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by qcnguy
231 days ago
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But "alienation" is a concept Marx made up and that only he used. Nobody talks about that today and you don't find talk of "alienation" even in very Marxist institutions like unions because it doesn't mean anything concrete. > A person working, developing and feeling connected to the fruits of their labor, fulfilling the needs of his society is exactly what he prescribed. So if a rich CEO feels connected to the fruits of his extensive labor, he's not a capitalist and should be left alone during the revolution of the proletariat then? Somehow none of the people who put communism into practice got that memo. Yeah, sorry, trying to find any sense in Marxism is a waste of time. The man was a very poor thinker. People who view him as insightful tend to conflate quantity with quality. He wrote lots of books, therefore he must be smart and have something to contribute. The man's theories don't describe the real world correctly, let alone successfully predict what happens if people act on his advice. Not even if you allow him to invent his own non-existent emotions and states of being like alienation. |
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Marx being such an obscure figure with little impact on the course of modern history, it doesn’t surprise me that you never got a chance to read it, but alienation is definitely “talked about”, the critique of capitalism is part and parcel of Marx specifically, the material conditions of workers play HEAVILY into it. He didn’t just emerge from some cottage with this idea, he was observing the Industrial Revolution.
If the bourgeoisie CEO (capital owner?) feels connected to the fruit of his labor it makes a difference for their material conditions, but has no bearing on capitalist-or-not.
In an economics setting you’ll talk more about the labor theory of value and so forth, alienation of the aristocracy wasn’t the thrust of the work. Your example could maybe point at the idea of “golden handcuffs”, however the classic Yes Men prank on the WTO is more the reality ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yK9Cs_UcTEE )
This is all of course a point of curiosity alone, since the rare encounters with Marx are restricted to philosophy, economics, history, political science, sociology and advanced psychology programs.