Abraham Rotstein, Weekend Notes

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Overview

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Part Date KPA
I February 25, 1956 45/02
II May 5, 1956 45/03
III July 14, 1956 45/04
IV August 25/26, 1956 45/05
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX April 6, 1957 45/06
X
XI May 25, 1957 45/07
XII June 25, 1957 45/08
XIII July 20, 1957 45/09
XIV August 24, 1957 45/10
XV September 14, 1957 45/11
XVI
XVII October 12, 1957 45/12
XVIII November 2, 1957 45/13
XIX December 21, 1957 45/14
XX February 15, 1958 45/16
XXI March 29, 1958 45/17
XXII April 27 - May 4, 1958 45/18
XXIII June 30 - August 10, 1958 45/19
XXIV August 23, 1958 45/20
XXV


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I

  • The Background of The Great Transformation
  • Russia
  • The Current Crisis
  • The Reality of Society
  • The U.S.A.
  • The Market and a Theory of Nationalism
  • Discussion oy My Letter of Dec. 17/55
  • Remarks
    • "Trade and Markets" Book
    • Sievers
    • New Book
    • Sundry

II

  • Parsons
  • The Reality of Society [II]
  • Politics and the Current Crisis
  • The Institutionalists
  • Background of the Great Transformation [II]
  • The Exchange Triad and the Gold Standard
  • The U.S.A. [II]
  • The 1958 Book
  • The Ford Project
  • Remarks
    • The Trade Cycle
    • World Religion
    • Meaning of "material"
    • Questions
    • Sundry

III

  • Religion and Revelation
  • The Rousseau Problem
  • Klages and History
  • Beyond the Great Transformation
  • Industrialism
  • Modern Politics
  • Background of Polanyi's Work
  • The Russians and Chinese
  • Art
  • Psychology
  • Remarks
    • Canada
    • Hesiod
    • Greece
    • The Quiet American
    • Nuclear Discoveries
    • Personal

IV

  • G[eorge] B[ernard] Shaw
  • The Great Transformation and America
  • Technology and Utopia
  • The 1957 Book and Beyond
  • Rationality
  • The Revelations
  • Freedom
  • Archaeology
  • Christianity and the Social Revolution
  • Modern Politics
  • Marx
  • World Trade
  • Joan Robinson - The Accumulation of Capital
  • Anthropology Fieldbook
  • The Mind
  • Art
  • Remarks
    • Borkenau
    • C.S. Louis
    • Gardening

V

VI

VII

VIII

IX

The Great Transformation and America [II]

Freedom and Technology

Human Society

The Mind

Money

"Trade and Market"

The Great Transformation

Notes

Interdisciplinary Project

Pearl Harbour

Suez

Dubarle

Homans

Jews and Christianity

[28+57] The reason for anti-semitism is that Jews are rightly charged with having brought Christianity into the world and then evading the consequence. (P. thinks it is true). The Jew thinks that the Gentil is pretty silly to be saddled with the religion. It is an unbearable burden.

P. always thought so. The Nazis said that Bolshevism was Christianity all over again and the Jews ought to be destroyed because they are responsible for Christianity.

X

XI

"Freedom and Technology" - General Comments

[…]

[4] One of the things that P. might do is not to speak of Christianity but of religion. There is not a religion which doesn't deal with man's inner freedom. If he has religion, he has inner life and that is what the rest of life turns on. Religion is like metaphysics.


The Christians don't accept a deeper meaning to their position and you immediately get them against you. You are attacked when you say that something deeper exists aside from its content. […]

[14] In a way, it is not the individual who is fighting the condition - but the conditions which are fighting the individual with a delusion - until it bursts like an inflated ballon. P. wrote this 49 years ago and [15] called it the "Passive Drama"[1]. The individual tries to maintain his delusion but proves unable to do so. […]

Shaw argues that the indestructible character of society (the reality of society) allows the individual much more freedom than he thinks he has e.g. marriage, estate, God. Society is not based on his good behavior in following conventional rules of the day. He will still follow conventional rules but not of the day. Shaw shows ironically how conventionally he behaves when he imagines he behaves unconventionally. […]

[18] Owen said that human environment determines character. […]

[20] From Owen we jump to urbanization, central power, lighting, information and communication, telephone, telegraph, police, newspaper and railways. Then you get public utilities and public service and the danger to society that lies in that.

[28] The modern complaints occur with Freud, Nietzsche and Sartre. Marx was more of a liberal Christian.

Shaw's vitalism (the life force)…

[30] P. think that Jaspers is boring and confused stuff. It does contain important insights but, for example, Jaspers thinks that Russia is the end of everything. This is unphilosophical measuring, of using one red for one thing and another red for another. Why doesn't he say something clear, simple and sensible?

In Jasper's book he puts everything on the masses. So does Tocqueville and Maine (i.e. under liberty you never have progress because the masses -and this was Spencer's influence on him). […]

P. discovered his philosopher. Robert Owen was the only person we can point to. He expressed the thought that he didn't realize. It was his actions which proved that he realized it - what he did in the factory.

Robert Owen

The Reality of Society

The Interdependence of Technology, Fear & Power

The New Sociology

Comments on my Preface

The Economy and 'the Social Question'

The Great Transformation [II]

Freud

Notes

The Chinese riots on Formosa

The Early Marx

Modern Politics

"The Great Transformation and America" [III]

Miscellaneous

Editors Critical Notes

  1. Is this text "A Történelmi materializmus Drámája” in 1907, 50 years ago? -- Santiago Pinault, 19 June 2017 (BST)

See also