KARL MARX’S CAPITAL
An integrated philosophical, political,
historical, mathematical, and literary interpretation
by
Robert Paul Wolff
Prelude
I come from a family with long roots in the socialist
tradition. My grandfather, Barnett Wolff, arrived in New York City as a
one-year-old baby in 1880 and grew up in lower Manhattan. Early in his life, he
committed himself to the socialist cause and spent his entire life working for
it. He and a colleague founded the Brooklyn branch of the Socialist Party and
he ran for office on the Socialist ticket a number of times, winning election
to the New York Board of Aldermen in 1917. On the occasion of the Russian
Revolution, my grandfather sided with the Mensheviks rather than with the
Bolsheviks, and as a consequence I grew up in a pro-socialist but
anti-Communist family.
My parents, whose families knew one another, courted as teenagers
at meetings of the Young People’s Socialist League in Brooklyn, but by the time
I was born in 1933, they were loyal supporters of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
the New Deal.
Despite this background, I had no familiarity with the
writings of Karl Marx during my undergraduate or even my graduate years. It was
not until the summer of 1960, when I was preparing to teach a sophomore
tutorial at Harvard in a newly established undergraduate interdisciplinary
program called Social Studies, that I first read Volume One of Capital. I read
it quickly and, I am embarrassed to admit, was not particularly impressed by
it. Over the next decade and a half, I taught the thought of Karl Marx in
various courses at Harvard, the University of Chicago, Columbia, and the
University of Massachusetts but it was always the early writings – The
Communist Manifesto, The Economic Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, The German
Ideology, and so forth.
Then in 1977, I decided to teach a graduate seminar in the
philosophy department at the University of Massachusetts devoted to Classics of
Critical Social Theory. One of the books I chose for the course was Capital. When I reread Volume One in preparation for
teaching, I was stunned by it. I thought I had never read so brilliant,
complex, challenging a work. I had almost immediately a revelation about the
book, what the French call an éclairecissement. I believed that I saw deeply into the reasons
why Marx had chosen to expound his theories in so strange and puzzling a
fashion. Pretty much on the spot, I decided to devote as much time and effort
as it took to come to a full understanding of what Marx was doing and to find a
way of expounding it that would capture its extraordinary and multidimensional
complexity.
As I saw it, to do justice to what Marx was trying to accomplish
in that great book, I would need to draw on the materials of at least five
academic disciplines - philosophy, history, sociology, literary theory, and
economics – and then to find a way of integrating them into a single unified
vision of his thought. Philosophy did
not present a problem. That was, as Eliza Doolittle says in My Fair Lady,
mother’s milk to me. History and Sociology were also disciplines that I felt I
could handle successfully. My first job
after getting my doctorate was teaching the history of Western Europe at
Harvard, and at the University of Chicago I had taught some of the great works
of sociology. I had never studied literary theory, but at that time I had been
married for 15 years to a distinguished literary scholar, and by pillow talk,
as it were, I had picked up a fair amount of the discipline.
Economics posed a more serious problem and to explain what was required of me, I need to say something about the development of the study of the works of Marx and his predecessors in the period of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Karl Marx, and the other important classical political economists set forth their theories in plain text, not using even those mathematical techniques that were available to them in the 18th and early 19th centuries. But beginning in 1960 and continuing on for several decades, a number of extremely gifted mathematical economists around the world brought modern techniques of analysis to bear on the classical tradition of political economy, with exciting and interesting results. Piero Sraffa in England, Michio Morishima in Japan, Andràs Brody in Hungary, Luigi Pasinetti in Italy, Gilbert Abraham-Frois and Edmond Berrebi in France, and many others completely revolutionized our understanding of the great early figures of modern economics. For reasons that I will explain later in this book, the branch of mathematics that they used in their analysis was not the calculus one finds so often in neoclassical economic texts but rather linear algebra. Although I had studied a fair amount of calculus in college, I had never mastered linear algebra. Fortunately, I had a sabbatical leave in the spring semester of 1978. As soon as my grades were submitted at the end of December 1977, I bought myself a linear algebra textbook and spent January teaching myself the subject. Then I set to work.
