Re: utopianism

2004-03-31 Thread Tom Walker
P to us) with a definition of wealth as "adding to the facilities of living": "so that wealth is liberty--liberty to seek recreation--liberty to enjoy life--liberty to improve the mind: it is disposable time and nothing more." The development from an earlier ascetic, morally-gro

Re: utopianism

2004-03-31 Thread Mike Ballard
--- Ted Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > It seems to me what distinguishes "utopian" from > "scientific" socialism > is that the former pays no attention to the means > through which the > better society is to be brought into existence. **

Re: utopianism

2004-03-31 Thread Ted Winslow
Jim wrote: The big criticism of utopianism was tactical and strategic: it doesn't do much good to show people a diagram of how socialism should be organized (as the Socialist Labor Party used to do) and do nothing else, ignoring the possibilities generated by the contradictions of capit

Re: utopianism

2004-03-31 Thread Louis Proyect
e Chris Doss's.) On to the substance. Utopian socialism of the 19th century was a living movement. Engels had high regard for David Owen because his utopianism was engaged with political action that made a difference in the lives of working people: "Banished from official society, with a

Re: utopianism

2004-03-31 Thread Devine, James
e very interested in utopian thinking and saw discussion of utopias as useful to working-class self-education. The big criticism of utopianism was tactical and strategic: it doesn't do much good to show people a diagram of how socialism should be organized (as the Socialist Labor Party used to

Re: utopianism

2004-03-31 Thread Robert Scott Gassler
You're not kidding. I call that the Achilles heel of Marxism. At 22:39 30/03/04 -0800, Mike Ballard wrote: Thatcher's TINA is the opposite side of the utopian coin. Commies have to know what they want as well as what they want to leave behind in history's dustbin. Regards, Mike B) = 1844 Paris

Re: utopianism

2004-03-30 Thread Mike Ballard
Thatcher's TINA is the opposite side of the utopian coin. Commies have to know what they want as well as what they want to leave behind in history's dustbin. Regards, Mike B) = 1844 Paris Manuscripts, Marx makes a major point of the relationship between the sexes: "The infinite degradation in

Re: utopianism

2004-03-30 Thread Tom Walker
Jim Devine wrote, > I see nothing wrong with utopian dreaming, as long as it's not seen as a > matter > of thinking up blueprints that _must_ be imposed. Just about everything I lay my hands on these days has the word Utopia in it. Chapman (1909): "It occurred to me after a cursory examination o

utopianism

2004-03-30 Thread Devine, James
e tolerated in the present.< alas, utopianism -- the creation of ideal alternatives to the system -- has never been absent from socialist movements. In the US, E.V. Debs's Socialist Party included lots of utopian ideas, including ideas from the Bellamyists. The Communist Party had

Re: utopianism??

2002-09-01 Thread Waistline2
[was: RE: [PEN-L:29857] Re: Re: Re: "Russia turns to yuan"] >>Shortage of oil? Not in this world. The shortage is in our vision and >imagination. > >Melvin P. Even under socialism, there would be dwindling supplies of oil just as there are dwindling supplies of water. Unless Melvin's "visi

RE: Re: Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Brown, Martin - ARP (NCI)
, August 26, 2002 2:35 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [PEN-L:29876] Re: Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism?? >From: Louis Proyect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Any workers found reading Hal Draper will be buried up to their necks and a >workers militia under the leadership of a tested co

Re: Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Carl Remick
>From: Louis Proyect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Any workers found reading Hal Draper will be buried up to their necks and a >workers militia under the leadership of a tested commissar will drive over >their heads with power lawnmowers. But what kind of lawnmowers, reel or rotary? Reels provide a b

RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Devine, James
Title: RE: [PEN-L:29868] Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism?? Louis Proyect of www.marxmail.org writes: > I advocate the most ruthlessly dictatorial rule from above and over the working class to make sure that they follow the dictates of the central presidium. Any workers found reading

Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Louis Proyect
Jim Devine wrote: >You don't have to reply. But are you endorsing "socialism from above," in >which a small minority imposes its predetermined schemes on the majority >of the population? I advocate the most ruthlessly dictatorial rule from above and over the working class to make sure that th

RE: Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Devine, James
Title: RE: [PEN-L:29864] Re: RE: Re: utopianism?? You don't have to reply. But are you endorsing "socialism from above," in which a small minority imposes its predetermined schemes on the majority of the population? Jim Devine [EMAIL PRO

Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Michael Perelman
Would it be fair to say that Lou is saying that we have to take account of technical recipes, but not social recipes? Providing food requires certain minimum amount of water, but not necessarily a specific social form in which society converts water into food. -- Michael Perelman Economics Dep

Re: RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Louis Proyect
x27; character. So we can't separate >the "bad utopianism" (figuring out how to get people to work together) >from the "good utopianism" (figuring out how to save water, etc.) BTW, >several of the 19th century utopians were pro-environment (e.g., William >Morris).

