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Theory as Critique

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Theory as Critique argues that the key to understanding Marx’s Capital lies in viewing it as a critique of economic theory.
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  • 18 June 2019
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Theory as Critique, while discussing many central issues of Marxian theory, has two main emphases: First, as the title suggests, it takes seriously Capital’s claim to be a critique of economic theory, rather than a contribution to political economy. Understanding what this means, it shows, goes far to unravelling many difficulties traditionally found in Marx’s book, from the nature of his theory of class to the 'transformation problem'. Secondly, Mattick’s volume carefully explores how to bridge the gap between the extreme abstraction of Marx’s ideas and the complex reality that they are intended to help us understand.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Imprint: Haymarket Books
Series: Historical Materialism
Publication Date: 18 June 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781642590135
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Economy, Political economy, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Theory, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Labor / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism, Economic theory and philosophy, Labour / income economics, Political ideologies and movements

“Marx is widely considered an outmoded nineteenth-century thinker whose predictions have been falsified [...] Paul Mattick’s superb study, Theory as Critique: Essays on Capital, establishes that these endlessly recycled objections either are not substantiated in a close reading of Marx’s works or do not touch the heart of Marx’s position. Correcting previous interpretations, however, is not Mattick’s ultimate goal: ‘the main interest of this book is the attempt to bridge the gap between Marx’s ideas and their application to present-day circumstances’. Far from being an account of nineteenth-century capitalism made obsolete by more recent developments, Marx’s theory is ‘still explanatorily relevant to a social system that continues to have the basic features Marx identified’.”
—Tony Smith, H-Net Reviews

Acknowledgements

1 Introduction
2 Marx’s Abstraction   Science   Idealisation   Explanation
3 Questions of Method   Marx’s Abandonment of Philosophy   Logic and Abstraction   Marx’s Dialectic
4 Theory as Critique   Political Economy as Text and Discourse   Representation and Reality   The Starting Point   The Argument in Capital
5 Labour as Activity and as Representation   Value as Representation   Abstract Labour and Value   Abstraction in Practice   The Reduction of Skilled Labour   The Causal Reality of Value
6 Value and Price: Marx’s Resolution of a Ricardian Conundrum   Labour and Value   Value and Price
7 Ricardo Redux   After Sraffa   Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
8 Economic Form and Social Reproduction   Capital   Circulation and Reproduction
9 Class and Capital   Economic Appearances and Social Reality   Economic Class and Social Structure   Class Struggle and Revolution
10 Trend and Cycle   Theoretical Issues   Breakdown
11 Value Theory and Economic Events   Categories and Data   Prosperity as Depression

Bibliography
Index