Cambridge Journal of Economics Advance Access published online on March 4, 2009
Cambridge Journal of Economics, doi:10.1093/cje/bep006
Marxism and the critique of social rationality: from surplus value to the politics of technology
* Simon Fraser University at Harbour Centre, Vancouver
Address for correspondence: Canada Research Chair in Philosophy of Technology, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University at Harbour Centre, ACT, Room 3598, 515 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, British Columbia V6B 5K3, Canada; email: feenberg{at}sfu.ca
The most effective way to silence criticism is a justification on the very terms of the likely critique. When an action is rationally justified, how can reason deny its legitimacy? This paper concerns critical strategies that have been employed for addressing the resistance of rationality to rational critique, particularly with respect to technology. Foucault addressed this problem in his theory of power/knowledge. This paper explores Marx's anticipation of that approach in his critique of the social rationality of the market and technology. Marx got around the silencing effect of social rationality with something very much like the concept of underdetermination in his discussion of the length of the working day. There are hints of a critique of technology in his writings as well. In the 1960s and 1970s, neo-Marxists and post-structuralists demanded radical changes in the technological rationality of advanced societies. Soon technical controversies spread, primarily through the influence of the environmental movement. The concept of underdetermination was finally formulated clearly in contemporary science and technology studies, but without explicit political purpose. Nevertheless, this revision of the academic understanding of technology contributes to weakening technocratic rationales for public policy. A new era of technical politics has begun.
Key Words: Marxism Technology
JEL classifications: B14, B24, B31, B51, P16
Manuscript received April 2, 2008; final version received January 15, 2009.