Abstract: Marx’s distinction between concrete-in-thought and concretein-reality does not invoke a conceptual or empirical difference but a
difference-in-act. This difference is verified in social practice rather
than in thought. The actuality of practice verifies that of thought without
there being a metaphysical correspondence between them. While
thought can adequately represent the structure of practice, there is no
similarity or resemblance between the structure of thought (what is
concrete-in-thought) and that of practice (concrete-in-reality). What
is concrete-in-reality is a practical act whose nature does not reveal
itself either to those executing it or to the theoretical consciousness
that takes the consciousness of practitioners as its starting point.
This has ramifications for Marx’s critique of reification as well as his
distinction between ‘living’ and ‘dead’ labour. I argue that Marx’s critique
of reification is epistemological, not ontological, and that the contrast
between objectivating and objectified labour is not a metaphysical
contrast between authentic and inauthentic existence or between lived
and represented experience. Rather, it is a formal contrast between
unconscious (unvalidated) practice and conscious (socially validated)
activity. Nevertheless, this contrast has an ontological premise: the
actuality of the exchange abstraction depends upon an act that is not
actually exchanged (socially valorized).
Keywords: Marx, materialism, critique, abstraction, concrete-in-thought,
practice, exchange.
Introduction
Marx’s is a materialism of abstraction. Capitalism is a system of real
abstractions: commodity, value, labour, money, exchange, et al. In contrast
to thought abstractions generated through intellection (such as humanity,
right, justice, beauty, etc.), real abstractions are generated through social
practices. Where the unity of thought abstractions defies spatiotemporal
localization because it is that of transcendent generality, the unity of real
abstractions defies localization because it is spread out across space and
time. Real abstractions are immanent without being particular, abstract
without being transcendent. Thus money, for example, is represented by
ostensible particulars (whether coins, notes, or digital encryptions) but
is not itself an ostensible particular. Yet it is not a conceptual artifact; its
attributes and functioning do not depend on intellection. It is concrete but
not ostensible.1
1
I say “ostensible” rather than “localizable” because specific currencies, such as the dollar
or the euro, possess temporally localizable properties (of magnitude or equivalence) even though
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Concrete social activity generates abstractions in consciousness. These
include: the individual, property, productivity, population, the market,
society, nature, nation-state, law, right, et al. They can be contrasted
with the critical form-determinations through which Marx diagnoses
these thought abstractions as the ideological masks of real abstractions:
commodity, money, labour, value, production, exchange, et al. Uncovering
the form-determinations of the capitalist totality reveals how a category
like ‘society’ misrepresents this contradictory totality as a concrete
whole.
Maintaining the reality of abstractions while anchoring them in social
practices, Marx’s materialism breaks with traditional metaphysics and
epistemology. This break is radical but not absolute: unlike Nietzsche
for instance, Marx does not try to dissolve the dialectic of truth and
semblance into a play of forces (competing wills to power).2 It is
Feuerbach who gives Marx his lead in breaking with philosophy’s
speculative consummation in absolute knowing. For Feuerbach,
speculative transcendence becomes immanent as the fusion of the
sensuous and the supersensuous, the phenomenal and the noumenal:
“[W]e need not go beyond sensuousness to arrive, in the sense of the
Absolute Philosophy, at the limit of the merely sensuous and empirical;
all we have to do is not separate the intellect from the senses in order to
find the supersensuous—spirit and reason—within the sensuous.”3 The
sensuous fusion of sensuous and supersensuous is realized in human
being. The essence of being human is communality and the sensuous root
of communality lies in the interpersonal relation (as opposed to Kantian
intersubjectivity).4
these properties may not be phenomenologically accessible by their users.
2
To the extent that it disregards distinctions between levels of explanation (between the
physical and the biological, the biological and the psychological, the psychological and the historical,
the historical and the cultural), Nietzsche’s invocation of ‘forces’ in his attempt to overcome both
transcendental (Kant) and speculative (Hegel) philosophy ends up miring him in psychologism and
biologism. For an illuminating reconstruction of the neo-Kantian context of Nietzsche’s naturalism,
see Peter Bornedal Nietzsche’s Naturalist Deconstruction of Truth, Rowman and Littlefield,
forthcoming. Marx, by way of contrast, espouses science and affirms the continuity between
humanity and nature while rejecting ‘worldview’ naturalism, i.e. naturalism as a metaphysical
ideology. He draws critically on Hegel and Feuerbach to overcome the limitations of both logicism
and anthropologism. The logicist equivalence between the real and the rational is subverted by
Feuerbach’s rooting of spiritual self-externalization in human sociality. But the anthropological
equation of sociality with communality is subverted by using the dialectic of essence and appearance
to explain how sociality does not appear to itself as it is in itself.
3
Feuerbach 2012, p. 504.
4
Feuerbach 2012: 529.
