Well-known contributions to philosophy in Europe and America in the twentieth century
are often divided into analytical and continental philosophy.
Analytical philosophers often state their arguments with formal reasoning and notation,
while concentrating on narrow points. How do you know that you have not always used 'green' to mean grue?
Continental philosophers provide a more intuitive reasoning and focus on larger issues such as culture.
Gender is performative.
I take no issue to those who argue that the division is not well-defined.
I lean more towards the analytical side, albeit I try to reject logical positivism.
Sometimes, when I read postmodernists - another ill-defined term - I can follow, but I do not retain much.
I find intriguing Lukacs' essay on reification, in which he builds on Karl Marx's work on commodity fetishism and vulgar political economy.
I have more use for Foucault's post structuralism
than Derrida's deconstruction.
I find Antonio Gramsci
insightful, which is no surprise for somebody building on Piero Sraffa.
Herbert Marcuse has a point about instrumental reason in the service of a system that is irrational as a whole.
I am never sure when Slavoj Zizek is joking.
But here I want to focus on Theodor Adorno and his 1951
book Minima Moralia: Reflections from Damaged Life. I could not make much out of his book, Negative Dialetics.
I have yet to read The Dialetic of Enlightenment.
As I poorly recall, Minima Moralia has a narrative arc, although it takes some work to perceive it.
I was surprised at passages that presume an understanding of technical terms in Marx's political economy.
I note a few here.
Here Adorno rejects some concepts of a post-capitalist society because they continue commodity fetishism:
"Sur l'Eau. He who asks what is the goal of an emancipated society
is given answers such as the fulfillment of human possibilities or the
richness of life. Just as the inevitable question is illegitimate, so
the repellent assurance of the answer is inevitable, calling to mind
the social-democratic ideal of the personality expounded by heavily-bearded Naturalists of the 'nineties, who were out to have a good
time. There is tenderness only in the coarsest demand: that no-one
shall go hungry any more. Every other seeks to apply to a condition
that ought to be determined by human needs, a mode of human
conduct adapted to production as an end in itself. Into the wishful
image of an uninhibited, vital, creative man has seeped the very
fetishism of commodities which in bourgeois society brings with
it inhibition, impotence, the sterility of the never-changing. The
concept of dynamism, which is the necessary complement of
bourgeois 'a-historicity', is raised to an absolute, whereas it ought,
as an anthropological reflex of the laws of production, to be itself
critically confronted, in an emancipated society, with need..." -- Adorno: 155-156.
Adorno draws on the concept of fetishism in other places.
I do not know that the above passage is consistent with Marx and Engels in The German Ideology.
In this next passage
he uses the concept of the organic composition of capital to write about how
working class consciousness is dimmed:
"Puzzle-picture. Why, despite a historical development that has
reached the point of oligarchy, the workers are less and less aware that they are such, can be surmised from a number of observations.
While objectively the relation of owners and producers to the
productive apparatus grows ever more rigid, subjective class membership becomes all the more fluctuating.
This tendency is fostered
by economic development itself. The organic composition of
capital demands, as has often been noted, control through technical
experts rather than through factory owners. The latter were the
counterpart, as it were, of living labour, the former correspond to
the share of machinery in capital. The quantification of technical
processes, however, their dissection into minute operations largely
independent of education and experience, makes the expertise of
these new-style managers to a large degree illusory, a pretence
concealing the privilege of being appointed.
That technical development has reached a state which makes every function really open to
all - this immanently socialist element in progress has been travestied
under late industrialism. Membership of the elite seems attainable
to everyone. One only waits to be co-opted...
...Preference goes to those who fit in most exactly...That technical forces might permit a condition free of
privileges is accredited by all, even those in the shadow, to the
social relations which prevent it. In general, subjective class-membership today shows a mobility that allows the rigidity of the
economic order itself to be forgotten..." -- Adorno: 193-194.
And, for the last passage I select, Adorno writes about the law of value and, again, the organic composition of capital:
"Novissimum organum. It has long been demonstrated that wage-labour formed the masses of the modern epoch,
indeed created the worker himself. As a general principle the individual is not merely
the biological basis, but the reflection of the social process; his conciousness of himself as something in-itself
is the iI1usion needed to
raise his level of performance, whereas in fact the individuated
function in the modern economy as mere agents of the law of value.
The inner constitution of the individual, not merely his social role,
could be deduced from this. Decisive here, in the present phase, is
the category of the organic composition of capital. By this the
theory of accumulation meant the 'growth in the mass of the means
of production, as compared with the mass of the labour-power that
vivifies them'. If the integration of society, particularly in totalitarian states, designates subjects
more and more exclusively as partial moments in the network of material production, then the 'alteration of the technical composition of capital' is prolonged
within those encompassed, and indeed constituted, by the technological demands of the production process. The organic composition of man is growing.
That which determines subjects as means of production and not as living purposes, increases with the proportion of machines to
variable capital... Only when the process that begins with the metamorphosis of labour-power into a commodity has
permeated men through and through and objectified each of their
Impulses as formally commensurable variations of the exchange
relationship, is it possible for life to reproduce itself under the
prevailing relations of production..." -- Adorno: 228-229.
My understanding of the organic composition of capital is straightforward. I take it to be the
ratio of constant capital to variable capital, evaluated either with labor values or with prices of production.
I do think about the physical composition of capital goods and of issues associated with depreciation.
But I certainly do not go into the cultural effects that Adorno writes about.