Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby neverfox » Mon Nov 24, 2008 21:34

Cork wrote:I think you're reading too far into this. Tucker is just explaining why he thinks someone shouldn't be able to make a living loaning out his plough (that plough quote was the exact one I was thinking of, btw). He's not defining "wage," here. He did that in Labor and Its Pay:

http://flag.blackened.net/daver/anarchi ... ker37.html

Here, he explicitly defines wages as "the purchase and sale of labor." Not the product of labor (which is what a plough would be). Remember: Tucker wants the distinction between wage payers and wage receivers wiped out, not the wage payers and receivers themselves.

The man is certainly hard to follow though.


I might be but I'm hard on Tucker because he is so about his "Consistent Manchesterism" and liberty.

But think about this example. He is describing a one-person enterprise. If "every man" is to be dependent, are we to assume that Tucker thinks this guys doesn't earn a wage when he sells his plough? Are we to assume that Tucker expects or implies that this man has another job bagging groceries at the Piggly Wiggly and that makes him "dependent"? I seriously doubt it. So this at least shows that selling the product of labor can be a wage in Tucker's world. Of course, it's true that it doesn't prove that it's not a wage to sell labor power or time but at least I think we can settle on the inclusion of the product sale in the definition of wages. I quite sure Tucker did think you could sell both the product and the time. What he doesn't say is how that time is spent. Tucker was also not a natural right-ist.

Now when I go the extra step and say that people in a multi-person enterprise should sell not their labor power (which implies that they hand over control of themselves and the product) I'm only taking the plough example and making it universal. What I'm not doing is making a "difference" when Tucker says "it will make no difference whether men work for themselves, or are employed, or employ others" where as Proudhon says "no one obeys, no one is dependent, and everyone is free and sovereign" and are "essentially producers, and abdicate all pretension to govern each other". When I "hire" a plumber for example I say that I "employ" him do I not? But I do not control his business and I don't have responsibility for his work. I'd be interested in any Tucker passages that actually say that capital should govern the action of the worker (beyond fulfilling the contract which isn't really governing anyway) and where capital is assumed to be the "firm" or where people should be legally treated as things from the perspective of responsibility. They may exists. I don't honestly know. I haven't read every line of Tucker. I'm just saying mainly that Tucker doesn't contradict the possibility of universl self-employment and that it doesn't contradict mutualism's goals though it may contradict the full conclusions of Tucker himself.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby Cork » Mon Nov 24, 2008 22:22

But think about this example. He is describing a one-person enterprise. If "every man" is to be dependent, are we to assume that Tucker thinks this guys doesn't earn a wage when he sells his plough? Are we to assume that Tucker expects or implies that this man has another job bagging groceries at the Piggly Wiggly and that makes him "dependent"? I seriously doubt it.


Tucker thinks that the only legitimate way to make a living is through labor: either selling the product of your labor or selling your labor itself (he defines the latter as wages). He believes it's unfair that some people have to make a living through labor while others are able to make a living by loaning out capital. He wants a world where everybody has to make a living through labor (whether selling one's labor or selling the product of one's labor), instead of "usury." At least that's how I interpret it.

IMO, the fact that he doesn't differentiate the two in the quote is simply coincidental. Either that, or the sentence might have just sounded too long and awkward if he had done so. In any case, he did differentiate the two earlier in the article:

In No 121 of Liberty, criticising an attempt of Kropotkine to identify Communism and Individualism, I charged him with ignoring "the real question of whether Communism will permit the individual to labor independently, own tools, sell his labor or his products, and buy the labor or products of others." In Herr Most's eyes this is so outrageous that, in reprinting it, he puts the words "the labor of others" in large black type. Most being a Communist, he must, to be consistent, object to the purchase and sale of anything whatever but why he should particularly object to the purchase and sale of labor is more than I can understand. Really, in the last analysis, labor is the only thing that has any title to be bought or sold.

When I "hire" a plumber for example I say that I "employ" him do I not? But I do not control his business and I don't have responsibility for his work. I'd be interested in any Tucker passages that actually say that capital should govern the action of the worker (beyond fulfilling the contract which isn't really governing anyway) and where capital is assumed to be the "firm" or where people should be legally treated as things from the perspective of responsibility. They may exists. I don't honestly know. I haven't read every line of Tucker.


