That is, pretty much, the labor theory of value, and that theory has several issues.Raphael wrote: ↑Wed Aug 26, 2020 9:10 am What if we use different metrics for valuing things? What, for instance, about the work that goes into producing goods and services? Would you seriously claim that each year, the result of more hours of human work is brought from the richer parts of the world to the poorer parts of the world than vice versa? Would you seriously claim that over the last 700 years, the result of more hours of human work was brought from the richer parts of the world to the poorer parts of the world than vice versa?
The thing is, it's entirely possible to work people to death and still get zero value in return.
I don't know much about British India... But it's entirely possible that they managed to get, by force, the product of countless hours of labor and be unprofitable.
(But the fact that we didn't profit from colonialism then doesn't mean we don't profit from labor exploitation in poorer countries now!)
So ultimately, you can only eliminate oppression by valuing freedom as defined by the Ljubljana school ? That's a nice hypothesis, but it's completely unproveable!rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed Aug 26, 2020 9:35 am At first, Frenchmen even supported the Haitian Revolution. Then they gradually became "reasonable" as ideology evolved to let them both love freedom and enrich themselves. The meaning of freedom is a deep issue in contemporary philosophy. The Ljubljana school would classify Spartan freedom as "obscurantism". A huge part of their theory presents a meaning of freedom that avoids obscuring oppressive practices.
PS. They trace their origins to the early French Revolution.