planned economies on a global scale or by the breakdown of civilisation ("socialism or barbarism", as Rosa Luxemburg already made clear a hundred years ago). It's a process that might be slower or faster but with our current state of knowledge there is no avoiding it, and various cataclysmic social events in the 20th century show that things can sometimes change much more rapidly than any observation of long-term trends might imply. What's needed is the ideas to make the inevitable transition to a different kind of society involve the minimum amount of death and suffering. The fact that nothing has happened since Marx's time which invalidates his analysis of class society would seem to imply that his ideas on how it might be changed, along with the subsequent evolution of those ideas, which continues to this day, need to be taken most seriously as indicating a way forward. (This is just another way of stating the main points of S_A's previous post.)
"Modernism", "Elitism", and "The Working Classes"
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostIt is all very Marxist.
Originally posted by Joseph K View Post'Have someone else's cake and eat it' see the Harvey quote about class roles. You're right, reading Marx for you would be a waste of time, you're someone who quoted in all seriousness a member of the royal family on a topic of sociology. Both embarrassing and risible.
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostYou're asking irrelevant questions. All that matters is that there are class roles.
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostAre you being deliberately obtuse? See the Harvey quote above about different class roles.
Of course Marx wanted to get rid of "class" and advocated a "classless" society and, however hopelessly optimistic that might have been or still is, he was right to do so; that, however, doesn't resolve the difference between actual "class" and perceived or promoted "class". That said, there could never be a "classless" society while the "grotesque inequalities" that you mention are allowed to persist - and I could not agree with you more that there remain such inequalities and on a vaster scale than pertained in Marx's day. It is perfecgtly possible - and, I believe, not unreasonable - to seek to claim that "class" either doesn't exist or, more likely, is a fabrication without denying those inequalities which are not about "class" but a quite different social ill altogether.Last edited by ahinton; 26-05-18, 13:53.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI don't recall the royal family quote, I'm afraid; could I trouble you to remind me?
Comical indeed.
Anyway, as Richard Barrett advised on the other thread, I won't get dragged into your confused rubbish. You claim that you do not believe and do not get the David Harvey quote while simultaneously giving examples that support his idea that class is a role and that it is possible to play more than one role.
One last thing... apropos this comment -
It is perfecgtly possible - and, I believe, not uinreasonable - to seek to claim that "class" either doesn't exist or, more likely, is a fabrication without denying those inequalities which are not about "class" but a quite different social ill altogether.
You have trollish personality which, like Richard advised, I won't feed anymore.
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Well it's as easy to demolish another person's argument by nit-picking through it as it is more difficult to construct a neighbourhood than destroy it. I am prepared to try and take on ahinton's way of debating, on equally exhaustive, and exhausting, premises, aware how frustrating he and they can be, because I spent most of the last 30 years of my father's life arguing precisely the same issues with him, one of the most practical and intelligent people I ever knew, but one whose whole raison d'être seemed built on never conceding he might be wrong on anything, that is until just two days before his passing he agreed that I had been right on politics all along. Actually he said he'd always agreed with me! It may have been an act of self-redemption for him to have done so - it should be mentioned he always said he was a Christian - but I like to think that had he lived longer than his 92 years he might have seen his U-turn vindicated: anti-EU though he was - he had old-fashioned John Majorish illusions about "British honesty" that were only partially changed after seeing "Ghandi" - he would have been outraged by what had happened to "his" Tory party.
Forgive me, everyone, for just this twice, indulging in a bit of personal history that people might find uncomfortable.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post"I seem to recall Prince Philip describing his wife as "working class" because she works."
Comical indeed.
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostAnyway, as Richard Barrett advised on the other thread, I won't get dragged into your confused rubbish. You claim that you do not believe and do not get the David Harvey quote while simultaneously giving examples that support his idea that class is a role and that it is possible to play more than one role.
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostAnd what, pray tell, is this quite different social ill altogether? Where have you got this alternative sociological theory from? Your problem ahinton is that you try to run-down the reality of class as put forth by me and others by burying it with a barrage of questions, many of which are irrelevant, without putting forth an alternative. The onus is on you to explain an alternative theory of social relations and inequality that avoids a class analysis.
