Philosophy
and Religion, Part 7a
“Capital”: Not a
Doctrine, but a Critique
In the year
following the 150th anniversary of the 1848 “Communist Manifesto”, Cyril Smith
took on Marx’s premier work, “Capital” in his “Hegel, Economics, and Marx's
Capital” (attached, and linked below).
Smith
showed how generations of Marxists have got it very wrong.
In
particular, Smith shows us how “Capital” is not about “economics” or about what
even Great Lenin mistakenly called “Marx’s Economic Doctrine”, but is really what
it says it is: “A Critique of Political Economy”.
Equally
mistaken, Smith shows, is the vulgar conception of the relation between Hegel’s
work and Marx’s, and here Smith could have drawn support from E. V. Ilyenkov [Image, above].
Ilyenkov’s
“The Dialectics of
the Abstract and the Concrete in Marx’s Capital” was published in the
Soviet Union in 1960.
No doubt,
Smith is not the first to rediscover the real Marx, and he will not be the
last.
Apart from
giving us a very good reminder to pay proper attention to what we are reading,
Smith is also validating the CU policy of reading the original work more than
the commentators and the analysts (see, e.g., the CU Generic Course on
Capital, Volume 1).
The next
post will deal decisively and comprehensively with Stalin and Stalinism. It
will lift the Stalinist load from off the back of Karl Marx, and refresh Marx’s
legacy.
The full
Cyril Smith archive on MIA can be found here.
Please read
the.
- The above is to introduce the original reading-text: Hegel, Economics, and Marx's Capital, 1999, Cyril Smith.
- To download any of the CU courses in PDF files please click here.
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