The historical and the transhistorical in Marx’s dialectical method

2021 ◽  
pp. 019145372110405
Author(s):  
Aidin Keikhaee

This essay revisits the question of alterations in Marx’s view of method from the 1857 “Introduction” to Capital. In the wake of the belated upsurge of interest in Marx’s notebooks of 1857–8, posthumously published as the Grundrisse, a dominant interpretation has been developed in Marx scholarship which characterizes the method of the “Introduction” as an ascent from the (transhistorical) abstract to the (historical) concrete and, upon such characterization, stresses the mature Marx’s departure from it. Rereading the 1857 “Introduction” with an emphasis on the theoretical import of its examples, I argue, against this interpretation, that although this text does not provide a fully worked-out account of method, it nevertheless offers invaluable insights into some of the central methodological problems with which Marx was concerned and in response to which his dialectical method was developed. In particular, I highlight what could be called Marx’s critical historicist approach to the categories and argue that this approach, together with his specific understanding of the process of the reproduction of the concrete in thought, constitute the lasting pillars of Marx’s dialectical method, in the 1857 “Introduction” as well as in Capital. Finally, in a concluding section, I re-examine the methodological status of the commodity and argue that the post-1857 emergence of the commodity as Marx’s favourite starting point does not represent a fundamental change, or a reversal, in his view of method.

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heinrich Mallison ◽  
Michael Pittman ◽  
Daniela Schwarz

The tails of extant crocodilians are anatomically the closest approximation of the tails of non-avian dinosaurs, and therefore a good starting point for any reconstruction of non-avian dinosaur tail muscles. However, we here demonstrate some methodological problems using crocodile tails, firstly regarding the general reconstruction of tail mobility from osteology, secondly for the reconstruction of tail musculature for the quantification of muscle forces, especially the m. caudofemoralis longus, and thirdly with respect to the anatomical differences between crocodilians and non-avian dinosaurs, especially in relation to the reconstruction of m. caudofemoralis brevis. Our results show that, given the current limited knowledge of crocodilian tails, volumetric reconstructions should be created on the basis of more gross morphological data than is usually used, and that biomechanical studies should include sensitivity analysis with greater parameter ranges than often applied.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1022-1051
Author(s):  
Pier M. Massa

Brand-led transformation is about leveraging the power of a corporate brand to drive fundamental change within organisations. Focused on complex service businesses, the brand serves as the starting point for a systematic process of transformation that drives change down to the level of business operations. This ensures that the principles of the promise are experienced in every interaction that the company has with its customers. Organizations typically struggle with translating brand-led customer-centric strategies into tangible and specific change outcomes at the front line. This chapter melds a practitioner's view with current theory and offers pragmatic and proven approaches to translating these strategies into a framework and a methodology that drives direct customer and company benefits with successful enterprise-wide outcomes that impact the full business. In addition, this structured approach is complemented with insight into a deeper review of the role of agents of change and their impact on implementation across the organization.


2004 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Heeg

Mobilization of the real estate market? Financial market and real estate economy. Since the late 1980s the real estate industry in Germany is transforming from a locally embedded industry towards an internationally oriented one. In this article it is asked how this fundamental change was possible and how the internationalisation is taking place and is coordinated. A starting point of the internationalisation is the deregulation of the national financial system which resulted in a mobilisation and professionalisation of real estate agents. After describing the changes in the politicoinstitutional embedding of the real estate market, the restructuring of networks and its effects upon spatio-economic patterns is analysed. By dividing the real estate market in an user, land, developer and investment market it is possible to show different degrees of internationalisation in the markets and the interdependency of the different market agents upon each other. It is claimed that the financial deregulation is a central motor in transforming the spatial orientation of the agents.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (32) ◽  
pp. 201
Author(s):  
Ken Farø

The first Danish electronic dictionary on idioms, Den Danske Idiomordbog, has been published by the Centre for Lexicography at the Aarhus School of Business, accessible directly via the Internet. This article, apart from reviewing the dictionary and its functions in general, aims at drawing a systematic picture of some of the methodological problems related to the discipline phraseography, taking the new dictionary as a starting point. Three significant issues should be mentioned here: The importance of a well reflected positive and operational idiom definition cannot be stressed too strongly, as it influences every choice made during the editing. Another difficulty which needs to be given more attention is the formal representation of the idioms, which could be carried out more adequately if thorough empirical evidence and linguistic tests were exploited systematically. And finally there is a need for a much stronger focusing on pragmatic constraints on idioms on the level of language use.Danish phraseology still needs to be discovered as an object of systematic scientific research as the discussed problems in Den Danske Idiomordbog are not at all singular but rather symptomatic for the genre phraseography as a whole.


Res Publica ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-86
Author(s):  
Daniel-Louis Seiler

This article is concerned with the epistemological and methodological problems related to the taxonomy of political parties whett based on noorganizational criteria.The study of parties represents a starting point for modern Political Science : i.e. the seminal researches of Bryce, Ostrogorski and Michels.  However this important field of knowledge hasn't known that much progress since the classical Duverger's Political  Parties. Why?Two kind of approaches are used in order to classify parties: individualistic versus holistic.  «Individualistic classifications» often suffer from a lack of theoretical background. Same of them use a spurious criterium like party names : i.e. Radical means extreme-left in the USA and conservatism in Switzerland, secularist activism in Italy and evangelical left in the Netherlands etc.Some classifications are based on political platforms which is a meaningless criterium: «A general election campaign is about a choice between organizations, not ideas.» (Richard Rose) The third criterium is far better: policies really implemented by political parties. However when properly used it gives a typology of countries, not parties.«Holistic classifications» either functionnalist or marxist opposed each other : the first stressed on equilibrium, the latter on class warfare.  One suggests Rokkan's four cleavages paradigm to classify parties : each side of a cleavage should correspond to a definite «Political Family».Which items to use in order to assess a party to a permanent cleavage line ? ( 1) The historical function performed by the party at its creation.  (2a) The sociological structure of the party's : electorate, membership and inner group; (2b) The linkage structure between the party and a given network of pressure groups, movements and  associations.


