Marx, "Forms Prior to Capitalist Production" (23)

Marx used the word tentative elephant along with the exchange. The phrase "inevitable phantom" is the same as when Kojin Karatani spoke of Kant's systematic ideas.

Such exchange of equivalents is only a superficial hull of production based on the occupancy of the labor of others, without exchange and under the hypothesis of exchange. This exchange system is based on the capital as its basis. And if we separate this system from capital and consider it as an independent system as it appears on the surface, it is a mere phantom, but an inevitable phantom.

"Conversion of money to capital" seems to be a passage of "Capital theory".

Marx analyzes spinning and weaving as capital-based production in this "form". At the beginning of "Das Kapital", the exchange of linen was mentioned.

Marx is talking about the textile industry that he sees in Britain, and I wondered if that argument could simply not be applied to other industries.

Marx's text (text) talked about text (textile). In Japanese, I thought that the text (textbook) was unique and the text (criticism) was ambiguous. I remembered that the word "real" has the meaning of "real" and the usage of "real (though not real)".

I thought that Marx and the subsequent criticisms only talked about texts (textiles), and that there was no consideration of clothing made from textiles, but at the beginning of "Capital theory", the theory of value morphology was subordinate. It was explained by linen and coat.

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