Title: Capital,%20Volume%20I,%20Chapter%20One
1Capital, Volume I, Chapter One
2Structure of the Chapter
- Section 1 The Substance of Value
- Section 2 The Measure of Value
- Section 3 The Form of Value
- Section 4 Fetishism
3Sec. 1 The Substance of Value
- Flow of the Argument
- From commodity exchange
- (A exchanges for B)
- to
- Abstract Labor
- (What they have in common)
4Dialectical Flow
- In Hegel
- being? nothing (becoming)
- In Marx
- exchange? abstract labor (money form)
- Why labor?
- At heart of capitalist social relations
- Saw in Part VIII on Primitive Accumulation
5Why Abstract Labor?
- Labor abstracted from specificity
- Defined without regard to type of concrete,
- useful labor (technical term)
- Labor as a general notion
- Historically specific concept
- before capitalism there was no labor
- with capitalism all activity becomes labor
6Labor Work
- Engels differentiated the two
- Labor work in capitalism
- Work the more general concept
- But, if there is no general concept of work
outside of capitalism, then there is no difference
7Abstraction of abstract labor
- concept is abstracted from concrete, useful labor
- concept designates common social meaning social
control - concept denotes process/tendency toward
abstractness, i.e.,deskilling of work
8Sec.2 Measure of Value
- Ques How do you measure useful labor?
- Ans by the time it takes
- Ques How do you measure abstract labor?
- Ans by the social time it takes
- Measure of value SNLT
- socially
necessary labor time
9Measure and Productivity
- Productivity output per unit of input, or
- output per hour of work
- Doubling productivity 2X product for same work
time (individual or social) - Same work time same useful labor time, same
abstract labor time - So, 2X productivity 1/2 SNLT per unit
10Sec. 3 The Form of Value
- The Simple Form
- The Expanded Form
- The General Form
- The Money Form
11The Simple Form
- xA yB
- A, B randomly exchanged commodities
- x, y quantifiers
- sign means is worth
- primary focus is on the qualitative
characteristics of this relationship
12The Relative Form
- In the expression xA yB
- xA is said to have the relative formof value
- Relative form the value of A is expressed
relative to B - B can be any commodity, so whatever it is, the
value of A is being expressed relative to that
commodity
13The Equivalent Form
- In the expression xA yB
- yB is said to have the equivalent form of value
- Equivalent form a use-value B is the
expression of As value - We exchange A for B, we look at B and we say,
Ah! this B is the equivalent of the A we traded
away!
14Contradiction
- In the relationship xA yB,
- A and B are in a particular kind of relationship
- Each is the opposite of the other, one has its
value expressed, the other does the expressing - Their meaning is inseparable from the relation
- We call this a contradiction (opposition
unity) - In Pt.VIII we saw that the class relationship
involved such a contradiction
15Contradiction Class - 1
- Working Class Capital
- are like
- xA yB
- Within capitalism, working class is defined and
takes its meaning from its exchange with capital - Labor market x(work) y(income)
16Contradiction Class - 2
- Workers in relative form
- Workerss value gets expressed in relationship,
e.g., what you are worth is given by your wage - Capital in equivalent form
- Capitals equivalent (wage, income) expresses
this value
17Contradiction Class - 3
- Yet, the relationship is NOT balanced
- Workers can be (and were) people without capital,
outside of wage, etc. - Capital can only be capital with people as its
workers - So, people can rebel/escape, capital cannot
- Here is the potential for revolution
18Reflexive Mediation
- In xA yB, B mediates As relationship to itself
- A discovers its own value through B
- B is like a mirror
- In a mirror we see one aspect of ourselves our
visible light images - A discovers one aspect of itself its value
19Reflexive Mediation Class
- Capital mediates peoples relationship to
themselves - They see themselves as as mere workers
- e.g., John Barton - Mill Worker (WC
in-itself) - e.g., John Barton - Unionist (WC
for-itself) - BUT, they can see other aspects of themselvs
outside of this relationship - e.g., Job Legh - naturalist
20Reflexive Mediation School
- School mediates students relationship to
themselves - They see themselves as mere students
- e.g., vis à vis the teacher
- e.g., vis à vis the administration
- Grade defines kind of student
- e.g., this is a B student
- Some students rebel at this narrow definition
21Reflexive Mediation Relationships
- Child - Parent
- Boyfriend - Girlfriend
- Wife - Husband
- All involve reflexive mediation, BUT
- People ARE multidimensional
- People NEED multiple mirrors
- So, all these relationships, if isolated, can
lead to insanity or rebellion
22Child - Parent
- Early on
- child identifies with parent, relationship is
enough of a definition of self - parent identifies self as parent
- Later
- child must find new mirrors, break free of
single source of self-defintion - Same for parents! Hardest for
house-wife-mother.
