Amusing, but your reading of Marx is as though that's the final verdict on economics and power. I don't know if you've noticed but I've had several short discussions on here about postmodern philosophy, much of which builds on and advances (or rejects) Marxian ideas. There's probably another newer school going even further by now. What's clear (also in the practical examples of 'communism' in reality) is that regardless of the system you will end up with an elite social group/class where there is a concentration of power, authority & usually wealth. Any system ought to try and control this somewhat and make that group more accessible to the general public.
I do think property rights and for-profit economics are here to stay. No, I don't see it in the same vein as feudalism or the economics of colonialism. Simultaneously I'll admit I'm no psychic and have as little foresight to offer about economics in the 25th century as a medieval peasant if he were to imagine the ordering principles of society in the 20th. But for the foreseeable future, I see no reason to assume things will change anywhere near as fundamentally as you seem to believe.
I do think property rights and for-profit economics are here to stay. No, I don't see it in the same vein as feudalism or the economics of colonialism. Simultaneously I'll admit I'm no psychic and have as little foresight to offer about economics in the 25th century as a medieval peasant if he were to imagine the ordering principles of society in the 20th. But for the foreseeable future, I see no reason to assume things will change anywhere near as fundamentally as you seem to believe.
Last edited by Larssen (2020-08-25 15:33:18)