I'm pretty sure that Tucker is fine with the owner of capital goods employing the laborer. It's heavily implied in the quote, because he's responding to a guy who thinks only labor-owned firms are legitimate. In addition, it's basically much what Carson says in those quotes I gave you.

Of course, I agree that it's awfully confusing. I agree with you and Franc: if you think profit is theft, why bother with the damn capitalist at all? Just cut to the labor-owned firm. What the hell's the point? This is something I probably should have gone into greater detail in, in that post--I wonder if the "contradiction" I'm talking about is really all that clear to the reader.
Last edited by Cork on Tue Nov 25, 2008 14:39, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby shawnpwilbur » Tue Nov 25, 2008 00:50

Cork wrote:Frankly, I don't know shit about Proudhon (I have some very basic knowledge...that's about it). But according to Shawn Wilbur, he did indeed support some form of wages and perhaps even profit (at least after 1846). See here: http://www.anarchism.net/forum/index.php?id=15676

Hey, Cork, all I said in that thread was that I would be surprised if Proudhon explicitly denied all wage labor, in the period after he started working with his "economic contradictions." That's the point at which he started focusing on showing how existing institutions were imperfect expressions of progress. Like the Fourierists and the Eclectics of the very early 19th century, he was looking for the positive aspects of everything, but "support" is probably the wrong word, since the goal was to get on to the next, better thing. If Proudhon is working towards the position where he'll point to war as an imperfect form of peace, and absolute egoism as the root-stock of libertarian socialism, he's not likely to be passing out edicts against much of anything. But he's not pinning a gold star on much either.

I may post something about the "was Tucker a mutualist" question in the near future. The answer depends on what you think the key elements of mutualism are. He was obviously a very different kind of thinker and political actor than either Proudhon or Greene.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby shawnpwilbur » Tue Nov 25, 2008 01:13

neverfox wrote:Shawn is a smart guy but we don't agree on everything detail. His focus, as he will tell you I think, is to bring clarity to Proudhon. But my response is, "Great, but I'm not required to buy everything Proudhon or anyone is selling." The fact is that I fully expect that most of the 19th century economic philosophers will have missed some of the picture. It the rush to make sure everyone gets a fair share, a lot gets overlooked (just look at Marx).

Actually, while Proudhon is a present focus, all of my real goals relate to present struggles. It so happens that we apparently need to dig deep into the history of the various anarchist and libertarian traditions in order to piece together a common language, as well as draw lines from our revitalized traditions to more contemporary forms of resistant thought (the poststructuralist thought we both value, the morality "without sanction or obligation" of the late 19th century, etc.)

The question of wages has been complicated by a series of partisan translations and partisan readings. We know that Proudhon was opposed to the existence of a "salariat," a class or caste characterized by its dependence on wages. We know that Leroux held similar opinions, and that Greene (who synthesized the two) inherited the opposition from both sides. Some of the anarchist communist commentators don't mean individual and voluntary sales of labor when they talk about "wage labor," they mean the existence of a salariat. That doesn't mean they approve of wages, in those individual and voluntary cases, but what it mostly means is that they simply don't take those cases into account. Some of them want to get rid of money, so there's no need to have an opinion on wages; others just act like you're talking about a caste or class system, whenever the word "wage" appears.

My answer to all of this, and I'm not sure Kevin would disagree with me, is that mutualism is very simply not a theory of wages, nor is it a banking system, nor is it a manifestation of an LTV opposed to a STV. Mutualism is based in mutuality and reciprocity. It may be egoistic in nature or think of itself as a new neo-christian dispensation. But the details are "approximations." Some of them are still useful approximations, but they're all pretty much old as dirt now, so some of them probably aren't all that useful. Proudhon's "Catechism of Marriage" can go to the trash bin of history, except as an example of uneven development in the thought of a great "thick" libertarian. His proposals with regard to property probably still have some stuff to be dug out of them. A lot of our arguments are just silly, because they assume an investment in the details of proposals that were very much grounded in the specifics of a particular time. Much of the apparent inconsistency of people like Proudhon and Greene is a result of contemporary readers not bothering to distinguish between work that was supposed to be general and philosophical in nature and that which was aimed at fixing something very specific that was broken in 1849, or 1863.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby Cork » Tue Nov 25, 2008 01:21

Awesome! Welcome Shawn. We're just one big happy market anarchist family here, it seems.