RE: Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Devine, James
Title: RE: [PEN-L:29861] Re: utopianism?? It's a nice academic distinction, but it doesn't work in practice. How one sets up a social organization of production affects how and what is produced. The relations and forces of production are unified, interpenetrate, and determine e

Re: utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Louis Proyect
Jim Devine: >when you advocate "measureable proposals," are you saying that we need to >develop "recipes for the cook-shops of the future"? I thought you were >against utopianism. Utopianism means blueprints for how society should be run. Stating that there are

utopianism??

2002-08-26 Thread Devine, James
Title: utopianism?? [was: RE: [PEN-L:29857] Re: Re: Re: "Russia turns to yuan"] >>Shortage of oil? Not in this world. The shortage is in our vision and >imagination. > >Melvin P. Louis P:> Even under socialism, there would be dwindling supplies of oil

Re: Re: Re: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread joanna bujes
At 11:54 AM 07/11/2002 -0700, Gar wrote: >The worse the better eh? Both from personal experience, and from my >reading of history people are mostly likely to engage in either radical or >revolutionary activity when they have hope - when they believe things can >be better. I think you can find m

Re: Re: Re: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Louis Proyect
Gar: >If it is the only thing maybe. But as part of a broader program of >activism, how does it "miseducate"? It tries to makes a connection between our ideas and what happened in history. Against the "managerialism" of Lenin, Albert-Hahnel propose participatory economics. Russia did not end up

Re: Re: Re: Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Carl Remick
>From: "Carl Remick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Ralph Waldo Emerson, ... criticizing the utopianism of Charles Fourier, >said in part ... Michael Perelman asked offlist about the source of that quote. It's from Emerson's essay "Fourierism and the Soci

Re: Re: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Gar Lipow
>> > > I am sorry, Gar. This is not a question of activist credibility. This is > not why I object to "Looking Forward". It is about how socialism can be > achieved. I believe that it miseducates people to write elaborate models. > Marxists focus on strategies for revolution, not how future > pos

Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Louis Proyect
Gar wrote: >I don't think it is "ahistorical" to deal with the limits of the >possible. Most "utopian socialists" today are activists. I am sorry, Gar. This is not a question of activist credibility. This is not why I object to "Looking Forward". It is about how socialism can be achieved. I bel

Re: Re: Re: Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Gar Lipow
In the first instance, with Morris, you are dealing with a genre of >> literature, namely the utopian novel. ... In the case of >> Hahnel-Albert, you >> are confronted with *utopianism*, a form of political advocacy that seeks >> ideal solutions to problems that had histor

Re: Re: Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Carl Remick
>From: Louis Proyect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >In the first instance, with Morris, you are dealing with a genre of >literature, namely the utopian novel. ... In the case of Hahnel-Albert, you >are confronted with *utopianism*, a form of political advocacy that seeks >ideal so

Re: Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Louis Proyect
nvolved on that floor. Plant decisions would be made by plant councils." In the first instance, with Morris, you are dealing with a genre of literature, namely the utopian novel. There are other examples, from More's "Utopian" to Samuel Butler's "Erewhon". In the c

Re: Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Carl Remick
>From: "Carl Remick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >I too as a devotely irreligious person can cite the bible ... Er, make that "devoutly." Normally I don't follow up on spelling errors, but since Louis Proyect seems to be setting a new, higher standard on this score, I figured I should be punctilious

Re: RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Carl Remick
>From: "Devine, James" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Utopianism will always play a role in the socialist movement, because >people >need to have some idea of what they're fighting _for_, not just what >they're >fighting against. Absolutely. And if the d