My original plan was to write an intellectual biography of
Marx, laying out the philosophical, historical, sociological, literary,
economic, and mathematical interpretation of Capital in relation to Marx’s life,
but then I read a marvelous biography of Marx by the Princeton scholar Jerrold Siegel,
and I decided that I did not like Marx very much as a human being and would not
want to spend that much time with him. When I floated the idea of my integrated
interpretation to my good friend and colleague Robert Ackermann, he pointed out
that there was not much of a market for a book that would be half literary
criticism and half mathematics, so in the end I decided to write a trilogy:
mathematics first, literary criticism second, and the integrated vision of what
Marx was doing in the third and final volume.
I began the economic and mathematical part of my story in a volume
called Understanding Marx, and published it with Princeton University Press in
1985. Elements of the literary
philosophical part of my analysis appeared three years later as the Romanell/Phi
Beta Kappa lectures under the title Moneybags Must Be so Lucky, published by the
University of Massachusetts Press. Along
the way, I published a number of journal articles in various places, including in
1981 what I considered to be a very important and quite mathematically
technical essay, “A Critique and Reinterpretation of Marx's Labor Theory of Value,”
of which more anon.
But by the time all of this had happened, we were deep in the Reagan years and
the exciting re-examination of Marx had given way to the dreary fight to
preserve such elements of the 60s and early 70s as had not totally evaporated
from the American consciousness. Eventually, I moved on to the Afro-American
Studies Department at the University of Massachusetts and spent a good deal of
my time raising money for poor black students in South Africa. The final volume
was never written.
Now, as I fast approach the end of the first nine-tenths of
a century of my life, the time has finally come one last time to try to set forth as
clearly, completely, and precisely as I am able the vision I had forty-five
years ago of what Marx is doing in his great work. Over the years I have become
more convinced than ever that Marx has something of the greatest importance to
say to us not merely about the nineteenth century but about the world in which
we live today.
A word of warning. As I proceed, I shall incorporate into
this manuscript substantial portions of books and articles I have already
published. I make no apology for this. My goal is to pull together half a
lifetime of work into a single coherent narrative. I have no idea how long this
will take me or how extensive the final manuscript will be but I hope that I
shall at long last complete the task that I set out to perform 45 years ago.
10 comments:
Noting a typo in second paragraph: "Franklin Donald Roosevelt" -- an error presumably by the voice-activated software (should be "Delano" of course).
Let me join the trivially minuscule comments. Robert Ackerman, with an additional "n" for Ackermann.
Many thanks for the typo corrections. Dragon NaturallySpeaking has its limitations
Dear Professor, have you read Sven-Eric Liedman's recent intellectual biography on Marx, entitled "A World to Win" (Verso, 2018)? It gives a more positive picture of Marx the person. Also, he attempts to give an 'historical materialist' account of Marx's intellectual journey and the historical time he lived in. Incidentally, he's critical of Siegel's biography of Marx (and of others like Gareth Stedman Jones's and Francis Wheen's biographies of Marx).
"Philosophical" is in your title twice.
bon voyage
Thank you very much for this, Professor. I look forward to future installments.
Apropos the topic: "If Marx or Freud had never lived?" by the brilliant Jon Elster.
A snippet:
"Marx and Freud underestimated the complexity of their respective subject matters. Like many modern economists, they were victims of excessive ambition (Elster 2009). In addition, they lacked a proper understanding of causal thinking and of the principle of falsification (which they could have learned from Pascal), reasoning in terms of analogies and functions rather than causes and using empirical phenomena as illustrations rather than as potential falsifiers. At the same time, they were of course towering intellects, still very much worth reading today."
I have had my say about Elster. See my Canadian Journal of philosophy essay, archived and accessible with the link at the top of this page.
I haven't read Elster, but Marx and Freud are very much the same insofar as they both got a lot of things wrong, but they both got so much right that they've become integrated into what we might call "progressive intellectual common sense".
We use concepts which originate in both of them so often in our daily discourse that often we forget where those concepts come from.
So it's valuable that people like Professor Wolff emphasize the specific contributions of Marx and Freud to our worldview from time to time.
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