Hey, Cork, all I said in that thread was that I would be surprised if Proudhon explicitly denied all wage labor, in the period after he started working with his "economic contradictions." That's the point at which he started focusing on showing how existing institutions were imperfect expressions of progress. Like the Fourierists and the Eclectics of the very early 19th century, he was looking for the positive aspects of everything, but "support" is probably the wrong word, since the goal was to get on to the next, better thing.


My bad. But I could have sworn seeing some quote from somewhere, where Proudhon says that's ok if someone wants to be employed instead of taking the risks of entrepreneurship. I'm not sure where I saw it, or if I even interpreted it incorrectly, or if it contradicted other things he wrote. Any idea what I might be thinking of? Just curious.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby neverfox » Tue Nov 25, 2008 09:42

shawnpwilbur wrote:My answer to all of this, and I'm not sure Kevin would disagree with me, is that mutualism is very simply not a theory of wages, nor is it a banking system, nor is it a manifestation of an LTV opposed to a STV. Mutualism is based in mutuality and reciprocity.


Thank you, Shawn. This is very important to remember. Other threads here have become manically obsessed with "So what's the mutualist rule on petting someone's dog?" I keep trying to tell people that mutualism isn't about rules. It's more a label applied to the a situation where "mutuality and reciprocity" is present. The rest is up to Zeus. And I'm sorry if my conjectures about your work's focus was off. Just a respectful stab in the dark. I'm glad you are here though to answer for yourself.

Cork, I'm working on a reply to you that should be finished shortly. I got too tired last night.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby shawnpwilbur » Tue Nov 25, 2008 11:49

neverfox wrote:
shawnpwilbur wrote:My answer to all of this, and I'm not sure Kevin would disagree with me, is that mutualism is very simply not a theory of wages, nor is it a banking system, nor is it a manifestation of an LTV opposed to a STV. Mutualism is based in mutuality and reciprocity.

Thank you, Shawn. This is very important to remember. Other threads here have become manically obsessed with "So what's the mutualist rule on petting someone's dog?" I keep trying to tell people that mutualism isn't about rules. It's more a label applied to the a situation where "mutuality and reciprocity" is present. The rest is up to Zeus. And I'm sorry if my conjectures about your work's focus was off. Just a respectful stab in the dark. I'm glad you are here though to answer for yourself.

The rest is up to us, and I would probably say that in mutualism "mutuality and reciprocity" aren't just present, but trump most other concerns. Add to that concern a relentlessly "progressive" element, since mutualism is committed to constantly increasing liberty within the context of justice-as balance: Proudhon's notion of "immanent justice" and Greene's invocation of the "blazing star" are the touchstones here. And then add a "conservative" element, meaning a tendency to mine present ideas and institutions for their libertarian elements, and to try to avoid throwing the baby out with the bathwater, and you have the key principles of mutualism. (Proudhon's "Toast to the Revolution" is a nice intro to the notion that "the revolution" is necessarily both progressive and conservative.)

Of course, mutualists have spun out nearly as many transitional programs and institutional plans as utopian socialists, so it's natural to think of the mutual bank or particular applications of the cost-principle as characteristic of mutualism. But these are all really experiments, grounded in particular problems under particular conditions. Critics of mutualism miss the boat when they focus too heavily on the individual "approximations." Proponents make the same mistake when they forget, or don't know, what the experiments were supposed to accomplish. I don't think, for example, that Greene's mutual bank has a lot to offer most of the people who currently consider themselves mutualists. On the other hand, understanding the experiments of 1849-50 (and their precursors in the colonial period, and their adaptations into the 20th century) is useful as a case study. When you look at Warren, the experimental character of his agitation is clear. He took on project after project, testing his ideas.

I should probably follow this up in the "What is mutualism?" thread.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby neverfox » Tue Nov 25, 2008 12:19

shawnpwilbur wrote:The rest is up to us, and I would probably say that in mutualism "mutuality and reciprocity" aren't just present, but trump most other concerns.


Touché...
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby MustangGT » Tue Nov 25, 2008 13:02

Cork wrote:He believes it's unfair that some people have to make a living through labor while others are able to make a living by loaning out capital.

It seems obvious to me that Tucker's mistake was in believing that loaning out capital was not a form of labor, or a form of buying or selling or trading one's labor.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby neverfox » Tue Nov 25, 2008 13:14

MustangGT wrote:It seems obvious to me that Tucker's mistake was in believing that loaning out capital was not a form of labor, or a form of buying or selling or trading one's labor.