RE: Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Devine, James
Title: RE: [PEN-L:27895] Market socialism as a form of utopianism Utopianism will always play a role in the socialist movement, because people need to have some idea of what they're fighting _for_, not just what they're fighting against. If people don't have some vision of

Market socialism as a form of utopianism

2002-07-11 Thread Louis Proyect
Jutsin Shwartz: >Well, I've been arguing with folks hereabouts. Ia gree that some anonmytity >is possible under planning. However there is little under, for example, the >Albert-Hahnel and Devine models, both of which require the consumer to >justify her choices to the world. Still, it's good t

Dialectical Utopianism

2002-05-12 Thread Ulhas Joglekar
EPW Book Review May 4, 2002 Dialectical Utopianism Spaces of Hope by David Harvey; Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2000; pp 293, £ 14.95. Praveen Kumar Harvey has tried to imagine his kind of ideal society by reiterating his faith in Marxism. If necessary correctives are added, he

Re: Soviet "utopianism"

2001-01-31 Thread Charles Brown
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/30/01 11:24PM >>> but this was quite different from the attitude of the early 1920s or the late 1910s. By the time K had taken over, the emphasis was on fighting and winning the battle of competition with the "West" ("we will bury you") just like Microsoft wanted to

Soviet "utopianism"

2001-01-30 Thread Jim Devine
[was: Re: [PEN-L:7564] Re: Re: Re: Korean news] Brad wrote: >I see an equivalence here up until the 1980s. Khrushchev and his people >were absolutely certain that they were the wave of the future, and the >road to utopia. but this was quite different from the attitude of the early 1920s or the

Re: utopianism.

2000-06-21 Thread Jim Devine
At 06:28 PM 6/21/00 -0400, you wrote: >Jim, >Thanks for the citations. I'll try not to be so loose with terminology in >the future. Still, I'm not sure Robin & Hahnel's LOOKING FORWARD is in quite >the same camp as Bellamy's LOOKING BACKWARD, Bellamy's LOOKING BACKWARD is a classic -- or _the_

utopianism.

2000-06-21 Thread Bwanajoseph
Jim, Thanks for the citations. I'll try not to be so loose with terminology in the future. Still, I'm not sure Robin & Hahnel's LOOKING FORWARD is in quite the same camp as Bellamy's LOOKING BACKWARD, as was originally charged by Louis. There is quite a bit more political substance to partic

utopianism.

2000-06-21 Thread Jim Devine
was: Re: [PEN-L:20499] Re: RE: Peter Dorman and Robin Hahnel (fwd) At 05:36 PM 6/21/00 -0400, you wrote: >Regarding utopianism, I thought regaining some semblance of vision was all >the rage on the Left these days. I realize there remains a great deal of >self-consciousness regard

Re: [PEN-L:9132] Re: utopianism

2000-05-17 Thread Peter Dorman
One final thought on the subject of utopianism: All real-world judgments are comparative. People don't have a utility thermometer that reads "97" when they evaluate a situation; instead, they compare it to some benchmark and decide whether it's better or worse, by a lot or

[PEN-L:9417] Re: social democracy & utopianism

1997-04-09 Thread eric drayer
i have tried to follow your unsubscribe instructions and i am still on it please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

[PEN-L:9415] social democracy & utopianism

1997-04-09 Thread James Devine
sue of how it happens. In some ways, this relates back to the discussion of utopianism and the aphorism (Yogi Berra?) that if you don't know where you're going, it doesn't matter how fast you're travelling.<< As one willing to take utopianism seriously, I'm all in fa

[PEN-L:9280] Re: utopianism -- final words??

1997-03-31 Thread Robin Hahnel
My utopian badge is red and black and is polished every day by the memory of millions who have given their lives for a more just democratic economy that strengthens people's solidarity for one another.

[PEN-L:9259] Re: utopianism -- final words??

1997-03-31 Thread Karl Carlile
ROBIN:I have always embraced the label "utopian" and wear the badge proudly. KARL:What colour is it and is it a big or a small badge? I bet you polish it every day to you mammy's delight. Yours etc.,

[PEN-L:9245] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-30 Thread Louis N Proyect
On Sun, 30 Mar 1997, Robin Hahnel wrote: > > For what its worth, the editorial board of Science and Society went through > this -- I must say tiresome -- debate over the sins of utopian thinking > before finally publishing their issue in 1992 on the Future of Socialism. > Poor David Laibman had

[PEN-L:9242] Re: utopianism -- final words??

