Synopses & Reviews
Four philosophers and four economists consider each of the major themes of volume III of Marx's
Capital --competition, the formation and development of the general rate of profit, the credit system and finance capital, rent, the Trinity Formula and the concept of class--in light of the two previous volumes. The collection is intended both for specialists in Marxian theory and for students of the history of economic thought and methodology.
Synopsis
Marx's Capital III, The Culmination of Capital: General Introduction; G.Reuten Class, Capital, and Crisis; P.Mattick Capital in General and Marx's Capital; C.J.Arthur Hostile Brothers: Marx's Theory of the Distribution of Surplus-Value in Volume III of Capital; F.Moseley Transformation and the Monetary Circuit: Marx as a Monetary Theorist of Production; R.Bellofiore Capital, Competition and Many Capitals; C.J.Arthur Surplus Profits from Innovation: A Missing Level in Capital III ?; T.Smith The Rate of Profit Cycle and the Opposition between Managerial and Finance Capital; G.Reuten The Credit System; M.Campbell Rent and Landed Property; M.Campbell The Illusion of the Economic: The Trinity Formula and the 'Religion of Everyday Life': P.Murray Abstracts of the Chapters Notes on the Contributors Author Index Subject Index
Synopsis
In this collection, four philosophers and four economists consider the Third Volume of Marx's Capital. The essays take up each of the major themes of Volume III - competition, for formation and development of the general rate of profit, the credit system and finance capital, rent, the Trinity formula and the concept of class - and consider them in the light of the two previous volumes. The authors share a focus on the concept of social form in Marx's work and on the method of his argument. The collection is intended both for specialists in Marxian theory and for students of the history of economic thought and of methodology.
Synopsis
In this collection, four philosophers and four economists consider the third volume of Marx's
Capital, focusing on its relation to the other two volumes of
Capital and taking into account the most recent scholarship.
About the Author
Martha Campbell is Assistant Professor at Potsdam, State University of New York.
Geert Reuten is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Amsterdam