[Marxism-Thaxis] Hardt and Negri's 'Multitude'

2006-08-15 Thread Karl Broome
I have recently started reading ‘Multitude’, without reading their prior 
text ‘Empire’. I am finding myself interested in their use of the concepts 
of ‘multitude’, ‘bio-power’ and ‘immaterial’ and ‘affective labour’, but not 
yet sure how to situate the text in regards to the rest of their oeuvre. I 
am interested in mailing lists views on their work.


Views, articles, responses please



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Re: [Marxism-Thaxis] Rosa Lichtenstein on Wittgenstein and Marxism

2006-08-15 Thread andie nachgeborenen


--- Ralph Dumain [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 All this is rather superficial, however.  I think
 Ernest Gellner nailed the 
 essentially conservative nature of Wittgenstein's
 philosophy.

Oh, agreed. W thought that philosophy done right
leaves everything as it is. That is a quote or at
least a translation of one.  But just because he
thought that is what philosophy could do doesn't mean
he couldn't had radical politics.

 
 Wittgenstein's conception of philosophy is hardly a
 notch above Carnap's 
 dismissal of metaphysics as bad poetry or
 Neurath's 
 metaphysicophobia.  

This is totally different. Carnap and Neurath did not
see philosophy as conservative but as radical, they
wanted to put on a scientific basis in the service of
a modernist project of social reconstruction of a
rational society -- see Carnap's autobiography in the
Schlipp Library of Living Philosophers volume.  (A
fascinating document in many ways, has a hilarious and
scathing portrait of the Univ. of Chicago Phil Dept in
general and Mortimer Adler in particular.)

Given an initially plausibly notion of cognitive
content (the verification theory of meaning) and a
scientific model of what counts as knowledge, it's
hard to know what to make of traditional metaphysics.
It's not scientific knowledge, whatever it is. And
it's not, for the most part, good poetry. Besides,
like people since Kant 9a big influence on the LPs),
the LP were annoyed that metaphysics wasn't making
progress in the sense that sciences seemed to, so it
wasn't crazy or conservative of them to try to shitcan
it.

The notion of philosophy as
 language on holiday or as 
 bewitchment by language is infantile. 

Well, when you out it that way, but there's more to
it.

 Such a view
 is itself a metaphysical 
 abstraction and bewitchment by language, divorced
 from history or any 
 extralinguistic investigation of human cognition. 
 Compared to Adorno's 
 socio-historical conception of philosophy,
 Wittgenstein is a piss-ant.

W's philosophy actually calls out for following up
with such investigation.  If you want to go beyond
philosophy, you have to go _somewhere_ -- maybe to
political economy and political sociology, like Marx,
maybe to Ideologiekritik like Adorno and the early
Frankfurters (Adorno also did flat out scientific
sociology or social psychology, see The Authoritarian
Personality), maybe to genealogical critic and
psychology like Nietzsche, maybe to mystical
pragmatism like Heidegger or scientific-sociological
pragmatism like Dewey -- there are a lot of
possibilities.  But some people, and W was one of
them, are like Moses at the Jordan, they point the way
to the land of Canaan but cannot cross the river.
Quine was another: he wanted to naturalize
epistemology, but that meant actually doing cognitive
psychology, and he wasn't suited for or able to do
that.

 
 Nor does Wittgenstein have anything in common with
 Marx, whom you 
 consistently misrepresent.  For Marx, philosophy was
 not a linguistic 
 disease,

I never said he said it was. He says it's ideology, a
mystification arising from the conditions of social
life that reflects and promotes the ruling interests
in certain ways, making the social seem natural, the
changeable permanent, the existing order inevitable,
and it does so by virtue of overgeneralizing and
inverting certain truths.   This is not W at all, but
a sociological analysis of why philosophy is
pointless.

 nor did he limit himself to Feuerbach's
 framework,

Given what I just said, obviously I agree with this
too. M;'s theory is novel and powerfully original.

 though 
 Feuerbach did take the decisive historical step of
 analyzing idealism as 
 inverted consciousness.  For Marx philosophy as
 practiced his milieu was 
 the dream history of Germany, not to be summarily
 dismissed but to be 
 analyzed in  its structure and related to its social
 genesis.

Agreed.

 
 The task of doing this for our time is infinitely
 more complicated, for the 
 interrelationships of science, mathematics, logic,
 philosophical systems 
 and their connection to alienated, inverted
 consciousness and social being 
 are not simple and obvious, at least not until one
 develops a framework in 
 which to place them, and even then there remains the
 long, hard labor of 
 the negative.

Now you are waxing Adornian. Marx was not really
interested in this.  I think he thought that
philosophy wasn't worth the bother as a target, given
his aims.

 But Rosa knows nothing of this,

No comment, haven't read the posts.

  


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Re: [Marxism-Thaxis] Hardt and Negri's 'Multitude'

2006-08-15 Thread Dogangoecmen
 
I do not know Negri's earlier writings. But I am very critical of 'Empire'.  
In my view it is in fact a rightwing book though leftwing intended. This has 
to  do with Hardt's and Negri's jurisprudential starting point. It mystifies 
the  concept of power and that of agent. Their critique of globalisation ends 
up 
 in  everything but critique of imperialism.
dogan
 
In einer eMail vom 15.08.2006 10:33:24 Westeuropäische Sommerzeit schreibt  
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:

I have  recently started reading ‘Multitude’, without reading their prior 
text  ‘Empire’. I am finding myself interested in their use of the concepts 
of  ‘multitude’, ‘bio-power’ and ‘immaterial’ and ‘affective labour’, but 
not  
yet sure how to situate the text in regards to the rest of their oeuvre. I  
am interested in mailing lists views on their work.

Views,  articles, responses  please



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[Marxism-Thaxis] Fwd: La guerra de la Restaurac ión

2006-08-15 Thread juan De La Cruz


Note: forwarded message attached.

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