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostYou have trollish personality which, like Richard advised, I won't feed anymore.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWell it's as easy to demolish another person's argument by nit-picking through it as it is more difficult to construct a neighbourhood than destroy it. I am prepared to try and take on ahinton's way of debating, on equally exhaustive, and exhausting, premises, aware how frustrating he and they can be, because I spent most of the last 30 years of my father's life arguing precisely the same issues with him, one of the most practical and intelligent people I ever knew, but one whose whole raison d'être seemed built on never conceding he might be wrong on anything, that is until just two days before his passing he agreed that I had been right on politics all along. Actually he said he'd always agreed with me! It may have been an act of self-redemption for him to have done so - it should be mentioned he always said he was a Christian - but I like to think that had he lived longer than his 92 years he might have seen his U-turn vindicated: anti-EU though he was - he had old-fashioned John Majorish illusions about "British honesty" that were only partially changed after seeing "Ghandi" - he would have been outraged by what had happened to "his" Tory party.
Forgive me, everyone, for just this twice, indulging in a bit of personal history that people might find uncomfortable.
I really do not believe that anything that I have written on this or any other subject here has implied that I believe that I am right and those who take alternative views are wrong; such has certainly never been my intention. Indeed, people such as Richard Barrett and Joseph K. write things that are far too interesting, thought-provoking and commanding of respect to be capable even of inciting such a belief. I do also think, however, that there is a distinct impression that, in having read Marx himself and more authorities on socialism, anti-capitalism and the rest and gleaned from them and my thinking about them as I have, I have drawn conclusions that appear to be regarded by some as entirely "wrong" and equally unacceptable, as though the reading such texts is, or at least ought to be, identical to endorsing them in every detail without room for possible argument. There is therefore a sense of intolerance on one side but mere disagreement on the other and, indeed, I am not even persuaded in any case that the two "sides" (horrible concept) are as far apart from one another as one of them might purportedly assume.
For what it is worth, incidentally, I happen to believe that UK now has the worst Prime Minister in living memory.
To return to the topic as a whole, however, it does seem that "modernism" and "élitism" have been cast to the sidelines in order to propritise these question of "class", which suggests, to me, at least, a growing sense of disproportionality, for what that might or might not be worth...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThank you for this.
I really do not believe that anything that I have written on this or any other subject here has implied that I believe that I am right and those who take alternative views are wrong; such has certainly never been my intention. Indeed, people such as Richard Barrett and Joseph K. write things that are far too interesting, thought-provoking and commanding of respect to be capable even of inciting such a belief. I do also think, however, that there is a distinct impression that, in having read Marx himself and more authorities on socialism, anti-capitalism and the rest and gleaned from them and my thinking about them as I have, I have drawn conclusions that appear to be regarded by some as entirely "wrong" and equally unacceptable, as though the reading such texts is, or at least ought to be, identical to endorsing them in every detail without room for possible argument. There is therefore a sense of intolerance on one side but mere disagreement on the other and, indeed, I am not even persuaded in any case that the two "sides" (horrible concept) are as far apart from one another as one of them might purportedly assume.
For what it is worth, incidentally, I happen to believe that UK now has the worst Prime Minister in living memory.
To return to the topic as a whole, however, it does seem that "modernism" and "élitism" have been cast to the sidelines in order to propritise these question of "class", which suggests, to me, at least, a growing sense of disproportionality, for what that might or might not be worth...
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostWorse than Blair and Brown?
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostYou have trollish personality which, like Richard advised, I won't feed anymore.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI do not "get" what prompts the Harvey quote but the examples that I hve given do nothing to "support his idea that "class" is a rôle", because a rôle is, as I mentioned, something that some people fulfil either through choice or enforcement but such fulfilment does not imply their designation as members of any particular "class".
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOne could fulfil a role, any role, however, by inadvertance. When bitter people say "I didn't choose to be born" they are generalising from the specifics of their situation onto the rest of life, lacking as they do a perspective other than their own. We're talking perspective here rather than some superpowered capacity transcendent of choice or coercion. Are you not prepared to concede that? it seems to be the nub of where we disagree.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI think that this comment is unnecessary and inaccurate, Joseph - you had made your exasperation with ahinton's responses perfectly clear; there was no need to add such an offensive statement.
Or perhaps not...Last edited by ahinton; 26-05-18, 17:09.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI have no problem engaging in debate with someone whose way of thinking is lucid, clear and transparent. Unfortunately for ahinton he's incoherent and prone to mystification and waffle.
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