tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post6800176288108664676..comments2024-03-29T03:19:09.227-04:00Comments on The Philosopher's Stone: WEARY, BUT IN A GOOD WAYRobert Paul Wolffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11970360952872431856noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-25189503780561945552018-08-26T00:27:24.410-04:002018-08-26T00:27:24.410-04:00Nice Nihilist,
Thank you for the link. I have ju...Nice Nihilist,<br /><br />Thank you for the link. I have just printed it. That obviates the need some may feel to steal it from a library.MSnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-49321909592896701452018-08-26T00:07:26.846-04:002018-08-26T00:07:26.846-04:00The link in the previous comment apparently leads ...The link in the previous comment apparently leads nowhere. While the charge of lunacy must stand on that account (together with the charge of egotism--a character trait that Anonymous lacks), nevertheless, here is a functioning link to <a href="https://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/sulr/vol35/iss4/15/" rel="nofollow"><i>The Future of Socialism</i></a>. Nice Nihilistnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-21864320131659188482018-08-25T23:33:58.364-04:002018-08-25T23:33:58.364-04:00For those who have forgotten the frequent referenc...For those who have forgotten the frequent references on this blog to <a href="https://app.box.com/s/n72u3p7pyj/file/718243533xzx" rel="nofollow"><i>The Future of Socialism</i></a> by its author, Robert Paul Wolff, and for those who haven't noticed, I have provided a link. This will provide some context, on the off chance that the frequent and recurring mention of this paper in these blog pages isn't sufficient for someone who has bothered to read it and take it seriously to escape the charge of lunacy. Nicenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-42314501982719805182018-08-25T21:16:31.909-04:002018-08-25T21:16:31.909-04:00RobinMcDougal,
In politically perilous times, som...RobinMcDougal,<br /><br />In politically perilous times, some are persuaded to resort to the doctrine, "The enemy of my enemy is my friend," no matter how wealthy and committed to conspicuous consumption the enemy-friend is. MSnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-59647807211791209122018-08-25T21:08:31.783-04:002018-08-25T21:08:31.783-04:00I must confess I'd have a hard time regarding ...I must confess I'd have a hard time regarding someone who lived in an enormous, expensive house as anything other than a political enemy, no matter what their declared partisan orientation. I can't imagine what argument would change my mind and my attitude.RobinMcDugaldnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-66984087187584795172018-08-25T19:08:17.523-04:002018-08-25T19:08:17.523-04:00I repeat, "Much madness is divinest sense [t]...I repeat, "Much madness is divinest sense [t]o a discerning eye."<br /><br />I suspect that Nice Nihilist was motivated by the references in Prof. Wolff's post to "private, keep out" signs and homes ranging in value from $750,000 to $1 million to submit a comment about socialism vs. capitalism.MSnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-36579448147938155682018-08-25T19:04:47.892-04:002018-08-25T19:04:47.892-04:00I think you've just asked an important questio...I think you've just asked an important question, jeffrey. I mean the first one, not the one about whether you precipitated it. My guess is that the blog has been discovered by some who can't resist using it for their own egotistical ends.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-29250485908138769132018-08-25T18:32:42.306-04:002018-08-25T18:32:42.306-04:00I'm sorry, but what the hell is going on in yo...I'm sorry, but what the hell is going on in your "Comments" section? Did I precipitate lunacy? I've been on-line for three months and this is what it's about?Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09090157934753471161noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-77531431863987958062018-08-25T18:30:16.823-04:002018-08-25T18:30:16.823-04:00I admire your commitment. I'm 12 years you...I admire your commitment. I'm 12 years younger than you, but I'm not up to 3 hours canvassing. I don't have the energy anymore. I can donate money by internet and sign petitions online, offer to edit texts (online) or translate (online), maybe interpret in person for a few hours. s. wallersteinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17448905469871566228noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-51823453111763128592018-08-25T18:03:21.788-04:002018-08-25T18:03:21.788-04:00One final remark: during the 2010 congressional an...One final remark: during the 2010 congressional and senate testimony on the financial crisis, there were expressions of the quasi-political decision making [though not in those terms] in the absence of a functional relation between the cost (of a sale or purchase of some security, in this case) and the overall profit and loss of the firm. Again this is implicit, though I believe a careful perusal of the testimony will reveal more than I have at the moment. I certainly recall one trader insisting that his desk only had a limited view of the firm, and that there was no way to tell how his desk would affect the overall P&L, or something to this effect. This could be a legal defense and nothing more, or it could reflect the indeterminacy of accounting methods.<br /><br />One example, from the EXHIBITS, Hearing On WALL STREET AND THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: THE ROLE OF INVESTMENT BANKS. April 27, 2010 <br />110 "...I want<br />III to be very clear about this point: whether a commitment is funded or not is<br />112 irrelevant to its impact on our P&L. We mark all commitments and funded<br />113 loans to market and our marks reflect current market conditions, not a view of<br />114 what a credit could be worth if the market dislocation were to end. Our<br />115 aggregate loss is not a portfolio level reserve. Each credit is individually<br />116 marked based on where we believe we could exit the commitment in current<br />117 market conditions, using as much external information as possible, including<br />118 broker quotes, external pricing services, derivative indices and actual market<br />119 trades in these and similar positions." <br /><br />Nnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-57038065404799874132018-08-25T17:37:37.540-04:002018-08-25T17:37:37.540-04:00What I meant to convey (I won't bother to dele...What I meant to convey (I won't bother to delete and correct my previous post--the way of errata is endless) can't be better expressed than a direct quotation from <i>The Future of Socialism</i>: What this means, in plain language, is that an accountant, speaking professionally, cannot tell the management of a firm just what a unit of output costs and hence how much of the profit of the firm can be attributed to its sale."<br /><br />I suppose no response to this will be a further favor to me: I will turn from Stocism, which permits and encourages political engagement, to Epicurianism, which prefers to confine itself within the walls of The Garden.Nice Nihilistnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5687347459208158501.post-12292397268461875882018-08-25T17:27:36.118-04:002018-08-25T17:27:36.118-04:00Corey Robin wrote an op-ed in the NY Times on soci...Corey Robin wrote an op-ed in the NY Times on socialism. He makes a good point about the private life of power--he uses the vocabulary of freedom to emphasize that life under corporate tyranny is not at all free. His critics divided into two camps: one criticized him for the New York Times paywall ("If free things make us free, how come we can't access your op ed?"). The other resorted to slogans: "capitalism is about choice; socialism is the opposite." These slogans are devoid of analytic content. I attempted to draw Robin's attention to your paper "The Future of Socialism." The point that large corporate bureaucracies have nothing internally like market signals to guide their decision making and that accounting practices cannot tell them which of of the firm's various inputs of any item contributed to its sale is, in my view, essential to the allocation problem Robin addresses. The absence of such market signals internally, except in the trivial cases where linear programming gives a complete answer (maximize the output given the inputs, sell off this productive capacity--meaning solve the linear program and its dual), leads ineluctably to the quasi-political decision making of the firm. [Some executives bristle at this characterization, and prefer the phrase "wild-ass guess" to "quasi-political decision making"--nevertheless, the intractability of the allocation problem remains an issue.] That accounting is not a reasonable subject bears crucially on the business preoccupation with "risk management"--and efforts to compensate for this through the so-called "private life of power"--limiting employee freedoms internally, and by limiting the "choices" available to labor legislatively. Yet I doubt that Robin will even cast a glance at your paper, despite, or perhaps because of, my referral. I give up attempting to reach intellectuals.Nice Nihilistnoreply@blogger.com