23Boyfriend - Girlfriend Wife - Husband
- Early On
- Intense focus on the other as VERY favorable
mirror of self, reciprocal mirroring - Later On
- 1. Peoples lives are multidimensionable and
intense focus cant be sustained - 2. People must find multiple mirrors
24Deficiency of Simple Form
- Equivalent form B is discreet, accidental
- Value expressed by product of a particular
useful labor - BUT, the nature of value is universal
- So, there is a contradiction between the
universal substance of value (abstract labor) and
its particular expression in the simple form of
value
25The Expanded Form
- xA yB
- zC
- nN
- Expanded relative form of value
- Limitation of equivalent form is overcome
- Equivalent form consists of ALL other commodities
and thus no longer particular - This form is totalizing, infinite
26Totalization
- Expanded form is totalizing because every
commodity that exists can represent the value of
any one commodity - Capital seeks this totalization
- seeks to convert all of life into commodities
- seeks to impose work on everyone
- seeks to impose a master narrative on world
27Infinity - 1
- The expanded form is infinite in the sense that
there is no limit to expanding world of
commodities, nN goes to infinity - Capital has this quality of endless expansion
- through space (colonialism, imperialism, SciFi)
- through time (end of history)
- through all of reality (commodification of the
cosmos, galactic work-machine)
28Infinity - 2
- However, the infinity of the expanded form is a
bad infinity, in the Hegelian sense - The expression of value is not unified it is a
mosaic of differentiated expressions - This contradicts the unitary nature of value
- A unique substance should have a unique expression
29The General Form
- yB xA
- zC xA
- nN xA
- In the general form the value of each and every
commodity has a common, unique expression. - The equivalent form is universal
- A is the universal equivalent
30Good Infinity
- The General Form is infinite just like expanded
form expands endlessly - BUT, this is a good infinity because it is not
just a list of discrete expressions - Rather, it is a unified expression of a unitary
substance, common to all - Universal equivalent mediates everthing
31Syllogistic Mediation - 1
- yB xA
- zC xA
- nN xA
- yB is related to zC only through xA
- two things mediated by a third is called
syllogistic mediation
32Syllogistic Mediation - 2
- Aristotelian syllogism
- Caesar is a man
- All men are mortal
- Therefore Caesar is mortal
- Caesar the Individual is related to the Universal
trait of mortality through his Particular
characteristic of being a man (I-P-U)
33Syllogistic Mediation - 3
- Hegels Interest Syll. form of movement
- Elements (U)niversal, (P)articular,
(I)ndividual - In a fully developed syllogistic form all
elements are mediated in their relationships - I-P-U,
- P-U-I,
- U-I-P
34Syllogistic Mediation Class-1
- Working class in-itself defined by capital
- Working class in-itself is a serial group
- Capital seeks to mediate among workers
- pays some a wage, some not
- pays some more, some less
- divides by job, plant, industry
- divides to control
35Syllogistic Mediation Class-2
- Worker (W) - (I)ndividaul
- Capital (K) - (U)niversal
- Union -(P)articular
- W - K - U (right to work laws)
- But also K - W - U (K uses scabs)
- W - U - K (U mediates W vs K)
- Rupture wildcat strikes bypass U
36Syllogistic Mediation School
- Elements (S)tudents, (P)rofessors,
(A)dministration - S - P - A (profs impose rules, absorb anger)
- P - S - A (admin uses student evaluations)
- S - A - P (profs use admin against students)
- Rupture S bypass P and attack A
37Syllogistic Mediation Relationships
- Elements men (M),women (W) capital (K)
- M - K - W (marriage, sodomy, divorce laws)
- K - M - W (K uses M to control W)
- K - W - M (K uses W to control M)
- Rupture Womens movement bypasses M to attack
capital directly, eg. welfare
38The Money Form - 1
- yB xAu
- zC xAu
- nN xAu
- Au gold, money
- Only difference from general form is that
universal equivalent is determined by social
custom, structures of power
39The Money Form - 2
- Includes all previous forms
- Has all their characteristics
- contradiction (unity opposition)
- reflexive mediation (money shows value)
- totalizing (money value displaces all others)
- infinite (endless expansion, common link)
- syllogistic mediation (everything is mediated by
money), eg., yB - xAu - zC, or C - M - C
40--End--