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Marx takes over Feuerbach’s sensuous immanentization of
speculative transcendence. However, for Marx, the social relation is
irreducible to the interpersonal because it is rooted in social practice,
which operates behind the back of consciousness, whether personal or
interpersonal. Sensuous practice—what we do without knowing that we
are doing it—is the immanent but unconscious medium of human being.
Sensuous social practice is not an attribute of human being; human being
is an attribute of sensuous social practice.
Attempts to absolutize Marx’s break with philosophy end
up recoding it philosophically by appealing to false concretions
(consciousness, the body), indeterminate abstractions (utopia,
redemption), or more often than not, a theological fusion of both.
Precisely because it eschews undialectical absoluteness, Marx’s
break with traditional philosophy can only be properly grasped through
the resources of philosophy. It resides in a double inversion: Marx
overturns rationalism’s subordination of the sensible to the intelligible
while simultaneously overturning empiricism’s subordination of the
intelligible to the sensible. Thus Marx ‘twists free’ of both rationalism and
empiricism by suggesting that it is the sensible that is inapparent and the
intelligible that is apparent. The critique of political economy follows from
this double inversion, together with Marx’s claim that what is concrete
in reality can only be grasped through the medium of abstraction. The
crux of this double inversion resides in the exchange abstraction and the
essential split it generates between the reproduction of value and the
reproduction of sociality. While Capital develops the ramifications of this
inversion, it is already prefigured in the tenets of historical materialism.
I will recapitulate them here in the form of ten theses derived from The
German Ideology and the Theses on Feuerbach (this list is not supposed to
be definitive; it is intended merely as a useful heuristic):
Ten theses of historical materialism
1. Human social production is the ultimate determinant of ideation.
2. Human activity is determined by existing conditions but also
produces new conditions. It is this circuit of conditioned and conditioning
activity that is the empirically (as opposed to logically) real starting
point for materialist theory. It is concretely sensuous as the medium
of practice; it is not an abstract datum or “matter of fact” of the sort
favoured by philosophical empiricism.5
5
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See Feuerbach 2012, pp. 484-486.
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3. Forces of production determine social relations but are also
determined by them in turn.
4. The development of the division of labour determines (a) the
development of forms of property, (b) the contradiction between theory
and practice, and (c) the contradiction between particular and common
interests.
5. The difference between humans and other animals is materially
produced by human activity; it is not a metaphysical or transcendental
difference. Humans differentiate themselves from other animals in
practice before distinguishing themselves from them in theory.
6. The history of humanity, including the history of humanity’s
relation to nature, is the history of social (re)production. No sensuous
datum is merely given; it has always been socially produced (i.e. mediated
by a system of social relations, not a concept).
7. The social relation is the source of the materiality of human
consciousness.
8. Consciousness is the “inverted reflection” of real social relations.
The limitations of material production and social relations impose this
inversion upon consciousness.
9. Historical materialism is the science of history to the extent that
it proceeds from the real premise of sensuous productive activity as the
source of ideological representation, including that of empiricist and
idealist history.
10. Practice establishes the truth, i.e. the effectiveness or actuality,
of thinking.
From ideological inversion to fetishistic transposition
I want to begin by considering thesis 8: sensuous productive activity
appears inverted in ideation. The limitations of our material activities
and social relations impose limits upon our understanding of that activity
and these relations. Thus the critique of ideology starts from the critique
of the primacy of consciousness. The “historical life-process” (the
production and reproduction of the means of existence) makes human
social relations appear upside-down in consciousness:
If the conscious expression of the real relations of these individuals
is illusory, if in their imagination they turn reality upside-down,
then this in its turn is the result of their limited material mode of
activity and their limited social relations arising from it. […] Men are
the producers of their conceptions, ideas, etc., that is, real, active
men, as they are conditioned by a definite development of their
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productive forces and of the intercourse corresponding to these, up
to its furthest forms. Consciousness [das Bewusstsein] can never
be anything else than conscious being [das bewusste Sein], and the
being of men is their actual life-process. If in all ideology men and
their relations appear upside-down as in a camera obscura, this
phenomenon arises just as much from their historical life process
as the inversion of objects on the retina does from their physical
life-process.6
If ideology (religious, juridical, economic, philosophical, scientific)
is the ‘inverted image’ of social existence, understood as circuit of
conditioned and conditioning productive activity, then this inversion
cannot be confined to single dimension of representation (e.g.
spatial orientation, up-down). Marx’s ‘inversion’ of the metaphysical
subordination of sensuous appearance to supersensuous reality does
not just re-subordinate the latter to the former. The critical torsion
proper to the critique of political economy implies that the sensuous
(forces and relations of production) is inapparent and that the intelligible
(consciousness as representation of these forces and relations) is
apparent, so that the intelligible is the distorted form of appearance of
inapparent sensuous activity (the activity constituting productive forces
and relations).
