[Xmca-l] Re: Do we find Inequalities in wild life system?

Peg Griffin Peg.Griffin@att.net
Wed Jan 30 12:16:53 PST 2019


And the work and play to “keep capitalism safe from democracy” (MacLean, 2017:xx) goes on among the leisure class.  Here’s a little article someone sent me about a dinner party game at the Mercers:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/07/02/a-parlor-game-at-rebekah-mercers-has-no-get-out-of-jail-free-card   

It’s unlikely we can get good field notes about the structuring work of the leisure class; the cost of participant observation is way out of budget range! Articles like this about  inequities paraded in and by the leisure class might be interesting and useful.  

What about cultural artifacts like their Rules of Play game – is it modern/post-modern monopoly?  It’s probably not just about reliving one political campaign in one location, right?

(IMHO, the Kochs, their minions,  handiwork, and allies  are fairly easy to find in the US (even if it’s too often too late by the time we do) but the Mercers are tougher to find. There seem to be lots of hints from their allies, handiwork and minions outside of the US nowadays, though.

 

 

From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu] On Behalf Of Andy Blunden
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2019 10:13 PM
To: xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu
Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: Do we find Inequalities in wild life system?

 

It is succeeding in shifting vast amounts of wealth into the pockets of an incredibly small minority world-wide (For whom the bell tolls?), but it has lost the consensus which enabled it to be a hegemonic ideology and social policy. Obviously, Vietnam is not in the same place. Every country is having different crises, but I was referencing the crisis affecting capital on a world scale. It is manifested differently from country-to-country.

andy

  _____  

Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm 

On 30/01/2019 2:01 pm, Helena Worthen wrote:

So what does “no longer working” refer to? 

 

In Vietnam, it’s mass wildcat strikes that make investors wary on the one hand and on the other pushes the government to re-think their labor code to encourage collective bargaining. 

 

In the US, one of the issues for the LA teachers was privatization of public schools (charter schools).The outcome of the strike was an agreement that the District would support legislation at the state level to put a cap on charter schools. 

 

Step by step. 

 

H

 

Helena Worthen 

helenaworthen@gmail.com

 

 

 

On Jan 30, 2019, at 9:30 AM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

The theory I most favour is that the most recent, but also former, ideologies of capitalist rule have objectively lost their efficacy. The neo-liberal ideology (putting all social functions in the market place) is no longer working. This creates a crisis in all the parties which have relied on this strategy. It will also affect the centre-left, but in the Anglosphere, at this point, they are having an easier time, promoting a little bit of Keynesianism.

Andy

  _____  

Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm <http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/indexhtm>  

On 30/01/2019 1:16 pm, Martin Packer wrote:

As far as I can tell — based I confess only on reading New York Times articles — something similar is happening in the US. And in the UK the Conservative party is fracturing. 

 

If one wanted to try to bring about these kinds of change one wouldn’t know where to start, would one? Or is it just me, unable to figure out where the levers of change are hidden?

 

Martin

 

 





On Jan 29, 2019, at 8:32 PM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

Fortunately, we have an election in May, and since the government has already lost their majority, they can't do too much damage, just paralysis. It's an "unreal" government.

The interesting phenomenon is that in country electorates and in wealthy "leafy" suburban seats, where respectively the National Party and Liberal Party (both right-wing parties) have held impregnable majorities since time immemorial, Independent candidates are popping up to challenge them and in several cases recently (in State elections and in Federal by-elections) they have toppled them. The extreme right is also fragmenting. It used to be a joke about Trotskyists and Maoists, but nowadays it seems you can't have two right-wingers in the same room without a faction fight and a split. So the political landscape is changing rapidly, and to the better here.

Andy

  _____  

Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm 

On 30/01/2019 12:24 pm, Martin Packer wrote:

That’s odd!  In contrast, the British government is handling Brexit in such a rational and mature manner! 

 

Martin

 

On Jan 29, 2019, at 7:56 PM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

as Mike says, we notice them when there's a "perturbation"! 

December was the hottest month ever here in Australia, but the current Australian government is still promoting coal, so what does that tell us?

