Commentary
Journal of World-Systems Research
View Archive InfoField | Value | |
Title |
Commentary
|
|
Creator |
Moore, Jason W.
|
|
Description |
Alf Hornborg says many useful things in his article, Ecosystems and World Systems: Accumulation as an Ecological Process. His effort to ground the notion of capital accumulation in the physical realities of ecology and thermodynamics is a much-needed corrective to nature-blind studies of capitalism. At a more paradigmatic level, his dismay at the analytical disjuncture of ecology and economics in modern social science is right on target (1998: 169). Yet, despite the articles laudable intent, Hornborg goes astray by imputing to Marx a focus on labor that excludes the physical realities of labor reproduction, world trade, or imperialism. Hornborg is right to urge a synthesis of ecological and economic studies, but wrong in his call to supplement the labor theory of value with a resource-orientedconcept of exploitation (1998: 173). Even if Marx did not grapple with a global ecological crisis of contemporary standards, he was remarkably sensitive to ecological processes as they shaped, and were shaped by, capital accumulation; indeed, Marx studied intensively the works of the leading soil chemists of his day, foremost among them Justus von Liebig. Particularly in the ?rst and third volumes of Capital, Marx provides a compelling framework for comprehending the nature-society dialectic under capitalism.
|
|
Publisher |
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
|
|
Date |
2000-02-26
|
|
Type |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — |
|
Format |
application/pdf
|
|
Identifier |
http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/234
10.5195/jwsr.2000.234 |
|
Source |
Journal of World-Systems Research; Volume 6, Issue 1, 2000; 133-138
1076-156X |
|
Language |
eng
|
|
Relation |
http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/234/246
|
|
Rights |
Copyright (c) 2015 Jason W. Moore
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 |
|