In Capital however, ideological inversion becomes fetishistic
transposition. The commodity is the juncture of the sensuous and the
supersensuous: it is the form in which sensuous relations between
producers appear to the producers themselves as supersensuous
relations between their products:
A commodity is therefore a mysterious thing, simply because
in it the social character of men’s labour appears to them as an
objective character stamped upon the product of that labour;
because the relation of the producers to the sum total of their
own labour is presented to them as a social relation, existing not
between themselves, but between the products of their labour.
This is the reason why the products of labour become commodities,
social things whose qualities are at the same time perceptible and
imperceptible by the senses [….] [But] the existence of the things
qua commodities, and the value relation between the products of
labour which stamps them as commodities, have absolutely no
6
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connection with their physical properties and with the material
relations arising therefrom. There it is a definite social relation
between men that assumes, in their eyes, the fantastic form of a
relation between things.7
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The relation of producers to “the sum total of their own labour” is
their relation to the exchange value that relates commodities to each
other. As the transposition of social relations among producers into
relations between products mediated by the ‘spectral objectivity’ of
value, fetishism is the occlusion of productive social activity in the act of
commodity exchange. Consciousness of the individual act of exchange
occludes consciousness of its social precondition. Consciousness is
necessarily false in the sense that we can only be individually conscious
of what we are doing in exchange by not being conscious of what we
are collectively doing in exchange. The collective practice of commodity
exchange is precisely what cannot be intuited or represented from the
vantage of individuals engaged in exchange. Exchange is a practical
abstraction whose concreteness can only be grasped by abstracting from
what appears as concrete from the vantage of individual consciousness.
The epistemic index for the primacy of social practice is its misprision
in consciousness. Practice is not transparent to its practitioners.
Supersensible abstraction (what Marx calls ‘form-determination’) is
the concrete form in which sensuous practice appears to theoretical
consciousness, which is the reified and reifying consciousness
conditioned by the division of (intellectual and manual) labour.
&
Two clarifications are necessary at this point. First, Marx’s
materialism is not soldered to a metaphysics of labour. Labour is not the
essence of history because useful work is necessarily misrepresented
as valuable labour within a specific historical context.8 There is no
determination of use that does not involve abstracting from the
historically specific determination of exchange-value under capitalism.
7
Marx 2000b, p. 473
8
“So far therefore as labour is a creator of use-value, is useful labour, it is a necessary
condition, independent of all forms of society for the existence of the human race; it is an eternal
nature-imposed necessity, without which there can be no material exchanges between man and
Nature, and therefore no life.” (Marx 2000b, p.464) Note that while useful labour in general is a
transhistorical condition of human life, the specific varieties of useful labour, or what counts as
useful labour within a particular society, will be historically variable. Marx does not postulate a set of
use-values in-themselves, transcending historically specific social formations. In a capitalist society
coordinated around the production and exchange of commodities, the use-values of commodities, i.e.
the variety of uses to which they can be put, is shaped in negative by the primacy of exchange-value,
which is the first and final cause of their existence.
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Thus there is no use in-itself, no domain of use-values transcending
historically specific alignments of production and consumption.
Second, Marx is not wedded to a metaphysics of production. Capitalist
production is commodity production: the form of production under
capital is conditioned by and subordinated to the commodity form. The
means of production themselves are composed of commodities. Thus,
under capitalism, both production and consumption are subordinated
to exchange (to the commodity-form and thereby to value). There is no
trans-historical perspective on production, save for what Marx describes
as “singling out and fixing” the general features common to historically
specific social formations. ‘Production in general’ is a methodological
abstraction, not an ontological category.9 To hypostatize production and
elevate it into a metaphysical principle (“nature is production”) is to
naturalize a historically specific social category. Since the commodityform is intrinsic to the categories of ‘production’ and ‘productivity’,
the logic of production is indissociable from the logic of commodity
exchange.10
But the practical reality of commodity exchange is not experienced
as practice within reified consciousness (i.e. the social consciousness
subjugated by the commodity form).11 Thus the reality of collective
practical activity can only be indirectly attested to by exposing
its symptomatic (fetishistic) misrepresentation both in individual
consciousness and the theoretical consciousness that takes its cue from
the latter. This is why the critique of political economy is necessary. To
grasp the structure of the necessary false consciousness operative in
9
“Whenever we speak, therefore, of production, we always have in mind production
at a certain stage of social development, or production by social individuals […] ‘Production in
general’ is an abstraction, but it is a rational abstraction, in so far as it singles out and fixes the
common features, thereby saving us repetition.” (Marx 2000a, p.381) Production as methodological
abstraction stands in contrast to the hypostatization of production, which often accompanies the
naturalization of capitalism. The latter involves a four-step argument, which Marx summarizes as
follows: (i) production always requires some instrument of production (“let that instrument be only
the hand”); (ii) production is not possible without past accumulated labour (“even if that labour
should consist of mere skill which has been accumulated and concentrated in the hand of the savage
by repeated exercise”); (iii) capital is (”among other things”) both an instrument of production and
past impersonal labour; (iv) therefore, “capital is a universal, eternal, natural phenomenon”. But
this is only true, writes Marx, “if we disregard the specific properties which turn an ‘instrument of
production’ and ‘stored up labour’ into capital.” (Marx 2000a, pp.381-382) These specific properties,
unveiled in Marx’s analysis, are their status as commodities and their subjection to the valorization
process, which is perpetuated by the practice of commodity exchange. But these are social
properties, not natural ones.
