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KNOW your Mountain is a mini expo covering all things resilience and preparedness for summer time life in and around Ulong and Lowanna. Carol Cleary, co-owner of Ulong General Store and Cafe in the Valley, told News Of The Area, “Our mini expo will be personal, encouraging everyone to ask questions about their particular concerns...
The post Mountain communities prepare for summer appeared first on News Of The Area.
Inside one national park’s quest to make peace between humans and animals.
The post A Fragile Equilibrium appeared first on Nautilus.
The buzz on preventing elephants from plundering communities.
The post Elephants Are Total Scaredy-Cats Around Bees appeared first on Nautilus.
Their inner compass could be guided by quantum forces.
The post Moths Find Their Way by the Stars appeared first on Nautilus.
How we Americans feel about Gazans living under Israeli bombs does matter, since we’re the ones financing it.
The post Gaza and the Empathy Gap appeared first on The Intercept.
Marxists tend to like the labor theory of value because it provides a vivid account of exploitation and highlights a basic antagonism at the core of capitalism: capitalists and workers are locked in a battle over the appropriation of the surplus that workers produce. But many commentators assume it is either internally inconsistent or hopelessly outdated. The theory is thus hotly contested, but arguably poorly understood by both critics and advocates alike. The debate has also sometimes been mired in arcane mathematical issues. As a consequence, interesting philosophical and empirical questions have received less attention. We put a number of these questions to Duncan Foley, author of Understanding Capital: Marx's Economic Theory.
The post Reconstructing the Labour Theory of Value: An Interview with Duncan Foley (Part 1: The Commodity Law of Exchange) appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).