Loaning capital is labor? Not even capitalists believe that. It's a fairly standard division of the factors of production in economic equations. Capital, land (i.e. natural resources), labor. The roles are separate and only labor produces wealth through human exertion. You are confusing the person behind capital with capital itself (a thing). Not all capital has people behind it, where as labor always does.

Loaning capital doesn't 1) produce wealth and 2) involve human exertion in the process of producing it (it may involve exertion in writing the check but that's not productive exertion as the factor of capital isn't added to production until the check is written). Those things are the definition of labor. Capital can't by definition be that. It logically prevents mixing the two roles in an economic analysis, as convenient as it would be for your argument.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby Cork » Tue Nov 25, 2008 14:39

Hey, I just added a couple edits to my last post, to make it more clear.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby MustangGT » Tue Nov 25, 2008 15:43

neverfox wrote:
MustangGT wrote:It seems obvious to me that Tucker's mistake was in believing that loaning out capital was not a form of labor, or a form of buying or selling or trading one's labor.


Loaning capital is labor? Not even capitalists believe that. It's a fairly standard division of the factors of production in economic equations. Capital, land (i.e. natural resources), labor. The roles are separate and only labor produces wealth through human exertion. You are confusing the person behind capital with capital itself (a thing). Not all capital has people behind it, where as labor always does.


If I spend all day long loaning out capital to everyone, I am laboring. Investors are workers. Investing is their job.

Note that I did NOT equate capital itself with labor. I said "loaning out capital" in other words, an action.

EDIT: Oh yeah, and I dont care what capitalists believe. Im not a capitalist.

Loaning capital doesn't [u]1) produce wealth and 2) involve human exertion in the process of producing it (it may involve exertion in writing the check but that's not productive exertion as the factor of capital isn't added to production until the check is written).


Labor need not "produce wealth" to be labor. There is plenty of labor that results in a reduction of wealth. And yes, writing a check or delivering gold in a truck or throwing dollars out of your 100-story office window would all count as labor.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby neverfox » Tue Nov 25, 2008 18:11

Cork wrote:Tucker thinks that the only legitimate way to make a living is through labor: either selling the product of your labor or selling your labor itself (he defines the latter as wages). He believes it's unfair that some people have to make a living through labor while others are able to make a living by loaning out capital. He wants a world where everybody has to make a living through labor (whether selling one's labor or selling the product of one's labor), instead of "usury." At least that's how I interpret it.

IMO, the fact that he doesn't differentiate the two in the quote is simply coincidental. Either that, or the sentence might have just sounded too long and awkward if he had done so.

I'm pretty sure that Tucker is fine with the owner of capital goods employing the laborer. It's heavily implied in the quote, because he's responding to a guy who thinks only labor-owned firms are legitimate. In addition, it's basically much what Carson says in those quotes I gave you.


I have no doubts that Tucker meant what you say. I know he was actively denying labor-owned firms as the only way. But I think that if you examine the whole picture, he painted himself into a corner. He "didn't do the math" so to speak. In fact, let's look at it like a system of equations:

Equation 1:
Tucker wrote:"Whatever contributes to production is entitled to an equitable share in the distribution!" Wrong! Whoever contributes to production is alone so entitled. What has no rights that Who is bound to respect. What is a thing. Who is a person. Things have no claims; they exist only to be claimed. The possession of a right cannot be predicated of dead material, but only of a living person. "In the production of a loaf of bread, the plough performs an important service, and equitably comes in for a share of the loaf." Absurd! A plough cannot own bread, and; if it could, would be unable to eat it. A plough is a What, one of those things above mentioned, to which no rights are attributable.


This "equation" clearly emphasizes that non-human capital does not have a legal claim to own the bread. Only the human factors, the "who", in production can own the product.

Equation 2:
Tucker wrote:Oh! but we see. "Suppose one man spends his life in making ploughs to be used by others who sow and harvest wheat. If he furnishes his ploughs only on condition that they be returned to him in as good state as when taken away, how is he to get his bread?" It is the maker of the plough, then, and not the plough itself, that is entitled to a reward? What has given place to Who. Well, we'll not quarrel over that. The maker of the plough certainly is entitled to pay for his work. Full pay, paid once; no more. That pay is the plough itself, or its equivalent in other marketable products, said equivalent being measured by the amount of labor employed in their production. [here Tucker makes a common mistake of assuming the LTV applies to previous applied labor as opposed to the labor it would take now to produce it but it's neither here nor there - nf]


