Alfred Sohn-Rethel - Intellectual and Manual labour; A critique
of Epistemology
The book is concerned to
develop understanding\ critique of epistemology through parallel analysis to
Marx’s critique of political economy. Here exchange is elevated to the
massively important point of social synthesis, in Kantian terms. Exchange is
abstract and social in a manner that is contrasted explicitly with the privacy
of use and its solipsist manifestation (i.e. belief in the existence of the
self.)
Rethel seeks to link the
categories of pure reason with the exchange abstract which is increasingly
taking the form of a purely mathematical characterisation despite its
historical and social origins. Part of this is due to the fact that commodity
production pushes exchange to empty time and endless space. There is no real
significant temporality to the principles of exchange.(56)
Primary and secondary
nature of commodity
‘Erste Natur’ – physical body of the commodity, concrete, material
‘zweite Natur’ – social and
abstract, commodities qua object of exchange, man made and synthetic. (pp 57)
‘primary nature is created by
human labour, second nature is ruled by relations of property.’
(must not forget that the
first nature is synthetic too – i.e. still transformed and made by socialised
productive and synthetic activity of men.) This distinction is typical and
based on Marx’s critique of political economy – it relates to the separation between
use value and exchange value and the respective concrete and abstract labour
that goes into their production (the two-fold character of labour in Das
Kapital).
Hegel and Kant
Describes the whole as the
social synthesis (pp 4-5). Reads Kantian a priori as something that
needs to be shown to exist but as formed socially. I.e. we do inherit prior
conceptions of how reality is and how to process it, but these are given by
society itself , rather than an inherent property of mind. (pp 8)
Stuff on Hegel is that he
does not really elaborate further than Kant. True he inaugurates the dialectic,
but his own understanding of it is an attempt to work through the
contradictions of an order, but making mind identical with being. With the mind
within mind of Hegel speculative idealist thinking has reached its apex but it does
not go substantially beyond the Kantian problematic. The comparison Rethel
makes between Kant’s critique of pure reason and Adam Smith’s wealth of
nations, as attempting to understand systems in their pure unproblematic form –
and Hegel’s science of logic and logic of everything with Ricardo’s project
(seen as already trying to understand the contradictions of the system)
illustrate quite well why Rethel thinks of Smith and Kant as being spokesman of
political economy and epistemology in their pure normalcy. Stuff on ‘real abstractions’ here that is
quite good. I.e. abstraction is not purely a conceptual activity of mind but
has a real basis in societies that exchange commodities.
Kind of sociology of
epistemology where commodity and exchange and the development of coinage, allow
for “conceptual reasoning in terms of abstract universals” that culminates
philosophically in Aristotle in a line from Thales (circa 600 BC I think?) This
inaugurates “full intellectual independence from manual labour”. (pp 60)
The secondary nature of
socially synthetic exchange activity is in total separation from nature. The
social interconnections between the private spheres of production, consumption
and reproduction now exist in and through commodity exchange. This is rightly
pointed to as purely social forms of interconnection, though it must be said, I
am not sure if Rethel would agree, that as a total social activity it is still
in relation to nature, as man still works with and inside nature. (60-61)
“what defines he character of
intellectual labour in its full-fledged division from all manual labour is the
use of non-empirical form-abstractions which may be represented by nothing
other than non-empirical, ‘pure’ concepts.” (pp 66). The basis for this is the
real abstraction of commodity exchange. This is a basic and correct I believe
materialist point (real abstraction of exchange cuts out empirical content
(67)).[ look at how this might be seen in spinozist terms?}
Commodity exchange as
abstract follows normative rules, such as non spatio-temporal element and
commodity not changing its form, thus it is postulated rather than factual. Yet
reasoning that it allows follows own normative logic that is the dialectic.
These properties of abstraction seen to relate to nature not to money – coined
money being the economic reality that allows for the abstraction to take form –
it is the ‘functional intermediary of the social synthesis’ (pp70)
Here, my supposition that
commodity exchange as the social nexus that unites diverse private spheres is a
way of getting out of a labour ontology, or a knowledge of nature gained
through manual work seems confirmed on (pp73. + pp 75)
Separation of intellectual
labour in this way, allows Rethel to argue that basic categories of abstract
thinking can apply to nature too, though their a priori character is
social in origin.
“The basic categories of
intellectual labour…are replicas of the elements of the real abstraction” (76).
This is quite dodgy for why would intellectual labour be then able to apprehend
nature, if their categorisation is social. Are natural laws the same as social
ones in a vulgar Marxian\ Engelsian formulation of a positivism? Continues much
in the same vein. Development of mathematics and increasingly abstract ways of
thinking from Egyptian rope stretching to Greek geometry and later medieval and
Renaissance developments in science.
- yes but we have
increasingly understood nature in a ‘scientific’ way by increased socialisation
of labour and its operative divisions. Natural science is only possible as a
social form.
Sohn-Rethel insists that the
rise of automation in dev of manufacturing ‘presents itself as a feature of
technology. But it does not spring from technology but arises from the
capitalist production relations and is inherent in the capital control over production.’
(pp 121) And further; “The postulate of automatism as a condition for the
capital control over production is even more vital than its economic
profitability – it is fundamental to capitalism from the outset.”!!!(122)
So: “The stages in the
development of capitalism can be seen as so many steps in the pursuit of that
postulate, and it is from this angle that we can understand the historical
necessity of modern science as well as the peculiarity of its logical and
methodological formation.” (122)
Capitalist could not handle
the workers having the knowledge that makes production work. Descartes and
Hobbes functionalism of self operating mechanisms, is ideological materialism
that accompanies this manufacturing epoch (123).
So, and this addresses the social nature of scientific knowledge
and where its structure comes from; “…the rise of modern science is not only outwardly coincident but
inherently connected with the rise of modern capitalism.”
Galileo’s principle of
inertia said to derive from the exchange abstraction! Seems a bit deterministic
(this is what I thought while reading it)
“…it derives from the pattern
of motion contained in the real abstraction of commodity exchange. This motion
has the reality in time and space of the commodity movements in the market, and
thus of the circulation of money and of capital. The pattern is absolutely
abstract, in the sense of bearing no shred of perceptible qualities, and was
defined as: abstract linear movement through abstract, empty, continuous and
homogeneous space and time of abstract substances which thereby suffer no material change, the movement being
amenable to no other than mathematical treatment. Although continually
occurring in our economic life the movement in this description is not
perceivable to our private minds. When it does indeed strike our minds it is in
a pure conceptual form whose source is no longer recognisable; nor is the
mechanism to which it owes its abstractness.” (128)
Then quotes Marx’s positivist
analogies: After-word to Second ed of Capital and First preface; social
movement as natural history independent of human will and determining it. (129)
This explains some of the Kantian
allusions in Sohn-Rethel? Arguably fails to appreciate the manifold social
mediations that give science a relative degree of autonomy, as developing,
non-economically determined standards of criteria for evaluation of natural
world. But then again Sohn – Rethel argues; “It is the exact truth of exact
science that it is knowledge of nature in commodity form” (pp 132)
The rise of the social power
of capital is based on outgrowing of the direct producer – (relate this to
Bauman, Andre Gorz, ). (pp 130) How does this changing composition of producer
change social form. Negri?