Many thanks for this, for your kindness in answering so thoghtfully and giving me food for thought too! I’m quite a lazy reader but I may actually spend money to buy the book you suggest (ok, let’s take the babystep of reading the summary as soon as possible first). If you still don’t want to give up on your left leanings, you may be interested in an older classic (if you haven’t already read it): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Transformation_(book)
The great takeaway for me from this book was that the ‘modern’ (from a historical perspective) perception of labor is a relatively recent development, plus that it’s an inherently political development (born out of legislation rather than as a product of the free market). My own politics (or scientopolitics let’s call them) are that politics and legislation should be above all, so I wouldn’t feel squeamish about political solutions (i know this positions has its own obvious pitfalls though).
Dear Jon,
Many thanks for this, for your kindness in answering so thoghtfully and giving me food for thought too! I’m quite a lazy reader but I may actually spend money to buy the book you suggest (ok, let’s take the babystep of reading the summary as soon as possible first). If you still don’t want to give up on your left leanings, you may be interested in an older classic (if you haven’t already read it): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Transformation_(book)
The great takeaway for me from this book was that the ‘modern’ (from a historical perspective) perception of labor is a relatively recent development, plus that it’s an inherently political development (born out of legislation rather than as a product of the free market). My own politics (or scientopolitics let’s call them) are that politics and legislation should be above all, so I wouldn’t feel squeamish about political solutions (i know this positions has its own obvious pitfalls though).