He again emphasizes in the "equation" that if you produce capital (a plough in this case) you should be paid for the "work", i.e. the labor that went into producing the plough. Tucker has his socialist hat clearly on here. He is emphatically against capital receiving money for being loaned. I think this equation gives an out for capital to receive some reward in the phrase "on condition that they be returned to him in as good state as when taken away". If the capital is money, then clearly money can always be returned in the same state but time-preference demands a premium. It's my theory that this time-preference and other such considerations (e.g. uninsured risk) will converge on the freed market "profit" that capitalists could expect anyway ceteris paribus. But that's beside the point for now...

Equation 3:
Tucker wrote:Ruskin next shows how this unjust transaction may be changed into a just one:

"If James did not lend the plane to William, he could only get his gain of a plank by working with it himself and wearing it out himself. When he had worn it out at the end of the year, he would, therefore, have to make another for himself. William, working with it instead, gets the advantage instead, which he must, therefore, pay James his plank for; and return to James what James would, if he had not lent his plane, then have had - not a new plane, but the worn-out one. James must make a new one for himself, as he would have had to do if no William had existed; and if William likes to borrow it again for another plank, all is fair. That is to say, clearing the story of its nonsense, that James makes a plane annually and sells it to William for its proper price, which, in kind, is a new plank."


Now Tucker freely praises the suggestion that loaned capital be paid for the used up inputs and returning the unused. This is exactly the proper thing. Now a "plank" not being a "plane" there is going to be some exchange-value involved. I would guess, if my theory holds, that the plank would fetch on the market something that would be more valuable enough that it would contain a time-preference element (making it acceptable to James as sufficient payment).

Equation 4:
If the men who oppose wages - that is, the purchase and sale of labor - were capable of analyzing their thought and feelings, they would see that what really excites their anger is not the fact that labor is bought and sold, but the fact that one class of men are dependent for their living upon the sale of their labor, while another class of men are relieved of the necessity of labor by being legally privileged to sell something that is not labor, and that, but for the privilege, would be enjoyed by all gratuitously. And to such a state of things I am as much opposed as any one. But the minute you remove privilege, the class that now enjoy it will be forced to sell their labor, and then, when there will be nothing but labor with which to buy labor, the distinction between wage-payers and wage-receivers will be wiped out, and every man will be a laborer exchanging with fellow-laborers. Not to abolish wages, but to make every man dependent upon wages and secure to every man his whole wages is the aim of Anarchistic Socialism. What Anarchistic Socialism aims to abolish is usury. It does not want to deprive labor of its reward; it wants to deprive capital of its reward. It does not hold that labor should not be sold; it holds that capital should not be hired at usury.


Do you think he means every man? ;) Shawn Wilbur in another discussion mentioned that:
Tucker talked about making everyone dependent on wages. That's in many ways classic Proudhonian mutualism, where there are potentially hierarchical relationships, but everyone is involved in ways that balance each other out. If I'm the "boss" here, I'm also the "employee" over there.
I replied that "two wrongs don't make a right" since I was attacking at the time the autonomy aspect, but putting that aside, think about it practically. Do we really think that Proudhon and Tucker wanted people to have two or more jobs? I find that hard to swallow as the solution to this equation. I suppose it could be changed to say that some of us will be employers and others employees and that as a society it balances out, but that seems to contradict the "every man wages" idea...that is unless employers are not to be equated with capitalists...I certainly use the term that way (reserving the word manager for non-capitalist "bosses") but that doesn't mean Tucker or Proudhon use my semantics. Remember that being a boss and being a capitalist aren't necessarily the same thing. It's only the capitalist we are concerned with here. They don't really make it clear.

So like any system of equations, to solve it you need an answer that fits all equations simultaneously without violating any part of them. Can this be done? Bellamy and Tucker give two answers.

Answer 1:
Bellamy via Tucker wrote:"Workmen will not receive a just proportion of the product of their labor until they receive the whole product. In order to receive the whole product, they must receive the profits which now go to the employers, in addition to their wages. In order to receive the profits which now go to the employers, they must become their own employers. The only way by which they can become their own employers is to assume through their salaried agents the conduct of industry as they have already (in this country) assumed the conduct of political affairs. The president, governor, and mayor do not make a profit on the business of the nation, State, or city, as employers do upon the industries which they manage. These and all other public officials receive salaries only, as agents, the business being conducted for the benefit of the people as the principals....As soon as the people wake up to the realization of this fact, there will be no labor question left. There will be no ground left for a dispute between workmen and capitalists, for every one will be at one and the same time employer and employee..."


