Re: What is "useful"; what is "survival"

From: chuck (cpalson@mediaone.net)
Date: Tue May 23 2000 - 11:34:41 BST

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    Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 11:34:41 +0100
    From: chuck <cpalson@mediaone.net>
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    Vincent Campbell wrote:

    > 'There's no way I could know everything happening in Europe.'
    >
    > How generous of you to be so humble!:-)
    >
    > Indeed, media sociology utilises Marxist analysis in much more
    > sophisticated ways than 'profit is everything'. You could, indeed should,
    > look at Adorno, Althusser, Gramsci, Marcuse,

    If you consider Marcuse as one such example, I will stick to my position. I read
    him extensively and found absolutely nothing beyond simplistic glosses of
    capitalist economy. As for Chomsky, he is simply not a Marxist -- and has said
    so openly both in private conversations with me and in public.

    There is a Brit author who has just come out with a book that is being
    publisized here - heard him on public radio the other day - talking about how
    Marx was indeed right on a lot of things and that modern day Marxists for the
    most part use his name, not his ideas. Someone asked him how he would study any
    society, and he said he would do exactly what Marx did at first -- dig into all
    the information, including business publications, that gives information on how
    the economy works. I don't recall ever meeting a Marxist who comes even close to
    this ideal. The author - whose name escapes me at the moment - is, after all,
    correct.

    The question "Who owns the media" is barely the beginning of a question. That in
    itself tells very little. I have seen this kind of analysis, and it tells us
    almost noithing about how the media operates as a sliver of particular interests
    within the capitalist class. In fact, one could just as easily find the same
    kind of analysis put forward by populist type authors.

    > In an information-based society what are the
    > most important products- media products.
    >
    > Why isn't Foucault a Marxist?

    For reasons I have listed above. He says nothing significant about the economy.
    He is as Marxist as Levi-Strauss who looks at societies more like a Hegelian
    than a Marxist.

    >
    > By the way, what are your views on seppuku, ritual suicide in Japan
    > (often incorrectly referred to as hari kari)?

    None. Don't know a thing about it.

