CAPITAL AS POWER: TOWARD A NEW COSMOLOGY OF CAPITALISM
By Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan
Jerusalem and Montreal, May, 2010

ABSTRACT

Conventional theories of capitalism are mired in a deep crisis: after 
centuries of debate, they are still unable to tell us what capital is. 
Liberals and Marxists think of capital as an economic entity that they 
count in universal units of utils and abstract labor, respectively. But 
these units are totally fictitious: they can be neither observed nor 
measured. They don’t exist. And since liberalism and Marxism depend on 
these non-existing units, their theories hang in suspension. They cannot 
explain the process that matters most – the accumulation of capital.

This breakdown is no accident. Every mode of power evolves together with 
its dominant theories and ideologies. In capitalism, these theories and 
ideologies originally belonged to the study of political economy -- the 
first mechanical science of society. But the capitalist mode of power 
kept changing, and as the power underpinnings of capital became 
increasingly visible, the science of political economy disintegrated. By 
the late nineteenth century, with dominant capital having taken command, 
political economy was bifurcated into two distinct spheres: economics 
and politics. And in the twentieth century, when the power logic of 
capital had already penetrated every corner of society, the remnants of 
political economy were further fractured into mutually distinct social 
sciences. Nowadays, capital reigns supreme – yet social scientists have 
been left with no coherent framework to account for it.

The theory of Capital as Power offers a unified alternative to this 
fracture. It argues that capital is not a narrow economic entity, but a 
symbolic quantification of power. Capital has little to do with utility 
or abstract labor, and it extends far beyond machines and production 
lines. Most broadly, it represents the organized power of dominant 
capital groups to reshape -- or creorder -- their society.

This view leads to a different cosmology of capitalism. It offers a new 
theoretical framework for capital based on the twin notions of dominant 
capital and differential accumulation, a new conception of the state of 
capital and a new history of the capitalist mode of power. It also 
introduces new empirical research methods -- including new categories; 
new ways of thinking about, relating and presenting data; new estimates 
and measurements; and, finally, the beginning of a new, disaggregate 
accounting that reveals the conflictual dynamics of society.

FULL TEXT: http://bnarchives.yorku.ca/285/

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-- 
Jonathan Nitzan
Political Science
York University
4700 Keele St.
Toronto, Ontario, M3J-1P3
Canada
Voice: (416) 736-2100, ext. 88822
Fax: (416) 736-5686
Email: nitzan at yorku.ca
Website:http://bnarchives.net

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