To Bellamy, "employers" in this quote is in fact "capitalist" because he doesn't seem to think they get wages but rather the profit from the product, just to be clear on terms. By the way, the underlined sentence is about the most straightforward and accurate thing said in all these quotes and is something that by itself Tucker agrees with ("the natural wage of labor is its product"). It is in fact the solution we are trying to solve for. It's the "they must become their own employers" part that gets Tucker steamed. Note that I've expanded your earlier parenthetical of [in cooperatives] because I think it hides the larger point and somehow implies something without outside capital ever being involved. If capital agrees to pay the labor upfront so they can live while they wait for a product he is prepaying as a customer for the product. The capitalist by paying "wages" is like someone buying something on layaway. They get a piece of the product with each paycheck.

So what's the difference then? All that to say it's just some semantic thing? No. The difference is in how people govern their work. Profits are assumed in economics to go to whoever is "the firm". The firm is whoever governs the work, whoever is the agent of responsibility. If you accept that labor should get the whole product then you commit yourself to 1) labor getting the negative product (used up inputs) not just the positive product (the output) and 2) the negative product implying responsibility means that you should govern the work to be inline with the legal reality. Payment for the labor is fine but it must not be governed in its execution by the person paying labor or labor is not getting the whole product. In fact, only human beings through action can be responsible, so you couldn't reverse the situation if you wanted to. Oh you might legally do so and that is what capitalism today typically does. But de facto, you can't and so it's the legal that needs to get in line with fact. How you get there isn't important, co-op, federation whatever. What matters is getting to full legal consistency of that underlined sentence.

Answer 2:
Tucker wrote:When this struggle comes, the weak point in Mr. Bellamy’s position will be located. I point it out in advance. It lies in his enormous assumptions that laborers, in order to receive the profits which now go to the employers, must become their own employers, and that the only way by which they can do this is to assume through their salaried agents the conduct of industry. The Anarchistic solution shows that there is no such must and no such only. When interest, rent, and profit disappear under the influence of free money, free land, and free trade, it will make no difference whether men work for themselves, or are employed, or employ others. In any case they can get nothing but that wage for their labor which free competition determines. Therefore they need not become their own employers. Perhaps, however, they will prefer to do so. But in that case they need not assume the conduct of industry through their salaried agents. There is another way. Any of them that choose will be enabled through mutual banking to secure means of production whereby to conduct whatever industry they desire. This other way, being the way of liberty, is the better way, and is destined to triumph over Mr. Bellamy’s way, which is the way of authority and coercion.


Here Tucker, in attempting to solve his own system of equations, makes some errors. First, he assumes that ownership of the means of production is what makes you the firm (thus thinking that getting some free money will let you be the boss). The fact that he believes this is going to allow him to take for granted that capital can govern the operations as the responsible agent. He's already decided in capital's favor by believing this myth. And refer back to Equation 1. This part of the answer can't satisfy that equation.

And 2) He simply thinks (probably due to his Stirnerism), "there is no such must and no such only". Here he is doing what many do with the issue of rights comes up: they confuse descriptive with normative and normative with meta-normative. As Tucker will tell you, there is no must. But that's the "descriptive" realm. A right to your life doesn't magically stop the bullet of someone who wants to shoot you. That's true enough. But that doesn't mean there isn't a normative principle that says we shouldn't shoot someone. Tucker might even go on to say everything is morally equal and that morality is a spook. I'll grant him this for the sake of argument. But the right to autonomy is really meta-normative as described in the ethical theories of Den Uyl and Rasmussen:

John Hasnas wrote:eudaimonia as an activity, not as a passive state of being. For them, human flourishing consists in the process of realizing one's potential as a human being by correctly integrating ends that are valuable in themselves into the inclusive end of living rationally or intelligently. Human flourishing is not merely living in accordance with virtue, but doing so through the effective exercise of one's practical reason; eudaimonia is not the state of having actualized one's potential, but the process of actualizing one's potential through one's own efforts.

