[this thread has been asleep for awhile, but since I have the time
today, I'll wake it up.]

I wrote:>>I haven't noticed many cultures refraining from destroying and
conquering cultures -- unless they happen to be small and weak and
unable to do so. Primitive-communist societies do not so, but they  lack
the states needed to conquer & destroy.<<

CB:>Yes there are many , many cultures in history, most in history, that
were not conquering cultures, because most in history were communist or
significantly communal. Most did not have states as you say. The vast
majority in Africa, America, Oceania , Australia and Asia were not
conquering cultures at the time of the European conquest.  Those that
did conquer, did not conquer on the scale that the Europeans started
conquering with the rise of capitalism in Europe.<

The "rise of capitalism"? that's the problem, not the Europeans. By the
way, did you notice that the USSR was ruled by Europeans? 

JD:>>I think it's wrong to assume that Europeans "chose" capitalism 
... History has a logic that is beyond the volition of individuals and
cultures; capitalism has an inner logic that meant that it was a system
that most class systems could have spawned.<<

CB:>This is a bit too much dismissive of agency and free will. Humans
make their own history. Sure they don't make it just as they please,
[right! --JD] but they make it as they choose to some extent. All is not
determined by the past. Some is chance and chosen freely of will.<

I don't see how anyone could have foreseen the rise of capitalism before
it happened. So how could have anyone "chosen" it? 

>Where is the locus of this "history" this "logic"? It is in living
human beings. Some Europeans did chose capitalism, or else it wouldn't
have come about. The logic of the culture of feudalism was not
absolutely binding on all to make capitalism. There was a struggle, and
the bourgeoisie won in their drive to make capitalism. In struggling for
it, they chose it.<

Now it's _some_ Europeans, rather than _all_ Europeans, that suffer from
moral inferiority. 

But even the European capitalists didn't _choose_ capitalism. It's not
like 2005, when there's a capitalist elite (or a bunch of them) that
have a clear idea of what capitalism is and how they like it and how
they want to have it all over the world. The pre-capitalist ruling
elites were kings and their advisors, barons, etc. Even the merchants
didn't know what kind of _society_ their actions were helping to
produce. Instead they thought that they could make a quick buck by
chasing the damn peasants off the land, etc. 

>If there were no choice, there never could occur a Babeuf, Marx or
Lenin.<

I didn't say there was "no choice" (see above). These folks changed the
world, obviously (except perhaps Babeuf). But they changed the world
because their ideas and actions fell on "fertile ground." The social
conditions were ripe for Marx's and Lenin's ideas. Even then, they
didn't produce the results they wanted. In fact, Marx didn't even say
what kind of post-capitalist society he wanted, except in the most
abstract (i.e., vague) terms. 

Me:>>Further, it wasn't "Europeans" who started capitalism: it was the
post-feudal upper classes in England.<<

CB:>Post-feudal upper classes in England and elsewhere are appropriately
referred to as "Europeans" . Capitalism did not start only in England.
It also started in Portugal with the slave trade, and elsewhere.
Capitalism has a multilocal origin, though it did get focussed in
England at some points of time.<

This gets into another pen-l debate, i.e., "what is capitalism?" I'll
leave that aside.

But if you redefine "Europeans" (as in the phrase "European moral
inferiority") as "Post-feudal upper classes in England and elsewhere,"
then you are simply changing the topic of the debate. But I don't want
to change the topic of the debate. 

JD:>> Third, if those folks hadn't done it, other cultures would have
done so: according to some anti-Eurocentric views, the Chinese had
capitalism long before China encountered European capitalism. If Europe
had stumbled, in other words, China would have taken up the task of
"perfecting" capitalism and spreading it all around the world
independently.<<

CB:>This counterfactual is a point in dispute. It is not proven that
capitalism, with its world historic inferior morality,  would have
arisen out of other historical traditions ( "ethnic groups"). That's
begging the question, asserting as true your side of the issue we are
disputing.<

I don't agree with Andre Gunder Frank and others who see China as
pre-capitalist in 1776, but it's a reasonable point of view.

>The Chinese didn't conquer the globe before the Europeans did, and
there is no proof they would have, if the Europeans didn't. They didn't
use their prior discovery of gunpowder to do what the Europeans used it
for. <

Heck, they controlled a massive area and a massive population, many of
who weren't Han Chinese. They did so in a dictatorial (i.e. bloody) way.
Who could ask for anything more? 


CB had written: >>>I guess I should add there is no such thing as
"capitalism" without the global conquest. Capitalism is inherently
imperialistic.<<<

I wrote>>I'd agree. However, pre-capitalist class-based modes of
production also involved efforts at world conquest. It's only the
development of communication, transportation, and weapons technologies
that allowed a more successful effort by the Euros.<<

CB:< Not world, in the sense of global , conquest, not nearly.<

The lack of modern communication and transportation technology meant
that the "world" that people saw was smaller in the past. As far as the
Chinese empire was concern, they'd conquered the "world," since the
outsiders (the Vietnamese, etc.) were mere "barbarians." 

...

CB:>>>Capitalism has screwed over the most people in history. This means
that the  Western Europeans' culture, the bearer of capitalism, is
pegged as morally inferior rather than superior to other cultures.<<<

JD: >>This misses another point. European culture isn't an "independent
variable" in history. In fact, European culture as we know it is to
large extent a _product_ of 300 to 500 years of capitalism. It's not
just that people make history. History makes people.<<

CB:>It is also a product of European feudalism and slavery. This is
why Marx and Engels put the history of all three European modes of
production in _The Manifesto of the Communist Party_. European
capitalism ... is the product of its prior history. Men (sic) make
their own history , but all previous history lays on their brains like a
nightmare and thereby has some determining effect on it, and combines
with chance in making the new mode.<

I don't get this.

Jim Devine

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