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Subordination to power: Follow the money

Posted: Sun Mar 30, 2008 12:48 am
by coberst
Subordination to power: Follow the money

“The capitulation of Western man to his technology, with its crescendo of specialized demands has always appeared to many observers of our world as a kind of enslavement.

No more are intellectuals focused upon the nature of man in society. Intellectuals have become non intellectual specialists—hired guns of CA (Corporate America)—Vulcan

Vulcanization—the process of treating crude or synthetic material chemically to give it useful properties.

All thought is saturated with egocentric and sociocentric presuppositions. That is, all thought contains highly motivating bias centered in the self or in ideologies such as political, religious, and economic theories. Some individuals are conscious of these internal forces but most people are not.

Those individuals who are conscious of these biases within their thinking can try to rid their judgments of that influence. Those who are not conscious, or little conscious of such bias, are bound to display a significant degree of irrational tendencies in their judgments.

“Can the intellectual, who is supposed to have a special and perhaps professional concern with truth, escape from or rise above the partiality and distortions of ideology?

Our culture has tended to channel intellectuals, or perhaps more properly those who function as intellectuals, into academic professions. Gramsci makes the accurate distinction that all men and women “are intellectuals¦but all do not have the function of intellectuals in society.

An intellectual might be properly defined as those who are primarily or professionally concerned with matters of the mind and the imagination but who are socially non-attached. “The intellectual is thought of not as someone who displays great mental or imaginative ability but as someone who applies those abilities in more general areas such as religion, philosophy and social and political issues. It is the involvement in general and controversy outside of a specialization that is considered as the hallmark of an intellectual; it is a matter of choice of self definition, choice is supreme here.

Even anti-ideological is ideological. If partisanship can be defended servility cannot; many have allowed themselves to become the tools of others.

We have moved into an age when the university is no longer an ivory tower and knowledge is king but knowledge has become a commodity and educators have become instruments of power; the university has become a privately owned think-tank.

“A profound change in the intellectual community itself is inherent in this development. The largely humanist-oriented, occasionally ideological minded intellectual dissenter , who saw his role largely in terms of proffering social critiques, is rapidly being displaced either by experts and specialist, who become involved in special government undertakings, or by generalist-integrators, who become house-ideologues for those in power, providing overall intellectual integration for disparate actions.

The subordination to power is not just at the individual level but also at the institutional level. Government funds are made available to universities and colleges not for use as they deem fit but for specific government needs. Private industry plays even a larger role in providing funds for educational institutions to perform management and business study. Private industry is not inclined ‘to waste’ money on activities that do not contribute to the bottom line. ‘He who pays the piper calls the tune.’

Each intellectual is spouting a different ideology, how does the individual choose what ideology? Trotsky once said “only a participant can be a profound spectator. Is detachment then a virtue? To suggest that intellectuals rise above ideology is impractical. Explicit commitment is preferable to bogus neutrality. But truth is an indispensable touchstone.

I think that the proper role for the intellectual is commitment plus detachment. Do you think many of our present day intellectuals qualify as committed and detached?

Quotes and ideas from “Knowledge and Belief in Politics Bhikhu Parekh

Subordination to power: Follow the money

Posted: Tue Apr 01, 2008 3:27 pm
by Harry_O
Gramsci !!! How refreshing That someone should refer to this little recognized social engineer, how sad so few know of him or his writing, sadder still to have read them and to look upon our world today. This could with little thought instill as it should fear of those who profess to lead us.

Subordination to power: Follow the money

Posted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 3:15 am
by coberst
Harry_O;823306 wrote: Gramsci !!! How refreshing That someone should refer to this little recognized social engineer, how sad so few know of him or his writing, sadder still to have read them and to look upon our world today. This could with little thought instill as it should fear of those who profess to lead us.


This provides you with a great opportunity to enlighten us all by posting some of the reasons we should better appreciate this individual. Internet discussion forums are an ideal place to post the important ideas that few people know of.

Our educational system leaves us all intellectually handicapped because these systems merely prepare us to become producers and consumers. The Internet is available for broadening our intellectual sophistication if we make an effort to use it so.

Subordination to power: Follow the money

Posted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 3:46 pm
by Harry_O
Antonio Gramsci,

Had a grand ideology of a two class system by which the upper class would control every thing by educating the working class into believing they (the upper class were in Leadership because the lower class believed they should and were the only ones truly capable).

Warped system in which all habits, and aspects of the working class would be controlled, education, breeding, regligious etc. In his prison writings he also makes mention of the occassional intelluctual that would be born and why they need to be spirted out of the enviroment and perhaps moved up. :)

His writing of course fertilized the imigination of may Industrialist and aspiring politician amoung other who sought power of the time. There is much more, and much hidden, and his thoughts on Hemogenic assimilation proves an interesting read indeed. But it can be said, that much of his idealogy has far outlived the man but embraced by those weilding power.

A little on the limb here but one can seen memories of his writting admist the idealogy of globalization...

For those interested there at least at one time, are quite a few disserations and a copy of his "Prison Writtings" here on the World Wide Web.