The key to the critique of capitalism is the measure of wealth in terms of socially necessary labor time. In contrast, the overcoming of capitalism requires that we measure our wealth in terms of what I call socially available free time.What a twist on that expression we're living through right now! We have all kinds of "free time," but so long as we're following the lifesaving physical distancing guidelines the epidemiologists insist we must, we're not available to socialize except through the proxy of communications technologies like Zoom. We should be grateful, not for the distance but for the technologies that allow us to surmount it.
The technologies that could make us wealthier -- that could give us more time to lead our lives -- are instead employed to exploit human labor even when such labor is not needed. If we measured our wealth in terms of socially available free time, however, then machines would produce value for us by virtue of their own operations.Remember what Thoreau said in Walden? “The cost of a thing is the amount of what I will call life which is required to be exchanged for it, immediately or in the long run.” Hagglund's analysis says the cost of capitalism has become prohibitive, has been extracting too much life for too little return. Time is money? No, time is worth a lot more than that. In the long run, this life is all we can count on.
Continuing in the present chapter, Hagglund says when we convert labor intensity devoted to ends and occupations that don't really matter to us into socially available free time, we can "engage the question of what we should do with our lives and pursue the activities that matter to us." And then we'll be really rich. As matters now stand, we're acquainted with the cost of things but not their true value.
How do we get there, from here? First we've got to defeat the killer virus, and learn the lessons our unpreparedness should be teaching us before the next one arrives.
Then we've got to ask ourselves, really ask, if we've done right by time and how we can and must do that with the time of our future lives.
Because, as John Prine's daddy told him, "Buddy, when you're dead..."
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UPDATE, 4.7.20, 9 pm. Damn.
John Prine, the raspy-voiced country-folk singer whose ingenious lyrics to songs by turns poignant, angry and comic made him a favorite of Bob Dylan, Kris Kristofferson and others, died Tuesday at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn. He was 73.
The cause was complications from Covid-19, his family said... (continues)
The cause was complications from Covid-19, his family said... (continues)
Go to town, John, and take that wristwatch off your arm. Your genius is timeless. #JohnPrine twitter.com/OSOPHER/status …
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Free time is important for our physical and mental health. It relives us of our daily stress of the world in my opinion.
ReplyDeleteI believe idol time isn't good for teenagers. We need something to keep us busy and active, not sit in the house and do work. There's an unhealthy amount of leisure time available right now!
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