Author(s):  
Błażej Marek Zych

<p>Punktem wyjścia jest zaniepokojenie związane z zanikaniem fundamentów kultury europejskiej. W paradygmacie klasycznym artysta pracował na bazie idealnego obrazu w swej duszy. Ta wizja została odrzucona. Nowożytność zaproponowała ludzkości racjonalizm, wolność i równość. Efektem tych dobrych intencji jest psychodeliczny bazar. Człowiek idąc w nim jest zdezorientowany, a jego odczuwanie doprowadzone do granic wytrzymałości. Ta wykorzeniona istota skazane jest na kulturalne tułactwo. Ucieczką od tego impasu jest powrót do pytania Archimedesa o punkt oparcia i zastanowienie się nad tym, co w ludzkiej naturze niezmienne a co przypadkowe i przemijalne.</p><strong>The Classic Pattern and Mass Man as Interpreted by the Contemporary Theorists of Society and Culture: Daniel Bell, Allan Bloom, and Jose Ortega y Gasset</strong><p>SUMMARY</p><p>The starting point for the analysis is an anxiety associated with the vanishing of the foundations of European culture. In the classical paradigm, the artist worked on the basis of an ideal image that s/he carried in his/her soul. However, this vision was rejected. Modernity offered rationalism, freedom, and equality to the humankind. The result of this fundamental change is the so-called “psychedelic bazaar” – a certain form of culture continually offering new, surprising and often extreme experiences. By following them, a person is disoriented and his/her feeling is driven to the breaking point. Consequently, s/he is like an uprooted being condemned to cultural wandering. The way out of this impasse is to return to Archimedes’ question about the point of support, and to ponder over the invariable in human culture and the accidental and transitory.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-57
Author(s):  
Luka Martin Tomažič

The paper investigates the possibility of a conception of the Rule of Law, based on Finnis’ natural law theory. His claim that law exists in degrees, but has a focal meaning, is the starting point to the research. A contradiction regarding incommensurability of values in connection with the focal meaning of law is emphasized and an interpretive turn to his theory proposed. It is claimed that the substantive elements of the Rule of Law can be understood through his concept of common good. In order to assess the congruence of individual laws with the Rule of Law, supplementation with the dialectical method of Aquinas is proposed. Such an approach also enables the restatement of modern natural law on a theological foundation, which is, however, more nuanced than its older natural law counterparts.


Author(s):  
Pier M. Massa

Brand-led transformation is about leveraging the power of a corporate brand to drive fundamental change within organisations. Focused on complex service businesses, the brand serves as the starting point for a systematic process of transformation that drives change down to the level of business operations. This ensures that the principles of the promise are experienced in every interaction that the company has with its customers. Organizations typically struggle with translating brand-led customer-centric strategies into tangible and specific change outcomes at the front line. This chapter melds a practitioner's view with current theory and offers pragmatic and proven approaches to translating these strategies into a framework and a methodology that drives direct customer and company benefits with successful enterprise-wide outcomes that impact the full business. In addition, this structured approach is complemented with insight into a deeper review of the role of agents of change and their impact on implementation across the organization.


2013 ◽  
Vol 72 ◽  
pp. 317-341
Author(s):  
David Morris

AbstractI argue that reconciling nature with human experience requires a new ontology in which nature is refigured as being in and of itself meaningful, thus reconfiguring traditional dualisms and the ‘hard problem of consciousness’. But this refiguring of nature entails a method in which nature itself can exhibit its conceptual reconfiguration—otherwise we get caught in various conceptual and methodological problems that surreptitiously reduplicate the problem we are seeking to resolve. I first introduce phenomenology as a methodology fit to this task, then show how life manifests a field in which nature in and of itself exhibits meaningfulness, such that this field can serve as a starting point for this phenomenological project. Finally, I take immunogenesis as an example in which living phenomena can guide insights into the ontology in virtue of which meaning arises in nature.


Author(s):  
Heinrich Mallison ◽  
Michael Pittman ◽  
Daniela Schwarz

The tails of extant crocodilians are anatomically the closest approximation of the tails of non-avian dinosaurs, and therefore a good starting point for any reconstruction of non-avian dinosaur tail muscles. However, we here demonstrate some methodological problems using crocodile tails, firstly regarding the general reconstruction of tail mobility from osteology, secondly for the reconstruction of tail musculature for the quantification of muscle forces, especially the m. caudofemoralis longus, and thirdly with respect to the anatomical differences between crocodilians and non-avian dinosaurs, especially in relation to the reconstruction of m. caudofemoralis brevis. Our results show that, given the current limited knowledge of crocodilian tails, volumetric reconstructions should be created on the basis of more gross morphological data than is usually used, and that biomechanical studies should include sensitivity analysis with greater parameter ranges than often applied.


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