10
This ontologization of production arguably vitiates Deleuze and Guattari’s attempt to align
Marx with Spinoza in Anti-Oedipus (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983).
11
1972.
Lukacs’s remains the most powerful and sophisticated account of reification: see Lukacs
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misrepresentation is to identify this falsity as the only veritable index
of the social relation, understood as a system of impersonal practices,
rather than a set of interpersonal relations. The necessity of falsity points
to its inapparent truth. Consciousness is necessarily false: it does not
express the social relation (the system of impersonal practices) that is its
essence; it represses it.
The concrete-in-thought
Marx’s critique begins with the categories of political economy as
expressions of socially necessary false consciousness.
These categories are shown to be results of historically specific
conditions and relations of production. What critique reveals however
is not the truth of the invisible but the untruth of the visible, i.e. the
intelligible. What presents itself to thought as concrete is an incomplete
abstraction; but through its incompleteness, this abstraction harbors
a symptomatic relation to what is really concrete, the social totality.
The structure of the latter, however, is precisely what cannot be intuited
or inferred. It does not give itself to consciousness. It is ideologically
misrepresented as an aggregate of composite abstractions, which
critique must first decompose into their elementary parts before
recomposing these parts into a conceptual totality that corresponds to
the social totality but does not resemble it:
It seems to be the correct procedure to commence with the
real and the concrete, the actual prerequisites. In the case of
political economy, to commence with population, which is the
basis and the author of the entire productive activity of society.
Yet on closer consideration it proves to be wrong. Population is
an abstraction, if we leave out for example the classes of which
it consists. These classes, again, are but an empty word unless
we know what are the elements on which they are based, such
as wage-labour, capital, etc. These imply, in their turn, exchange,
division of labour, prices, etc. Capital, for example, does not mean
anything without wage-labour, value, money, price, etc. If we start
out, therefore, with population, we do so with a chaotic conception
[Vorstellung] of the whole [Ganzen], and by closer analysis we
will gradually arrive at simpler ideas; thus we shall proceed from
the imaginary [vorgestellten] concrete to less and less complex
abstractions, until we arrive at the simplest determinations. This
once attained, we might start on our return journey until we finally
came back to population, but this time not as a chaotic notion
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of an integral whole, but as a rich aggregate [Totalität] of many
determinations and relations […] The concrete is concrete because
it is a combination [Zusammengfassung] of many determinations,
i.e. a unity of diverse elements [Mannigfaltigen]. In our thought it
therefore appears as a process of synthesis, as a result, and not as
a starting-point, although it is the actual [wirkliche] starting-point
and, therefore, also the starting-point of observation [Anschaung]
and conception [Vorstellung]. By the former method the complete
conception passes into an abstract definition; by the latter the
abstract definitions lead to the reproduction of the concrete subject
in the course of reasoning.12
Marx’s method of critique comprises two steps: first the decomposition
of the abstracted (represented) concrete into its elementary components
(simple abstractions); then the recombination of simple abstractions
into concretely determined abstraction: the totality of determinations
as concrete-in-thought. What is represented as concrete-in-reality is
an indeterminate whole. What is reproduced as concrete-in-thought is
a determinate totality. The movement from abstract representation to
concrete reproduction is logical not material. Thus it is necessary to
distinguish ideal movement from the real act of production:
[T]he consciousness for which comprehending thought is
what is most real in man, for which the world is only real when
comprehended (and philosophical consciousness is of this nature),
mistakes the movement of categories for the real act of production
(which unfortunately receives only its impetus from outside),
whose result is the world; that is true—here we have, however,
again a tautology—in so far as the concrete aggregate [Totalität],
as a thought aggregate [Gedankentotalität], the concrete subject of
our thought [Gedankenkonkretum], is in fact a product of thought,
of comprehension; not, however, in the sense of a product of a
self-emanating conception which works outside of and stands
above observation [Anschaung] and imagination [Vorstellung], but
of a conceptual working-over [Verarbeitung] of observation and
imagination. The whole [Ganze], as it appears in our heads as a
thought-aggregate [Gedankenganze], is the product of a thinking
mind which grasps the world in the only way open to it, a way which
differs from the one employed by the artistic, religious, or practical
mind. The concrete [reale] subject continues to lead an independent
12
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existence after it has been grasped, as it did before, outside the
head, so long as the head contemplates it only speculatively,
theoretically. So that in the employment of the theoretical method
in political economy, the subject, society, must constantly be kept in
mind as the premise from which we start.13
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The difference between the real (social) subject and the thought
aggregate (e.g. society), or between what is really concrete and what
is concrete-in-thought, is not a difference in thought. But here an
obvious rejoinder presents itself: How are we to distinguish between
concrete and abstract in thought, and concrete and abstract in reality,
without invoking either a metaphysical or empirical difference between
thought and reality? Can Marx maintain this methodological distinction
without unwittingly reiterating philosophical dualisms (between thought
and reality, concept and thing, ideal and real) that have already been
dialectically superseded in Hegel’s idealism? The distinction between
real subject and thought-aggregate cannot be empirically attested to:
we cannot point to the real subject because the social totality is not
an empirical datum. Nor is it accessible from Feuerbach’s “absolute
standpoint”, which is that of the interpersonal relation between ‘I’ and
‘You’: Marx’s real subject is a locus of impersonal practices irreducible to
the interpersonal relation.14 Conversely, to insist that the difference can
be substantiated from a purely rational vantage point is to readopt the
contemplative stance whose separation of thought and being, or mind
and matter, reflects the division of labour and the separation of theory
and practice.
