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"Marx's thinking about technology"

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Anonymous Rakesh Bhandari said...

It is also possible that Marx took for granted a secular tendency for falling profitability and thought that the task was to explain it even in face of its being periodically arrested or even reversed. Roman Rosdolsky for example has collected several quotes, presumably not all additions from Engels, in which Marx asserts the centrality of a tendency to falling profitability in the dynamics of capitalism.

According to Bernice Shoul, Marx did not properly acknowledge his debt to JS Mill's attempt to understand capitalist dynamics in terms of a tendency towards falling profitability counter-acted temporality until a stationary state was realized.

Two interesting pieces on Marx's theory of technological change are Nathan Rosenberg's work in the 70s and Donald MacKenizie's later essay.

Rosenberg reminds us that Marx did not reduce technical change to only the labor=saving kind. Marx (and here some of the quotes may come from Engels) was also interested in the technologies that allowed for the faster turn over of capital and the access to wider markets that made possible economies of scale. Some of these technologies are what we call today ICT.

MacKenzie revisits Marx's ideas that some technologies are developed and introduced to weaken labor's bargaining position. So Marx put power at the center of his study of technical change.

John Bellamy Foster has been interested in Marx's recognition of the ecological consequences of what we today call industrial agriculture.

July 6, 2013 at 12:10 PM

Blogger hilde said...

Hi Dan, thanks for this post. I'm a philosophy professor and I want to include a short reading or two on Marx and technology in my spring philosophy of technology course. Any suggestions of things good for undergraduates? I'm finding a lot, but am having trouble separating wheat from chaff.

December 13, 2018 at 8:24 AM

Blogger Nelisiwe Mzobe said...

Great

June 4, 2021 at 10:31 AM

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