I'll do this in pieces.
First, the publisher of this online magazine it Dan Blatt. He's a writer and he's trained in law. He doesn't have any training in any social science. That becomes obvious as you read his article. More about that later.
Besides the fact that Blatt starts out with a batant irrelevant bald assertion that seems to be obviously false, what kind of economic knowledge does he have to understand "Das Kapital?" His overall understanding of the nature of social science is piss poor.
Irrational rationalizations? What can I say, except example please, but he offers none? Anyone else care to help Blatt out?
Secondly, rationalization is part of human nature. Why do you think that conservatives come up with conservative theories and liberals come up with liberal theories? It's the way social science works. It doesn't mean in anyway that the theories are false. It's completely meaningsless to the discussion.
Also, Blatt claims that there are countless flaws in logic and contradictions, but doesn't identify any (bald assertions). Maybe he doesn't know what a flaw in logic or a contradiction is, because he seems to imply that somethings are contradictions which are not.
Then Blatt sumarizes Das Kapital in his own view, obviously to meet his own needs. Then he retorts with six bald assertions.
Next he refutes (if it can be called that) the labor theory of value, and that will take up a whole post probably so I'll stop here for now.
First, the publisher of this online magazine it Dan Blatt. He's a writer and he's trained in law. He doesn't have any training in any social science. That becomes obvious as you read his article. More about that later.
Of those who have waded through "Das Kapital," few had the economic knowledge to evaluate it. Indeed, very few who call themselves "Marxists" - it is widely acknowledged - have ever bothered to even read Karl Marx.
It is composed of tediously interminable, repetitively and minutely detailed rationalizations, that are nevertheless obviously incomplete and irrational.
Secondly, rationalization is part of human nature. Why do you think that conservatives come up with conservative theories and liberals come up with liberal theories? It's the way social science works. It doesn't mean in anyway that the theories are false. It's completely meaningsless to the discussion.
Also, Blatt claims that there are countless flaws in logic and contradictions, but doesn't identify any (bald assertions). Maybe he doesn't know what a flaw in logic or a contradiction is, because he seems to imply that somethings are contradictions which are not.
Then Blatt sumarizes Das Kapital in his own view, obviously to meet his own needs. Then he retorts with six bald assertions.
Next he refutes (if it can be called that) the labor theory of value, and that will take up a whole post probably so I'll stop here for now.
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