1997-03-30 Thread Robin Hahnel
I have always embraced the label "utopian" and wear the badge proudly. I have also always criticized Marxists who rail against utopianism as wrong headed if not self-serving. I'm sure Louis wears his labels with pride.

[PEN-L:9241] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-30 Thread Robin Hahnel
I've been called worse by better than Comrade Proyect. I mentioned my teaching of comparative systems and visits to work with Cuban planners in an attempt to argue that, for better or worse, my utopian thinking is not totally uninformed by some study and familiarity with the history of "once exis

[PEN-L:9232] Re: M-I: Re: On utopianism

1997-03-29 Thread TimW333521
Mind if I butt in a bit into this discussion? I have been thinking somewhat along your line of thought about Marxism and utopianism for some time. My problem with your remarks is its blanket assessment of Marxism as "utopian." I would suggest a more limited one: that Marxis

[PEN-L:9192] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-27 Thread Karl Carlile
s and have a limited imagination. KARL: It would seem to me that the above comments are merely a ruse to avoid concerning yourself on this list with the serious issue of the status of marxism today. I do not use the term "utopian" or "utopianism" as merely another word fo

[PEN-L:9167] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-26 Thread Louis Proyect
> >KARL: Your posting on Utopianism was interesting. However you seem to >take it for granted that marxism itself is not another form of >utopianism > Part of the problem is terminology. Paul Phillips uses the word interchangeably with "unrealistic". You use it as a syn

[PEN-L:9165] Re: On utopianism

1997-03-26 Thread Karl Carlile
LOUIS P: What I would no longer do is classify them as examples of Marxist thought, which has its object the critique of capitalist society in order to facilitate its destruction. KARL: Your posting on Utopianism was interesting. However you seem to take it for granted that marxism itself is

[PEN-L:9164] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-26 Thread Karl Carlile
EN:0 CS:1 RC:0 DC:1 UR:0 SS:0 EX:0 FL:0 LOUIS P: What I would no longer do is classify them as examples of Marxist thought, which has its object the critique of capitalist society in order to facilitate its destruction. KARL: Your posting on Utopianism was interesting. However you seem to take

[PEN-L:9160] Re: utopianism -- final words??

1997-03-26 Thread Louis Proyect
scuss my ideas. At first he says what's wrong with a little utopianism, then he turns around and says that since he spent time in Cuba, how can he be a utopian. I guess he is not sure how he feels about being labeled as a utopian. Perhaps he would be happier if I labeled him as a half-utopian.

[PEN-L:9157] utopianism -- final words??

1997-03-26 Thread James Devine
For the sake of not only my own ego-enlargement but also the progress of pen-l debate, it's good to read Louis Proyect saying, after simply repeating his previous points, that >> Jim Devine is correct. Marx and Engels did respect what they [the utopians] were doing since utopian publications, wi

[PEN-L:9150] Re: utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Michael Eisenscher
At 01:40 PM 3/25/97 -0800, Karl Carlile wrote: [SNIP] >KARL:Utopianism means striving for a state of being that is >unachievable. It means struggling for something that it is >historically impossible to establish. Utopianism is a political >philosophy and practice.This being utopi

[PEN-L:9149] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Michael Perelman
Yes, I saw this, hoping that it would pass without comments. Let me take this one step further. If Robin takes this in stride -- and I expect he will, then insults can be part of the rough and tumble of the list, so long as they do not become the focus to the point of distraction. You might hav

[PEN-L:9145] Re: Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Gerald Levy
Louis N Proyect wrote: > (I would urge people to shy away from Robin Hahnel's > work, however, since he is now revealed as an intellectual snob. Isn't it > funny how beneath the tie-dyed grooviness of a Z Magazine figure, there > lurks somebody who wants to rub your nose in their curricula vitae.