According to [Den Uyl and Rasmussen], this implies a qualitative distinction among goods. Unlike possessing necessary material resources, being educated, being free from discrimination, and having adequate health care, "self-directedness or autonomy is not merely the necessary means to human well-being. Rather it is an inherent feature of those activities which constitute the human good that is human flourishing." Although many human goods may, in fact, be necessary for human flourishing, all but self-directedness or autonomy are conceptually separable from it. However, as a constitutive part of flourishing, self-directedness or autonomy is not merely "an activity (a virtue) which is an end in itself. It is . . . nothing less than the very form, the only form, of the natural end of man."

Den Uyl and Rasmussen assert that this gives self-directedness or autonomy a pre-eminent place among human goods. To flourish, individuals must exercise their practical reason to select the package of human goods most likely to lead to their self-perfection given their potentialities and circumstances. Hence, these goods are subject to the balancing and trade-offs of the dictates of practical reason. However, as a constitutive element of every individual's self-perfection, self-directedness or autonomy must always be present for one to flourish. In other words, in order to flourish, one must be self-directed or autonomous regardless of one's potentialities and circumstances. Hence, unlike other human goods, self-directedness or autonomy is not subject to the application of practical reason. This difference between self-directedness or autonomy and other human goods forms the basis of Den Uyl and Rasmussen's distinction between the meta-normative and normative realms.


My argument is easy to destroy. Just disagree with my ethical beliefs. I won't hide the fact that it relies on them. Just deny that we have the meta-normative right to self-determination and autonomy in the execution of our affairs. If contracts can contain within their very essence the obligation to obey in order for the contract to remain valid (it's this that makes it different from conductor/cellist etc.), as opposed to simply the obligation to complete the contract, what does that make them?

To return to Tucker, I think his two mistakes are fatal to solving the equations for the value "the natural wage of labor is its product" and Bellamy, on the other hand, gets an A from the math teacher (Aristotle probably, Stirner not so much). When Tucker says it's ok to "buy the labor or products of others" he can only avoid contradicting liberty if he means the distinction to be "intangible services or tangible goods" and not "governed work or ungoverned work" (He might have consciously meant the latter. I don't deny that). Does that mean that mutualism is opposed to wages? Well, mutualists have historically been, more so than other market anarchists, concerned with "the natural wage of labor is its product". So that puts them at least closer to it, if not all the way there historically. I don't think Tucker succeeded in taking himself all the way (because of his egoist beliefs or whatever) to where he wanted to go. When the early drafts of the AN-FAQ said Tucker "logically entailed" worker control, I think they saw (or at least felt the tension in) this system of equations more than simply wishing Tucker was a communist.

I'm a Bellamy. I can't figure out how "mutuality and reciprocity" can be foremost without autonomy in the "mutuality and reciprocity"
Last edited by neverfox on Tue Nov 25, 2008 20:48, edited 1 time in total.
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A positive and scientific morality, we have said, can give the individual this commandment only: Develop your life in all directions, be an "individual" as rich as possible in intensive and extensive energy; therefore be the most social and sociable being. (Jean-Marie Guyau)
If you can read this, you are the resistance.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby shawnpwilbur » Tue Nov 25, 2008 20:20

neverfox wrote:Do we really think that Proudhon and Tucker wanted people to have two or more jobs?

Do you think they wanted people to have "jobs" in the sense you seem to mean? C'mon, even old Karl of the Bad Beard could imagine far better than that.

And, dammit! It's Wilb-u-r. I'm sensitive about it today, since I noticed it's misspelled in the print version of AFAQ.
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Re: Is mutualism opposed to wages/employment?

Postby neverfox » Tue Nov 25, 2008 20:54

And, dammit! It's Wilb-u-r. I'm sensitive about it today, since I noticed it's misspelled in the print version of AFAQ.


Oh man, I'm SO sorry. I hate that too. It got stuck in my head and spread like a disease. I've combed my posts and fixed it.

shawnpwilbur wrote:Do you think they wanted people to have "jobs" in the sense you seem to mean? C'mon, even old Karl of the Bad Beard could imagine far better than that.


No I don't think they did,especially not Tucker as I was clear to point out. I just meant that I don't think they mean people create some sort of Parecon job complex across businesses. But back to your quote, how else should I read "If I'm the "boss" here, I'm also the "employee" over there."?
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A positive and scientific morality, we have said, can give the individual this commandment only: Develop your life in all directions, be an "individual" as rich as possible in intensive and extensive energy; therefore be the most social and sociable being. (Jean-Marie Guyau)
If you can read this, you are the resistance.
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