One single work day of patchy internet can change how you look at this.
Skeptic
One single work day of patchy internet can change how you look at this.
I mostly use an android, and the default font is Ideal Sans Light. On my system, Arial Nova, Courier Prime, Helvetica Neue, Ideal Sans Book and a few others are regulars.
Every once in a while I get this itch which ends up in getting a new favourite font.
Yes.
At their heart, both capitalism and marxism are ideologies describing how things “ought to be.” Proponents of either of them seek to influence political decision making around economic decisions, but neither is/was/will be reality.
Capitalism postulates that all capital ought to be privately owned and working in individual interest, while communism postulates that bulk of capital ought to be institutionally owned but working for public interest.
Capitalists believe that capital is most efficiently allocated (returns most value) when its owner spends it for his own benefit, rather than spending it on benefit of others, and that growth of any economy is maximum when capital is allocated most efficiently.
Communists dismiss this by pointing out that inequal access to capital causes internal problems in society, which ultimately culminates to violence aiming to change the capital allocation system into more equal one.
Communism predicts the end of capitalism, while later flavours of capitalism do the same for communism.
if you had to pick one and reject the other, which one of the following would rather you pick :
There is one very basic problem with the source here: Marx is not a capitalist, and,
Marxist interpretation of capitalist theory ≠ capitalist theory.
And how exactly is “death by paperwork” incentivized in capitalist theory?
By what mechanism does elimination of “death by paperwork” ensured in this?
You describe science as “a process based ideology” with an aim. Science is seldom described as an ideology. What is your source here? Or, if this is an original idea, can you expand upon what your concept of science as such, is?
There are issues with the other “aspects” of Marxism you briefed above; most salient one being the attempt to infer principles of economics from anthropology (which isn’t a particularly robust academic field by itself, devoid of any power to make good predictions in its own field, let alone in others), but I’d avoid opening that at the moment as considerations of “what science is” run deeper.
Source, please; and unambiguously capitalist one?
Criticism of monopoly is not a criticism of capitalism. In fact, capitalist theory itself doesn’t view monopoly as a good condition. Capitalism prescribes competition and open market - for both buyer and seller sides.
What safegaurds does Marxism/Communism has to prevent monopoly?