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Thanks Michel for bringing up that point! list-en oekonux.org writes:
i think it's also important to recognize, that these forms or structures, that embody and support these different kinds of consciousness can be 'habitual' and 'informal', rather than 'explicit/formal'... so even when a community has rejected the conventional forms of organization which could be seen as embodying primary mentality (voting, majority rules, bureaucratic structures, etc...) it's still the case, that the community will tend to have a particular 'culture', or 'way of doing things'... and that culture will not necessarily be 'secondary' since as individuals, we still tend to carry the "primary mentality" within us, even in the absence of conventional forms of organization...
I have had extensive conversations about this with a friend whom I owe a lot theoretically. He brought up the issue that there are big cultural differences totally neglected in Marxist theory, not in Marx ouvre thouh. Marx took the issue dead serious, as his letter to Vera Sassulitsch and his long preparatory studies show. The question is: are there some cultures habitually more prone to adapt cooperative schemes of production? Particulary in Eastern cultures. I think this deserves very much attention from our side. It occurs to me that the Oekonux conference never dealt with that subject - "P2P traditions and new possibilities in the information age". Cant go more into the subject now, maybe others can pitch in. Franz _________________________________ Web-Site: http://www.oekonux.org/ Organization: http://www.oekonux.de/projekt/ Contact: projekt oekonux.de
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