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I want to suggest that the right way to grasp Marx’s distinction
between concrete-in-thought and concrete-in-reality is neither as a
conceptual difference nor as an empirical difference but as a differencein-act. What is concrete-in-reality is the totality of impersonal social
practices and these practices constitute a system of actual differences
that cannot be ratified at the level of consciousness or experience. Thus
the fundamental difference, from which the critique of political economy
proceeds, is verified in social practice, rather than in experience or
thought. Recall the tenth thesis of historical materialism stated above:
the truth, i.e., the effectiveness or actuality (wirklichkeit) of thinking,
is established in practice. My claim is that for Marx, the actuality of
13
Marx 2000a, p.387
14
“The natural standpoint of man, the standpoint of the distinction between ‘I’ and ‘You’,
between subject and object is the true, the absolute standpoint and, hence, also the standpoint of
philosophy.” Feuerbach 2012, p. 528.
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practice verifies that of thought without there being a metaphysical
correspondence between the actuality of thought and the actuality of
practice. Indeed, Marx’s point is that while thought can adequately
represent the structure of practice, there is no similarity or resemblance
between the structure of thought (what is concrete-in-thought) and
that of practice (concrete-in-reality). What is concrete-in-reality is a
practical act whose nature does not reveal itself either to those executing
it or to the theoretical consciousness that takes the consciousness of
practitioners as its starting point.
Using and exchanging
Sohn-Rethel roots Marx’s distinction between use-value and exchangevalue in the socially instituted distinction between the act of using and
the act of exchanging. But this social distinction also has an ontological
basis:
The point is that use and exchange are not only different and
contrasting by description, but are mutually exclusive in time.
They must take place separately at different times. This is because
exchange serves only a change of ownership, a change, that is,
in terms of a purely social status of the commodities as owned
property. In order to make this change possible on a basis of
negotiated agreement the physical condition of the commodities,
their material status, must remain unchanged, or at any rate must
be assumed to remain unchanged. Commodity exchange cannot
take place as a recognised social institution unless this separation
of exchange from use is stringently observed. […] Thus the salient
feature of the act of exchange is that its separation from use has
assumed the compelling necessity of an objective social law.
Wherever commodity exchange takes place it does so in effective
'abstraction' from use. This is an abstraction not in mind, but in fact.
It is a state of affairs prevailing at a definite place and-lasting a
definite time. It is the state of affairs which reigns on the market.15
Commodity exchange separates use from value: this is the source of
real abstraction. Use is determined by qualitative particularity, exchange
by quantitative homogeneity. Using and exchanging are concrete social
acts. For Sohn-Rethel, it is their spatiotemporal disjunction (the fact that
one cannot exchange what one is using or use what one is exchanging)
15
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Sohn-Rethel 1978, pp. 24-25.
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that makes abstraction a concrete act. However, the act of exchange
presupposes the actuality of the commodity-form: every exchange is
an exchange of commodities (buying and selling). But exchange cannot
generate commodification if commodification is the condition of exchange
(i.e the commodification of labour as wage-labour). Thus the reality of
the exchange abstraction implies a difference between exchange-in-act
(the actuality of exchange) and the act of exchange. The concrete act
generative of abstraction cannot presuppose its actuality. The sociality of
the act of exchange is distinct from the actuality of commodification. But
sociality is the totality of relations joining productive forces and relations
(otherwise it is a metaphysical abstraction). Since the production
process presupposes commodification and commodification (the
exchange-abstraction) presupposes un-commodified social activity, we
face the following dilemma: either try to give a positive account of noncommodified sociality, i.e. of the social relation, at the risk of relapsing
into an ultimately ideological metaphysics of sociality (reiterating
Feuerbach’s conflation of sociality and communality); or we insist that
we cannot determine the social relation other than as the negation of
commodified sociality. The latter option implies that the un-commodified
root of commodified sociality cannot be positively characterised as
social.
