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The Mismeasure of Wealth
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Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Putting the Spotlight on Social Form and Purpose

PART I: THE ESSAYS

1: Value, Money and Capital in Hegel and Marx
2: Redoubled Empiricism: The Place of Social Form and Formal Causality in Marxian Theory
3: Things Fall Apart: Historical and Systematic Dialectics and the Critique of Political Economy
4: Marx’s ‘Truly Social’ Labour Theory of Value: Part I, Abstract Labour in Marxian Value Theory
5: Marx’s ‘Truly Social’ Labour Theory of Value: Part II, How is Labour that is under the Sway of Capital Actually Abstract?
6: The Grammar of Value: A Close Look at Marx’s Critique of Samuel Bailey
7: The Development of Marx’s Value-Form Theory in the Grundrisse: Reflections on Backhaus
8: The Necessity of Money: How Hegel Helped Marx to Surpass Ricardo’s Theory of Value
9: Money as Displaced Social Form: Why Value cannot be Independent of Price
10: The Social and Material Transformation of Production by Capital: Formal and Real Subsumption in Capital, Volume I
11: The Place of ‘The Results of the Immediate Production Process’ in Capital
12: Beyond the ‘Commerce and Industry’ Picture of Capital
13: Capital ‘Laid Bare’: How Hegel Helped Marx Surpass Ricardo’s Theory of Profit
14: The Illusion of the Economic: The Trinity Formula and the ‘Religion of Everyday Life’

PART TWO: CRITICAL ENGAGEMENTS

15: Avoiding Bad Abstractions: A Defence of Co-constitutive Value-Form Theory
16: The New Giant’s Staircase
17: In Defence of the ‘Third Thing Argument’: A Reply to James Furner’s ‘Marx’s Critique of Samuel Bailey’
18: Reply to Reuten
19: Comments on ‘The Four Drafts of Capital: Towards a new interpretation of the dialectical thought of Marx’ by Enrique Dussel and ‘Introduction to Dussel’ by Fred Moseley

Bibliography
Index

Promotional Information

Features in Historical Materialism
Promotion targeting left academic journals
Published to coincide with the annual Historical Materialism conference
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking engagements

About the Author

Patrick Murray, Ph.D. (1979), St. Louis University, is Professor of Philosophy at Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska. He is author of Marx's Theory of Scientific Knowledge (Humanities, 1988) and editor of Reflections on Commercial Life (Routledge, 1997).

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