Andy

  _____  

Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm 

On 30/01/2019 11:50 am, Martin Packer wrote:

Yes, it struck me after hitting send that of course Taylor also wrote a huge book (and then a little one) on Hegel.  

 

Sounds like Paul Redding has been talking to your spellchecker.  :)

 

The power of mediators, and what makes them easy to forget, is that they become invisible in action. Language seems like a window on another person’s consciousness; the plough is simply handy when the soil needs turning. The government is just those idiots in Washington (or Canberra?)… When we notice the myriad of mediators, they seem like simple links between us and whatever we’re interacting with, when in fact neither would exist without them. Without language, ploughs, and governments life would be brutish and short. 

 

Martin

 





On Jan 29, 2019, at 7:24 PM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

I'm sure you're right, Martin. We are after all both defending the same view.

"Intersubjectivity" is a slippery and changing word. I thought it was Karl Popper who introduced the word in his 1945 "Open Society," but his meaning has been supplanted by others much later. I think he used the term to mean something "in between" objective truth (things fall when you drop them) and subjective truth (heights are scary), which is culturally produced (falling is due to gravity, acrophobia is a panic disorder).

There was a whole movement of Hegel interpreters who began to use "intersubjectivity" as a means of "operationalising" a "nonmetaphysical reading" of Hegel, in the 1980s I think, and 1990s. Charles Taylor was ahead of that curve, I would agree, but I don't think he took the spirit-is-human-activity reading down to the detailed level that this later intersubjective reading did. I agree with Charles Taylor - his work was pioneering.

I don't know about this view of intersubjectivity as a "merging of subjectivities" unless we mean some New Age kind of thing, or crowd behaviour, etc. (BTW, my spellchecker keeps telling me there's no such word as "intersubjectivity.")

I had a long and fruitless email conversation with Paul Redding (usually recognised as the "senior" Australian Hegelian) on the question of how he understood me telling him "It's raining here" (he's in Sydney). I wanted him to see that our interaction was mediated by 2 computers and the internet and by the English language, but he utterly rejected this, insisting that the only sense in which our communication of mediated was that in Sydney as well as in Melbourne, it rains, and so we both had experience of rain. We never got past that point. The concept of artefact-mediation was utterly impenetrable for him. He's a supporter of Robert Brandom, BTW.

Andy

  _____  

Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm 

On 30/01/2019 10:55 am, Martin Packer wrote:

I feel we’re still talking past each other, Andy. You seem to be attributing to me the view that I am attributing to James, and questioning: namely that ‘intersubjectivity’ is two (or more) subjectivities somehow meeting in interaction. 





I am trying to argue that to talk only of subjects and objects, or only of subjectivity and objectivity, will never be sufficient, because it neglects a third phenomenon which is primary: the shared, public practices (involving artifacts) in which people are always involved, and into which they are born. I think you hold the same opinion!





One reason for the confusion is a terminological one. Some of us here are using ‘intersubjectivity’ to refer to some kind of fusing of subjectivities. That is a real phenomenon, I concur. I still remember many years ago finding the perfect partner for mixed badminton: it was though we played as one! And also those rare occasions dancing salsa with the right partner.





But I want to use the term ‘intersubjectivity’ the way Charles Taylor used it in his article "Interpretation and The Sciences of Man" (1971). (Taylor is not the last word on the phenomena of intersubjectivity, but he was one of the first.) Taylor wanted to draw to our attention “the social matrix in which individuals find themselves and act,” “the background to social action,” including “a common language” which “is constitutive of… institutions and practices.” He insisted that it is not simply consensus among individuals.





But I don’t feel dogmatic about the terminology. We could call them intersujectivity-1 and intersubjectivity-2. Or find a new word for what Taylor was talking about. What’s important is the observation that there are phenomena that cannot be reduced to subjects and objects. 





Obviously these practices and institutions will involve material artifacts; they couldn’t function otherwise. But these artifacts will be defined within the practices. The fact that the US government cannot get rid of guns is not due to their number, it is due to the fact that the *right* to own a gun is (on one interpretation) defined by the texts and practices of government as one that cannot be legally infringed. The government is perfectly within *its* rights to destroy a gun that has no owner. I would want, then, to avoid trying to draw a distinction between an artifact and its meaning: what *counts as* a gun is (again) a legal matter, not something that individuals negotiate. 