Labour and valorization
The difference between exchange as act and exchange as actuality
underlies the distinction between concrete and abstract labour. The
labour that enters into the composition of value has already had its
qualitative particularity expunged from it through the act of exchange:
“[W]henever, by an exchange, we equate as values our different products,
by that very act, we also equate, as human labour, the different kinds of
labour expended upon them. We are not aware of this, nevertheless we do
it. Value, therefore, does not stalk about with a label describing what it is.
It is value, rather, that converts every product into a social hieroglyphic.”16
By inscribing itself into the body of every commodity, the ‘spectral
objectivity’ of value converts every product into a cipher whose sensuous
structure is blotted out by its supersensuous signification. But the
process in which value acquires substance and inscribes itself into the
commodity is also the process in which labour is transubstantiated
into value. This is the process in which concretely differentiated human
16
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Marx 2000b, p. 474 (my italics).
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labour is rendered into what Marx describes as an undifferentiated
“bloße Gallerte”, a ‘gelatinous mass’.17 Yet this rendering process, the
reduction of concretely differentiated labour into undifferentiated
abstract labour, is already governed by value. Thus value oversees its
own substantialization: it perpetually regenerates itself by ensuring
that the substrate from which it draws substance, labour, has ‘always
already’ been rendered homogenous with it. This is carried out through
what Michael Heinrich calls a “threefold reduction”: of individually
expended labor-time to average socially necessary labor-time; of
individual productivity to socially average productivity correlated with
monetary social demand; of differences in kinds and degrees of skill
to a socially average type and degree of skill.18 Thus the abstraction of
labour is its social validation as value-constituting labour. Abstract labour
is both socially valorized and valorizing insofar as it has already been
appropriated by what Marx calls “self-sufficient value”:19 its “valorizing
activity” is carried out on behalf of self-valorizing value.
However, Marx insists, “the value of labour-power and the value
which that labour-power creates in the production process, are two
entirely different magnitudes.”20 As with every other commodity, the value
of labour-power is measured by the socially necessary time required
to reproduce it. But in reproducing itself, labour-power creates value in
excess of itself, i.e., a value greater than the value of labour-power as
measured by the time required for its reproduction. This is what Marx calls
‘surplus-value’. Surplus-value is a function of the discrepancy between
the value of unexpended labour-power, a value measured by the time
required to reconstitute an equivalent of this unexpended potential, and
the value generated by its expenditure, which is greater than that of its
unexpended state. This appeal to the metaphysical distinction between
potentiality and actuality should not be taken to entail the ontologization
of labour-power; rather, it follows from its social status as a commodity.
The distinction between potential and actualized labour-power is internal
to commodified labour; it is decreed by capitalism’s metaphysics of
value. But it does not map onto the distinction between abstract and
concrete labour. The actualization of labour-power, i.e. the consumption
of its use-value in the capitalist production process, generates
17
For an insightful discussion of the significance of the expression “bloße Gallerte” see
Sutherland 2010.
18
See Heinrich 2012, pp.100-102
19
See Marx 2000a, p.409
20
Marx 2000b, p.504
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exchange-values in excess of the exchange-value of labour-power.
As Peter Thomas points out, this is a consequence of labour-power’s
exceptional status as the commodity whose use-value is generative of
the exchange-value of all other commodities: “labour-power is the only
commodity that is not exhausted in the consumption of its particular
use-value following exchange. On the contrary, the consumption of the
use-value of labour-power has the potential to give the capitalist more
exchange-values than the seller of labour-power, the worker, received.”21
But note that the consumption of labour-power is only potentially
productive of exchange-values greater than its own. This is because, as
Thomas observes, although it is exchanged as abstract labour-power,
it is consumed as concrete labour. The capitalist’s consumption of this
concrete labour generates another magnitude of potential abstract value;
but its realization as a surplus depends on additional factors exceeding
those of production per se (e.g. social demand, the market, etc). More
importantly, the difference between the exchange and consumption of
labour-power (which corresponds to the difference between abstract and
concrete labour) does not unfold in the same dimension as the difference
between its potentiality and its actuality. The first difference transects
the second but does not overlap with it. While the difference between
the actuality and potentiality of labour-power is internal to the exchange
abstraction, the difference between exchanging and consuming labourpower bridges the spheres of exchange and use, which is to say, between
the abstract and the concrete. This is why Thomas describes labourpower as a “vanishing mediator” between the spheres of circulation and
production.22 However, it is not labour-power qua commodity that plays
this mediating role between the spheres of circulation and production,
since the commodity-form already presupposes the constitution of
the difference between these two spheres, or the difference between
exchange and use. Thus the actuality of the exchange abstraction (within
which the difference between potential and actual labour-power obtains)
is constituted by a concrete act that also establishes the difference
between exchanging and using, or circulation and production. The
vanishing mediator here is not labour-power but the unvalidated act
through which labour is abstracted into its socially validated, valueconstituting role.
