Return-Path: Delivered-To: andy@mira.net From: JulioHuato Date: Wed, 24 Dec 1997 09:31:03 EST To: andy@mira.net Subject: Re: Essence and Notion cont'd Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com) << Volume II, Chapter 1, is about the circuit M - C - M?>> Yes, exactly. I like that part because Marx gets quite explicit about how a "high" level of commodity production and exchange is a pre-condition for capital. The forms of capital (and the transition from one form to the next) in is circuit forces Marx to address this. Insofar as the gradual or forceful separation between MP and L is the historical form in which the commodification of labor power takes place, then the primitive accumulation is an aspect of this "generalization of commodity production" and hence, that formula ("generalized commodity production") summarizes the social conditions for capital to exist. Of course, once capital takes over, commodification expands further and faster. So capitalism is generalized commodity production taken to its peaks. <> [That is, the concrete aspects of capitalism.] <> What can I say about this? It seemed to me that the "Concrete" was an epistemological category (and that's why in the Logic it is mostly used as an adjective) whereas the Notion was an ontological one (a noun). But that they were equivalent. The Notion is the ontological concrete. The Concrete is the epistemological notion. As to the "power of substance self-realised," I thought Hegel referred to the Idea in the last stage of its self-realization. In Hegel the Idea is substantive and the world that results from its realization is phenomenic. Now, since the Substance has been already elucidated in the Essence section, then the Notion appears as "a form, but infinite and creative, that releases from itself the fullness of all content" (ie, the fullness of the Substance). The references to "totality," "the true concrete," "the systematic whole," etc. made me think he was referring to a fully displayed Notion, the developed Notion. But now, I'm not sure. I admit mine is a forced interpretation -- a kind of wishful thinking. I also ignore subtle differences in terminology that may be important. Anyway. I rush to read Marx IN Hegel ... and then I do it the wrong way. By the way, a similar problem arises when one reads Ricardo trying to interpret him as a direct germinal exposition of Marx's political-economic view. When you read "value" in Ricardo, you have to read "relative price" and then everything falls into place. (I must give credit to Anwar Shaikh for sharing this "trick" with me.) But that's another problem ... I guess I regret sometimes that Hegel (and Ricardo) didn't read Marx! :) Thanks! J.