    Chuck

    >
    > > ----------
    > > From: chuck
    > > Reply To: memetics@mmu.ac.uk
    > > Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2000 10:02 am
    > > To: memetics@mmu.ac.uk
    > > Subject: Re: What is "useful"; what is "survival"
    > >
    > > Vincent Campbell wrote:
    > >
    > > > Very interesting that you should included Wilson alongside Weber,
    > > Durkheim
    > > > and Marx.
    > >
    > > Modern sociobiology was founded in the mid 1970s, but it only broke
    > > through the
    > > enormous prejudices against it in the early 1990s, in part, I think, to
    > > the mass
    > > publication of MRIs thinking brains which put an end forever to the notion
    > > that
    > > thoughts are merely spiritual entities floating around in a grey cloud. He
    > > took
    > > all the heat in the meantime because he was willing to put himself on the
    > > line
    > > with his considerable intellectual integrity. I think he has to take major
    > > credit for being the front man.
    > >
    > > > I doubt anyone but other sociobiologists would put Wilson on a
    > > > line of important theoreticians of the last 100 years or so.
    > >
    > > I don't think that's any longer true in the US anyway. He has, after all,
    > > been
    > > prophetic. (I'm not claiming he is always right - which would be
    > > miraculous -
    > > but the general direction of his thought has been accepted.) And SB has
    > > arrived
    > > sufficiently strongly here that the inevitable bastardized references to
    > > it in
    > > common parlance are almost obligatory. So people beyond sociobiologists
    > > *do*
    > > look to Wilson as at least a force to be reckoned with.
    > >
    > > I should add that the tension between the hard sciences and the all other
    > > fields
    > > has increased markedly since about the early eighties. The amazing
    > > excesses of
    > > the humanities in my view comes mostly from the fact that private money to
    > > fund
    > > the sciences has poured onto the campuses, leaving the humanities in a
    > > defensive
    > > position. They have spent the last 20 years trying to prove that the hard
    > > sciences are entirely arbitrary in an effort to recover their position.
    > > That was
    > > the basis of a lot of vitriol against Wilson and SB.
    > >
    > > > Incidentally, I don't know where you get the idea from that many aspects
    > > of
    > > > the social sciences are ignorant of the importance of Marx.
    > >
    > > Yes, Europe finds the **name** of Marx more important. But when all sorts
    > > of
    > > academics claim to be Marxists who clearly aren't - like Foucault - I
    > > think you
    > > have to wonder how much Marx's actual theory and methodology has actually
    > > survived. And, yes, you are right, academics in the US have been quite
    > > literally
    > > scared out of mentioning any debt to Marx with the result that many have
    > > no idea
    > > how much of their ideas comes from Marx. Then again, there are lots of
    > > "Marxists" in the US who owe about as much to Marx as Foucault does.
    > >
    > > > It certainly
    > > > doesn't apply to social science in Europe- perhaps in America
    > > McCarthyism's
    > > > long shadow keeps it hidden in the USA. In fact, amongst our less aware
    > > > students, we get complaints about the amount of Marxism that has to be
    > > dealt
    > > > with when exploring media sociology, with comments like 'the Soviet
    > > Union
    > > > doesn't exist anymore so why are we studying Marx?'.
    > >
    > > I have to wonder what version of Marx is taught in media studies. If it is
    > > simply his notions of class lifted out of his broader method and theory, I
    > > would
    > > have to wonder if it is more ideology than science that is being taught.
    > > (I'm
    > > not saying that class doesn't play an important role). For example, a
    > > Marxist
    > > approach to the media would involve a thoroughgoing understanding of how
    > > the
    > > capitalist economy works and where the media fits in. A simplistic
    > > profit-motivates-everything will not do. Any of the so-called Marxist
    > > sociology
    > > coming out of Europe that I have seen doesn't even begin to understand the
    > > necessity of this approach. So - I'm skeptical, but open to correction.
    > > There's
    > > no way I could know everything happening in Europe.
    > >
    > > Whatever the actual status of Wilson and sociobiology, though, the fact
    > > remains
    > > that the notion of the means of production providing the essential context
    > > for
    > > society is one of the most important theoretical trusses of sociobiology.
    > > After
    > > all, the means of production is determined, if you will, by the ecology of
    > > a
    > > society, and ecology is a crucial concept in SB.
    > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Vincent
    > > >
    > > > > ----------
    > > > > From: chuck
    > > > > Reply To: memetics@mmu.ac.uk
    > > > > Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2000 8:18 am
    > > > > To: memetics@mmu.ac.uk
    > > > > Subject: Re: What is "useful"; what is "survival"
    > > > >
    > > > >
    > > > >
    > > > > Robin Faichney wrote:
    > > > >
    > > > > On Mon, 22 May 2000, chuck wrote:
    > > > > >In short, the industrial revolution did not happen because
    > > people
    > > > > were suddenly
    > > > > >infected with some virus as some memists might claim. It was a
    > > > > necessary
    > > > > >response to a changing ecology. The competitive game is a
    > > constant
    > > > > in across all
    > > > > >human societies - that's how change is ultimately accomplished.
    > > But
    > > > > it's not the
    > > > > >competition itself, but the ecology that drives it.
    > > > > >
    > > > > >Unfortunately to give this a reality, it is necessary to have a
    > > > > good grasp of a
    > > > > >lot of historical data pertaining to economics, politics,
    > > > > psychology, population
    > > > > >studies, and history. There are simply no easy shortcuts on
    > > this
    > > > > one. But the
    > > > > >principle is still ecological, not simply a game of cultural
    > > > > catchup -- even
    > > > > >though people may conceptualize it that way in their daily
    > > lives.
    > > > >
    > > > > This seems wildly implausible to me, and I'm afraid I'm not
    > > willing
    > > > > to accept it
    > > > > on your say-so, even though you might be much better read in the
    > > > > relevant areas.
    > > > > I take is, as you're not giving any references, this is all your
    > > own
    > > > > work?
    > > > >
    > > > > There is a huge body of work out there on this theme, but it is
    > > scattered
    > > > > across many fields. I suggest that anyone interested in pursuing this
    > > > > start by reading the basic classical works of the last 100 years -
    > > > > Weber, Durkheim, Marx, and the sociobiologists like Edward Wilson and
    > > > > Pinker. Stripped of the ideological stuff, Marx is enormously useful
    > > > > because he is the first to fully understand the role of the means of
    > > > > production in human behavior. That has proved to be so useful that it
    > > is a
    > > > > standard conceptual tool in huge areas of the social sciences even
    > > though
    > > > > many are unaware of the source. Sociobiology builds on this.
    > > > >
    > > > > However, if you already find what I say "wildly implausible," it's
    > > quite
    > > > > possible you are already too wedded to parsing the world into
    > > fragmented
    > > > > pieces to seriously consider a broader context. Many people,
    > > professionals
    > > > > included, don't find a broader view based on what is essentially
    > > > > historical ecology so implausible. That includes Edward Wilson (you
    > > might
    > > > > try reading his latest book, Consilience, which explores exactly what
    > > I am
    > > > > talking about).
    > > > >
    > > > >
    > > > >
    > > > >
    > > >
    > > > ===============================================================
    > > > This was distributed via the memetics list associated with the
    > > > Journal of Memetics - Evolutionary Models of Information Transmission
    > > > For information about the journal and the list (e.g. unsubscribing)
    > > > see: http://www.cpm.mmu.ac.uk/jom-emit
    > >
    > >
    > > ===============================================================
    > > This was distributed via the memetics list associated with the
    > > Journal of Memetics - Evolutionary Models of Information Transmission
    > > For information about the journal and the list (e.g. unsubscribing)
    > > see: http://www.cpm.mmu.ac.uk/jom-emit
    > >
    >
    > ===============================================================
    > This was distributed via the memetics list associated with the
    > Journal of Memetics - Evolutionary Models of Information Transmission
    > For information about the journal and the list (e.g. unsubscribing)
    > see: http://www.cpm.mmu.ac.uk/jom-emit

    ===============================================================
    This was distributed via the memetics list associated with the
    Journal of Memetics - Evolutionary Models of Information Transmission
    For information about the journal and the list (e.g. unsubscribing)
    see: http://www.cpm.mmu.ac.uk/jom-emit



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