[PEN-L:9144] Final thoughts on utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Louis N Proyect
These are some final thoughts on the utopian socialism question. What Marx and Engels saw as three of the main features of utopian thought were: 1) Ahistoricism: The utopian socialists did not see the class struggle as the locomotive of history. While they saw socialism as being preferable to cap

[PEN-L:9143] Re: utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Louis N Proyect
On Tue, 25 Mar 1997, Robin Hahnel wrote: > same book. I have taught comparative socialism for over 20 years and visited > Cuba 3 times. I have spent 6 weeks in work with Cuban planners at JUCEPLAN. > My utopian ideas are NOT UNBASED in 20th century real world experiences. > Louis, you talk too o

[PEN-L:9137] Re: utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Rosser Jr, John Barkley
For what it's worth, I respect Robin and Michael's effort to introduce a democratic aspect to the planning process, which seems to me to be the main virtue of their system. I also note that I raised one problem (aggregation) that has so far not received an answer. Barkley Rosser On Tue,

[PEN-L:9135] Re: utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Karl Carlile
A KARL CARLILE MESSAGE KARL: Hi Rosser! ROSSER: But, I think that a certain amount of it is not only healthy but necessary. KARL:Utopianism means striving for a state of being that is unachievable. It means struggling for something that it is historically impossible to establish. Utopianism

[PEN-L:9132] Re: utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Robin Hahnel
Michael Albert and I developed our utopian model of a participatory economy in large part in response to our historical evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses of the Soviet, Chinese, Yugoslavian, and Cuban experiences. We wrote about those experiences for 2/3 of a book -- Socialism Today and T

[PEN-L:9131] Re: utopianism

1997-03-25 Thread Robin Hahnel
Here! Here! Let's here it for a Jim Devine's defense of utopian thinking. And, I'd like to add that I consider my recent reading of Bellamy's Equality -- his lesser known but more complete work on utopianism -- and William Morris' News from Nowwhere -- a libertaria

[PEN-L:9108] yet more utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread James Devine
and has no connection with American society or politics. The idea of Fotopoulos and Bookchin having a "split" over rival utopian schemas strikes me as foolish, no matter the sincerity of the two parties. This is symptomatic of a deeper malaise.<< Sure, but don't the revolution

[PEN-L:9104] utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread Rosser Jr, John Barkley
Louis P. has in the past berated various "sectarians" on various lists for simply telling everybody to just talk about the class struggle and that's that. Now, Louis appears to be doing something similar here, along with the idea that we should be thinking like the Yugoslav Partisans in

[PEN-L:9102] Re: more utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread Louis Proyect
own notion of a "feasible socialism". In the last 6 months or so, I have given this a lot of thought and it seems to be the wrong way to go. I am much more convinced than ever that all scientific socialists can do is develop a critique of capitalist society and become part of the larger po

[PEN-L:9098] Re: utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread Louis Proyect
Barkley: > But, given that arguably >Slovenia is _still_ an actually existing market socialist >economy, albeit trending to a market capitalism with heavy >worker-owned, worker-managed elements, one can hardly lay >the "utopian" label on the advocates of worker-managed >market socialism. Lo

[PEN-L:9096] more utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread James Devine
eave it as something that will arise "naturally" out of the struggle? Since the struggle itself involves visions of what we want, it seems that utopian dreams and schemes also play a role. It seems to me that what we need to do is avoid blanket rejection of say, H&A. Instead, try to compa

[PEN-L:9092] Re: utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread Rosser Jr, John Barkley
most rapidly growing economy. China is hardly utopianism, much less a utopia. Barkley Rosser On Mon, 24 Mar 1997 09:27:37 -0800 (PST) Louis Proyect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jim Devine: > > > > >First, many of the grass-roots supporters of the FSLN, not to mention t

[PEN-L:9091] Re: utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread Rosser Jr, John Barkley
the elite. > > > > Louis: Many thanks to Jim for the trenchant reply to my original post. > Rather than going over it point by point, I plan to put together some of my > thoughts on the general topic of utopianism in the next day or two. This > will address many of his specific poi

[PEN-L:9090] Re: utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread Louis Proyect
an to put together some of my thoughts on the general topic of utopianism in the next day or two. This will address many of his specific points. Meanwhile, there is one thing that the above paragraph states that I want to take issue with right away, because it can led to some confusion over what we mean

[PEN-L:9088] utopianism

1997-03-24 Thread James Devine
Here, I define utopianism as an effort to make moral ideals more concrete, to develop pictures of how "true socialism might actually work in practice" or "true communism might work in practice." Louis Proyect criticizes utopianism. I can understand why, but as Peter Dorman p