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Blink 3 von 12 - Eine kurze Geschichte der Menschheit
von Yuval Noah Harari
A Critique of Political Economy
You may have heard the term commodities before, particularly in the financial news. A commodity refers to any object that satisfies human needs—from food to clothing to homes to gadgets. It is the usefulness of a commodity that gives it what Marx calls use value, which is significant because it forms the basis of wealth in any society.
In capitalism, commodities can also become the physical representation of something called exchange value. In this sense, even objects without a use can have an exchange value. For example, art and music don’t provide shelter or food, but they can still have a high value in the marketplace.
Many things have both a use and an exchange value. The contents of a well-stocked storeroom of athletic shoes in a shop, for instance, can be exchanged for money, which will pay rent and salaries, and buy more shoes to sell. These shoes may then accrue even more exchange value for being trendy and stylish rather than just being useful as shoes.
But all exchangeable commodities – from shoes to cars to hairspray to corn – have something in common: they are products of human labor. In this way, commodities are like crystallizations of social labor, bearing value.
Labor is responsible for creating both the use value and exchange value of a commodity. The concept of useful labor is used to describe the work that contributes to the use value of an item. For example, the work involved in tailoring a coat or weaving linen are both types of useful labor because they create useful products.
Not all labor is equal, though. The production of different commodities requires different types of labor. These types are not interchangeable – a tailor can't produce linen, and a weaver can't make a coat. This differentiation forms the basis of the social division of labor – the varying kinds of work required by a community to function and produce commodities.
While this division of labor is necessary for producing commodities, it doesn't always mean commodities are created by individuals. In many systems, like in some Indian communities or factories, tasks are divided. So not all labor can be simply exchanged as a commodity.
The value of a commodity, be it a coat or linen, reflects the human labor embedded in it, abstracting away from the specific type of labor. This abstraction is critical for these goods to be comparable and exchangeable in the market. For instance, despite the difference in the types of work, both tailoring and weaving are considered equivalent, as they both represent human labor.
The magnitude of a commodity's value is determined by the amount of labor it embodies, meaning a coat worth double the value of the linen that forms it contains twice the amount of labor. This doesn't change the use value of the commodities, however, as a coat will still serve its purpose of providing warmth.
Capital (1867) represents a groundbreaking analysis of money and its many roles at the height of the industrial revolution. By focusing on the exploitation of the working class, the text challenges traditional economic theories and frames a capitalist economy as a system inherently leading to social inequality and class struggle.
Ich bin begeistert. Ich liebe Bücher aber durch zwei kleine Kinder komme ich einfach nicht zum Lesen. Und ja, viele Bücher haben viel bla bla und die Quintessenz ist eigentlich ein Bruchteil.
Genau dafür ist Blinkist total genial! Es wird auf das Wesentliche reduziert, die Blinks sind gut verständlich, gut zusammengefasst und auch hörbar! Das ist super. 80 Euro für ein ganzes Jahr klingt viel, aber dafür unbegrenzt Zugriff auf 3000 Bücher. Und dieses Wissen und die Zeitersparnis ist unbezahlbar.
Extrem empfehlenswert. Statt sinnlos im Facebook zu scrollen höre ich jetzt täglich zwischen 3-4 "Bücher". Bei manchen wird schnelle klar, dass der Kauf unnötig ist, da schon das wichtigste zusammen gefasst wurde..bei anderen macht es Lust doch das Buch selbständig zu lesen. Wirklich toll
Einer der besten, bequemsten und sinnvollsten Apps die auf ein Handy gehören. Jeden morgen 15-20 Minuten für die eigene Weiterbildung/Entwicklung oder Wissen.
Viele tolle Bücher, auf deren Kernaussagen reduziert- präzise und ansprechend zusammengefasst. Endlich habe ich das Gefühl, Zeit für Bücher zu finden, für die ich sonst keine Zeit habe.
Hol dir mit Blinkist die besten Erkenntnisse aus mehr als 7.000 Sachbüchern und Podcasts. In 15 Minuten lesen oder anhören!
Jetzt kostenlos testenBlink 3 von 12 - Eine kurze Geschichte der Menschheit
von Yuval Noah Harari