Sabri, it's easiest to answer your question in its final version:  no 
surplus value at all is associated with the DX in your example, because DX 
does not reflect the expenditure of labor subsequent to the purchase of the 
piece of land for X.  Consequently DX represents merely the redistribution 
of existing values (measured in labor terms) and so, according to Marx (see 
V. I, ch. 5 (!), pp. 265-66 in the Penguin edition), cannot constitute 
surplus value.

One catch:  Marx represents this claim as a deduction from previously 
established principles, but it is instead just a stipulation on his 
definition of "surplus value."

Gil


>I have a question to the Marx experts:
>
>How do we distinguish between rent and profit?
>
>For example, if I bought a piece of land for X dollars and sold it
>X+DX dollars with DX>0, did I make a profit or just collected some
>rent? What sort of surplus value is associated with that DX?
>
>Best,
>Sabri
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