Difference between revisions of "Relationship human society/nature, productivism"

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Outline :  
Outline:  
The development of the capitalist ecological crisis
The development of the capitalist ecological crisis
Humans produce their existence through social contacts.
Humans produce their existence through social contacts.

Revision as of 17:19, 5 November 2019

Outline: The development of the capitalist ecological crisis Humans produce their existence through social contacts. Labour, as a conscious activity, transforms natural resources into use values.

   1. Causes of the ecological crisis
   • Technological system is destructive?
   • Population growth destroys nature?
   • Reconsider the relationship with of society with nature in a concrete historical and social context
   2. Marxist concepts explain the productivist nature of capitalism 
   • Use value and exchange value 
   • Production of exchange value becomes independent of human needs
   • General aim is accumulation of capital
   • Competition between capitals is necessary
   • Result is permanent increase of production and constant growing environmental degradation
   3. Short history of the development of capitalism
   • Enclosures movement in England
   • Farmers expulsed form their land: landless poor will become later the proletariat in factories
   • Separation of country side and towns
   • Capitalist dynamics of accumulation spread over the world
   • Industrialisation in 19th century is the cause of an erupting ecological crisis
   • Mercantilism: plundering of natural resources and genocides in colonies
   • First monocultures of export crops
   • New slave based economy put in place
   • Industrial revolution based on factories in cities and on burning of coal for steam engines
   • Growing differentiation in agriculture
   • Intensified destruction of tropical forests
   • The fertility crisis and its solution chemical fertilisers
   • Second industrial revolution : discovery of oil and mechanisation based on electricity
   • New sectors in 20th century: car industry, petrochemicals, aeronautics, farming and building engines
   • Agribusiness: pesticides and chemical fertilisers; GMO’s
   • New materials such as  plastics, pesticides growing poisoning of all ecosystems
   4. New global problems emerge in the 1970’s
   • Hole in ozone layer: problem solved by regulations not by market forces
   • Global warming caused by greenhouse gasses: most dramatic and urgent problem 
   • Neoliberalism worsens the ecological crisis
   • Capitalist pseudo-solutions
   5. Necessity of an ecosocialist alternative