Martin

 

 





On Jan 29, 2019, at 5:26 PM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

Martin, I distinguish between intersubjectivity and the CHAT standpoint because the literature I have seen which tries to build a social theory on the basis of subject-subject interactions, ignores the artefacts being used, and in particular, the pre-existence of these artefacts relative to the interactions, and their materiality. (I admit that I have come to this conclusion from my study of Hegel interpretations, which is a limited domain. But I do also see it in strands of social theory as such.) This is achieved by either subsuming the mediating artefact into the subject itself (e.g. my voice is a part of me, the subject, as is my hand) or taking the mediator as the object rather than a means. Such interpretations fail to explain why today can be any different from yesterday, etc.

We cold say that mediated interactions are still intersubjective, we just use things for our interactions with other subjects, but I see CHAT as a further really existing step beyond the step which the intersubjective turn made relative to methodological individualism and abstract social theory.

Ontologically, the distinction is this: the meaning of an artefact is established intersubjectively, so to speak, but the artefact itself is still material and objective, and this constrains the meanings which can be attached to it. For example, the sheer existence of 400 million guns in the USA is a social problem over and above the place of guns in the thinking and behaviour of so many Americans. A government simply cannot get rid of them. For example, the propensity of people in some countries to suffer in natural disasters is not just due to the poor preparedness of their people and governments, but the objective vulnerability of people due to the state of infrastructure. There is a limit on how good your education system will be if you have no teachers, no books and no schools. Of course the simple objective existence of the relevant things is not the whole business, but it is something else. And the nature of the constellation of existing artefacts is something else, over and above their existence. EG all the school books are written in a foreign language, etc. The material artefacts is a product of past history, you could say, which was intersubjective, but intersubjectivity ends as soon as the interaction ends, but the artefact often lives on.

I think CHAT has something important to contribute here.

Andy

  _____  

Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm 

On 30/01/2019 2:17 am, Martin Packer wrote:

Well, I was going to add that culture would be generally considered an intersubjective phenomenon, rather than subjective or objective. So it could be said that what this discussion group is about — the C in XMCA — is intersubjectivity. 

 

Should intersubjectivity be transcended? I think, Andy, that you may be reading the word as some kind of merging or sharing of subjectivities. Which is indeed how the word has been used here not long ago. But Charles Taylor, for example, defined intersubjectivity as meanings and norms that exist in practices, not in individuals' minds. The materiality of culture — material artefacts — seems to me to be a very good example of this.

 

Martin

 

 





On Jan 29, 2019, at 9:51 AM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

It's my view, Martin, that in making actions, including intersubjective actions, essentially artefact-mediated, Vygotsky transcended "intersubjectivity." His citing of Marx citing Hegel on the "cunning of reason" is no accident. 

Hegel has what he calls (in typical Hegel style) the "syllogism of action." This is the culminating concept of the Logic making the transition to the Absolute Idea and Nature. Hegel points out, and Marx picks up on this, that this means that every action is mediated by material culture. Hegel says "the plough is more honourable than anything produced by its means." For Marx, this is about the importance of ownership of the means of production. For Vygotsky, it is what makes Cultural Psychology what it is.

Emphasising the culture in the middle in no way minimises the constructive role of language use, but it means that the language itself plays, maybe. the more "honourable" role. :)

andy


  _____  


Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm

On 30/01/2019 1:41 am, Martin Packer wrote:

There was a general recognition in the social sciences (including philosophy) some time ago that it is crucial to recognize the existence and importance of “intersubjective” phenomena.  Language, for example, is not subjective, it is intersubjective. As Andy notes, subjectivity and even objectivity (think Latour’s analysis of science in Laboratory Life) arise from and are dependent upon intersubjective phenomena. 