Value is measured abstractly (through abstract labour time) but
realized concretely (through concrete labour time). Thus surplus-value
21
Thomas 2010, p.51
22
Thomas 2010, p.52
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is a function not only of the difference between the potential and actual
expenditure of labour-power, but also of the inequality between the value
of labour as measured by the abstract time required to reproduce it,
and the value of the products generated through its reproduction when
measured by the same yardstick. Whether absolute and obtained by the
extensive increase of expended labour-power (lengthening the working
day) or relative and obtained through its intensive increase (increasing
productivity without lengthening the working day), surplus-value is
generated by the unvalorized surplus labour required for labour’s selfreproduction. Thus capital extracts surplus-value from labour-power’s
activation of the value embodied in both constant and variable capital
(a value which is itself nothing but a sum of objectified or ‘congealed’
labour-power). Potential surplus-value is realized as profit with the
sale of the products of labour-power and then reinvested in production.
In the diagram below, the valorization process proceeds from money
(M, representing constant and variable capital), to commodities (C,
representing living labour’s activation of the value embodied in constant
and variable capital), to a greater quantity of money generated through
the extraction of surplus-value from living labour’s activation of the initial
sum of value (M’, surplus-value):
Capital as self-valorizing value
Constant
capital
(machinery)
Variable
capital
(wages)
Labour process
(living labour’s
activation of
value)
Extraction of surplus-value
(surplus labour from socially
necessary labour)
In reproducing itself, living labour creates the ‘spectral objectivity’ of
value, to which it is re-subordinated in turn as commodified wage-labour,
i.e. socially validated labour. But the difference between commodified
and un-commodified labour is neither metaphysical nor sociological: it
is the formal difference between socially validated exchange and the
unvalidated act of exchange.
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Dissociative sociality
In a society where all social validation is governed by exchange, Tony
Smith suggests that the actuality of the social relation is necessarily
dissociative. Following Smith, I want to argue that since, under
capitalism, the social component of dissociation is governed by exchange
(commodification), the practical source of commodification (the act of
exchange) is necessarily asocial. This is to say that socially validated
labour is conditioned by un-validated practical activity. This entails a split
between the essence of sociality and the essence of value, i.e. capital.
Smith formulates this split as follows:
Generalised commodity-production must be conceptualised as a set
of relationships among things (commodities and money), with value
reigning as the ‘essence’ of these relationships. The underlying
truth of this essence (abstract, homogeneous and quantitative
value) is adequately manifested in its form of appearance (abstract,
homogeneous and quantitative money).23
On Smith’s account, commodity exchange is the alien form of
sociality in the historically specific mode of dissociated sociality.
Sociality is the ‘essence’ of the totality of productive forces and relations.
But this essence can only manifest itself as its own untruth (as capitalist
‘society’). Dissociative sociality entails that social relations cannot
appear as what they essentially are:
The social ontology of generalised commodity-production is
defined by two completely incommensurable Essence-Logics in
Hegel’s sense of the term. On the one hand, value is the essence
commodities must possess to play a role in social reproduction. This
essence adequately appears in the form of the money that validates
the production of those commodities. But the value of commodities
is a reflection of the form taken by human sociality in our epoch,
and the money that manifests value is nothing but the fetishized
appearance of this quite different sort of essence. Each essenceclaim is incompatible with the other; neither can be reduced to or
explained away by the other.24
This bifurcation in the essence of the social totality follows from
capital’s being a “contradiction in act”: it is compelled to reduce labour
23
Smith 2009, p. 31.
24
Tony Smith 2009, p. 32
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time to a minimum while maintaining it as the sole measure of value.
Socially necessary labour time is decreased in order to increase surplus
labour time, thereby turning surplus labour time into the condition
for necessary labour time. Capital’s self-reproduction, i.e. its infinite
expansion as self-valorizing value, generates the internal obstacle to its
reproduction, i.e. the immanent limit to its infinite expansion.25 Thus, as
Endnotes put it, capital is split between its “constant return to itself as
true infinity, and its incessant driving beyond itself as false or spurious
infinity.”26
This scission in the capitalist totality, its ‘contradiction-in-act’,
generates the split between the reproductive cycles of capital and
of labour-power. Capital reproduces itself through the valorization
process, in which necessary labour is constantly diminished to maximize
surplus labour and hence surplus-value. At the same time, labourpower reproduces itself by valorizing capital, but in doing so increases
surplus labour, making necessary labour ever more dependent upon it.
