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The Metaphysics of Capitalism
Contributor(s): Micocci, Andrea (Author)
ISBN: 073912837X     ISBN-13: 9780739128374
Publisher: Lexington Books
OUR PRICE:   $124.74  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: January 2009
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Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Free Enterprise & Capitalism
- Business & Economics | Economics - Theory
Dewey: 330.122
LCCN: 2008040469
Physical Information: 1" H x 6.2" W x 9" (1.20 lbs) 280 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The objective of this book is to construct an individually emancipatory economic and political philosophy. This means a concrete-based, man-centered, non-hypostatizing, anti-dialectical approach to the apprehension of the material, i.e. nature in general. This constitutes an emancipation from culture-based understandings of reality, and in particular from the metaphysically biased type of culture represented by capitalism. The proposed philosophical emancipation means individual liberation from the logically flawed, massifying character of the dominant mode of thought of capitalist times. From these bases, the social sciences can also be reformulated. Micocci argues that capitalism can be conceptualized as a limited and limiting socialized mode of thought, an intellectuality whose dialectical features are effectively identified by using the proxy of political economy, both marxist and mainstream. Political economy in fact, being a most representative instance of dialectical thinking, mirrors the dialectical nature of capitalist economic and political relationships. According to Micocci, non-dialectical occurrences in capitalism are simply excluded from normal social, economic, and intellectual activities, which are performed in a metaphysical, intellectually isolated environment. In capitalism, therefore, the materials, the concrete, i.e. nature itself, is not considered as a whole but only as occasional instances. Micocci describes capitalism, in sum, as an intellectually constructed culture (a metaphysics) which preserves itself, and props itself up, by means of its iterative (market-like) functioning.