 

Martin

 

 

 





On Jan 29, 2019, at 12:15 AM, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

 

When you get the electric chair for murdering someone that is not a linguistic construct.

andy


  _____  


Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm

On 29/01/2019 2:49 pm, Adam Poole (16517826) wrote:

Perhaps it may be more appropriate to use the term 'quasi-objective form', as the medium through which concepts like inequality and injustice are made objective, language, is itself inherently subjective. For example, justice can be given objective form in law, but the law itself is comprised of language, customs, traditions, beliefs, etc. The manifestation of an objective form is not universal, but will differ depending on cultural context. Hence quasi-objective. Concepts like inequality are given objective form, but it doesn't mean that they are objective in nature, due to the mediating role of language. 

 

Adam


  _____  


From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu  <mailto:xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on behalf of Andy Blunden  <mailto:andyb@marxists.org> <andyb@marxists.org>
Sent: 29 January 2019 08:16:35
To: xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu
Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: Do we find Inequalities in wild life system? 

 

Mmm, "subjective" is a polysemous word, Huw. It is not a matter of precision but of relativity. "Inequality" is a famously contested concept, as is "injustice," but its contestation is necessarily in a social context and with social content. Justice and equality are given objective form in law and social policy in definite, really-existing states or organisations challenging for state power, not the opinion of individuals.

andy


  _____  


Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm

On 29/01/2019 1:50 am, Huw Lloyd wrote:

It isn't "subjective", Andy. Rather it is limited to a certain construal. One can be quite precise and objective about that construal. 

 

Huw

 

On Mon, 28 Jan 2019 at 14:14, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

I can't agree that with your suggestion, Huw, that inequality (in the meaning with which Harshad used it) is something subjective, in the eye of the beholder. Such a view would be very pernicious politically. The fact is that states have emerged and developed over many centuries so as to makes objective certain concepts of justice, among which are various qualified and nuances notions of equality. This is not  figment of my imagination.

andy


  _____  


Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm

On 29/01/2019 12:59 am, Huw Lloyd wrote:

We find "wild life" systems that are imbalanced and subject to radical changes. 

 

Inequality is a perceptual/cognitive construct and predicated on an ontological scope. We find the condition of inequality (or comparison) in our thinking and behaviour. Every living thing "finds" inequalities. We do not find inequality, we find the awareness of inequality.

 

On Mon, 28 Jan 2019 at 08:17, James Ma <jamesma320@gmail.com> wrote:

Should you find inequality within a wildlife system, that must be a political, ideological precept!

 

James

 

On Mon, 28 Jan 2019 at 07:56, James Ma <jamesma320@gmail.com> wrote:

Not only is it meaningless but also preposterous. To maintain that all members of the same species are equal, as Anne Moir and David Jessel put it, is to "build a society based on a biological and scientific lie".

James

PS: I'm apolitical - anything political, ideological just doesn't speak to me!


_______________________________________________________

James Ma  Independent Scholar https://oxford.academia.edu/JamesMa   

 

On Mon, 28 Jan 2019 at 05:27, Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

Harshad,

"Inequality" is a meaningless concept when referred to Nature. Likewise "Injustice." 

Justice and equality are relevant only to the extent that the subjects are living in an 'artificial' world, out of Nature. Natural disasters and the plenitude of Nature have these dimensions only to the extent they are imposed on or made available to different classes of people by the social system. 

Hope that helps.

Andy


  _____  


Andy Blunden
http://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm

On 28/01/2019 4:00 pm, Harshad Dave wrote:

Hi,

 

I am working on one article. I want to know your views on following query.

 

"Do we find Inequalities exists in wild life system?"

 

Your views will help me in my work.

 

Regards,

 

  <https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=0B18Z0b6DY4fWbkFHN3I1cEhYUTg&revid=0B18Z0b6DY4fWWVFVOWZiaWVaYmhLNXZOUHp6MEpzT3IxUHFnPQ> 

 

Harshad Dave

Email: hhdave15@gmail.com

 

 

 

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Martin

 

"I may say that whenever I meet Mrs. Seligman or Dr. Lowie or discuss matters with Radcliffe-Brown or Kroeber, I become at once aware that my partner does not understand anything in the matter, and I end usually with the feeling that this also applies to myself” (Malinowski, 1930)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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