Thus the activation of value in the valorization process depends not
on the abstract difference between potential and actual labour-power
but on the concrete actuality of the disjunct between (un-commodified,
valueless) practice and (commodified, valuable) activity. Interpreted in
this way, Marx’s contrast between ‘living’ and ‘dead’ labour is shorn of
its Romantic, vitalist overtones. Adopting Marx’s terminology, we could
say that it is labour-power as commodity that is subsumed by capital,
not living labour as such. But the capitalist class relation compels living
labour to commodify (i.e. sell) itself in order to reproduce itself, thereby
also reproducing capital:
Proletariat and capital stand in a relation of reciprocal implication
with each other: each pole reproduces the other, such that the
relation between the two is self-reproducing. The relation is
asymmetric, however, in that it is capital which subsumes the labour
of proletarians.27
25
“Capital is itself contradiction in act, since it makes an effort to reduce
labour time to the minimum, while at the same time establishing labour time as
the sole measurement and source of wealth. Thus it diminishes labour time in
its necessary form, in order to increase its surplus form; therefore it increasingly establishes surplus
labour time as a condition (a question of life and death) for necessary labour time.” (Marx 2000a,
p.415, translation modified)
26
Endnotes 2010
27
Endnotes 2010
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purchase of labour-power
purchase of means
of consumption
reproduction
of capital
reproduction
of labour-power
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28
capitalist process of
production
Labour-power’s purchase of the means of consumption it requires to
reproduce itself fuels capital’s purchase of labour-power in capital’s selfreproduction. The exchange of labour-power for wages (C→M) initiates
the reproduction of labour-power; the exchange of wages for commodities
(M→C) completes it. At the same time, but at the opposite pole of the
class relation, the capitalist’s purchase of labour-power (M→C) is the
exchange that initiates the valorization process, while the sale of the
commodities embodying the surplus-value extracted from labour-power
(C→M’) is the exchange that completes it. Both reproductive cycles (of
labour-power and capital) are mediated by exchange. Yet exchange cannot
be realized without the intervention of valueless activity, which capital
requires to activate value, i.e., to convert the magnitude of actual value
embodied in fixed and constant capital into a potential surplus.
Conclusion
Reification is the fetishization of social relations: the transposition of
relations between producers into relations between products. But Marx’s
critique of reification is epistemological not ontological. The distinction
between ‘living’ (objectivating) and ‘dead’ (objectified) labour is not a
metaphysical contrast between authentic and inauthentic existence or
28
it.
This diagram is taken from Endnotes 2008. I would like to thank Endnotes for letting me use
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between lived and represented experience. It is a formal contrast between
unconscious (unvalidated) practice and conscious (socially validated)
activity. Nevertheless, the contrast has an ontological premise: the
actuality of exchange depends upon an act that is not actually exchanged
(valorized). This unconscious practice is essentially or veridically human
precisely in the sense that, under capitalism, our socially validated
humanity (as persons) is necessarily dissociative. The question is
whether knowing this, and the necessary worthlessness of continuing to
reproduce ourselves under the capital relation, provides any clue about
determining the negation of this contradiction between what we do and
what we are.
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Bibliography:
Endnotes 2008, ‘Afterword’ in Endnotes 1: Preliminary Materials for a Balance Sheet of the 20th
Century, https://endnotes.org.uk/issues/1/en/endnotes-afterword.
Endnotes 2010, ‘The Moving Contradiction’ in Endnotes 2: Misery and the Value-Form, https://
endnotes.org.uk/issues/2/en/endnotes-the-moving-contradiction.
Feuerbach, Ludwig 2012, The Fiery Brook: Selected Writings, trans. Zawar Hanfi, London and
New York: Verso.
Heinrich, Michael 2012, An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx’s Capital, trans.
Alexander Locascio, New York, NY: Monthly Review Press.
Lukács, Georg 1972, ‘Reification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat’ in History and
Class Consciousness, trans. Rodney Livingstone, Cambridge, MA and London: MIT Press, pp. 83-222.
Marx, Karl 1998, The German Ideology. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books.
Marx, Karl 2000, Selected Writings, David McLellan (ed.), 2nd edition. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
________ 2000a, Grundrisse in Marx 2000, pp. 379-423.
________ 2000b, Capital: Volume I in Marx 2000, pp. 452-525.
Smith, Tony 2009, ‘Hegel, Marx, and the Comprehension of Capitalism’ in Marx’s Capital and
Hegel’s Logic: A Re-examination, Fred Moseley and Tony Smith (eds.) Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books.
Sohn-Rethel, Alfred 1978, Intellectual and Manual Labour: A Critique of Epistemology, trans.
Martin Sohn-Rethel, London and Basingstoke: The Macmillan Press.
Sutherland, Keston 2010, ‘Marx in Jargon’, http://www.worldpicturejournal.com/WP_1.1/
KSutherland.pdf
Thomas, Peter 2010, ‘Labour-Power (Arbeitskraft)’ in Krisis: Journal of Contemporary
Philosophy, 2010, Issue 2, http://krisis.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/krisis-2010-2-09-thomas.pdf?
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