Karl Marx is viewed as arguably one of the most influential philosophers of his era. His way of looking at society through an alternative lens led him to develop theories that would help workers emerge from their classes and improve their lifestyle. He explained that the economic system was flawed and that the rise of capitalism would inevitably be the cause of society’s issues. However, out of all his theories, there is one that is still evident in today’s society, alienation. Marx argued that alienation was fueled by capitalism, as workers were manipulated in order to improve efficiency and increase productivity. The workers’ labour and the resulting products in fact belong to the capitalist. In Marx’ “Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844”, he broke alienation down into four parts; Workers are alienated from the products of their labour, workers are alienated from the labour process, workers are alienated from their species-being, and workers are alienated from other workers. These four parts explained the implications alienation had on each individual worker and it is seen as the reason why society has failed to break capitalism and create a “classless” society, where no person is born into a social class and where achievements and individuality are realized. Now the question lies, is the theory of alienation still relevant in the post-industrial world? The answer to that question is yes.
The capitalists decide everything that needs to be done in order for a product to be produced and sold. This system is not determined by the workers, nor the consumers. The capitalists are able to gain control over the labour power of their workers and reap benefits from their labour because workers add value to their business (Naiman, 2012, p. 81). Everything the worker produces is for the capitalist; the worker owns none of what he or she produces. The capitalist is able to do so through a system that turns labour into product in order to satisfy the material wants of the consumer. This is in strong opposition to the workers’ species-being, as the workers are producing to meet the needs of others and not the needs of themselves. As Marx put it, “the externalization of the worker in his product
The Marx’s theory of alienation was based on antagonism that things that are related together and are in harmony as well as social separation of man from aspect of man’s nature. One can only be left to ponder if alienation is a systematic result of capitalism. Predominance of private ownership of means of production and exploitation of wage labor all characterize alienation, therefore, alienation is the culmination of capitalism.
In the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, Karl Marx identifies a dichotomy that is created and bolstered by the capitalist mode of production. In this mode of production, the dichotomy presents itself in a division of labor that forms of two kinds of people: capitalists, the owners of the means of production, and laborers, those who work under the domain of the capitalist. Marx harshly criticizes this mode of production, arguing that it exploits the laborer and estranges him from himself and his fellow man. According to Marx, this large-scale estrangement is achieved through a causal chain of effects that results in multiple types of alienation, each contingent upon the other. First, Marx asserts that under capitalism, the laborer is alienated from his product of labor. Second, because of this alienation from his product, man is also alienated then from the act of production. Third, man, in being alienated both from his product and act of production, is alienated from his species essence, which Marx believes to be the ability to create and build up an objective world. Finally, after this series of alienations, Marx arrives at his grand conclusion that capitalist labor causes man to be alienated from his fellow man. In this paper, I will argue in support of Marx’s chain of alienations, arriving at the conclusion that laborers, under the capitalist mode of production, cannot retain their species essence and thus cannot connect with one another, and exist in a world
Man no longer exercises his essence as a species-being in productive labour for the good of others, but on the contrary, he becomes detached from his essence and the product of his labour is abstracted as a means to produce for the sake of capital. In this sense man becomes reduced to nothing but a machine; the more capital the product of his labour acquires, the more the worker will be encouraged to produce through the influence of wages. The appeal of this profit for the worker sustains his alienated state by further sacrificing his ‘body and spirit’ for the sake of his wages;
Making products in a capitalist system puts many people in a position that are repetitive and laborers end up going through the motions. They have one specialized job in producing the whole product. The labor does not give input into the purpose of design, distribution, and marketing of the product. According to his essay “ Alienated Labor,” Marx tells us the things we go through in a work under the capitalist society:
The United States has been historically known as a country of innovation, business, and a land of opportunity. Recent history has led to the questioning of the validity of the amount of opportunity that is truly still available within the United States. The consistent questioning of the way that labor works in the United States has led individuals to begin analyzing the works of Karl Marx. Marx has written a plethora of information regarding his view on how capitalism encourages alienated labor. The United States is still predominantly a capitalism and there is an increase of education being forced due to inability to find lower level employment. The amount of individuals being educated has increased dramatically due to necessity, but it has not necessarily encouraged the death of alienated labor. Alienated labor is still prevalent in the modern day United States, but it should not necessarily be
According to Marx, the first type of alienation is the estrange of the labor from the product of his work. This alienation occurs because the labor invests his work into the object yet the capitalism appropriates the object from him, he becomes alienated to the object that he creates. The second alienation, as Marx mentions in his first manuscript, is the estrangement of the worker from the producing activity since the labor’s work does not belong to himself, but it is simply a means of satisfaction of human needs. Karl Marx then illustrates the third form of alienation, which is the labor’s alienation from species being. Transforming inorganic matter to create objects is the one of the main identities of human being, yet, the structure of capitalism estranges the labor from the essential identity and species being.
Marx’s theory of alienation is concerned primarily with social interaction and production; he believes that we are able to overcome our alienation through human emancipation.
As human beings, one of the most fundamental aspects of our existence, according to philosopher Karl Marx, is the act of work. More specifically, it is the idea that work fulfills human being’s essence. Work, for Marx, is a great source of joy, but only when the worker can see themselves in the work they do, and when said worker wants to partake in the work they are performing. In the capitalist identity, workers are “a class of labourers, who live only so long as they find work, and who find work only so long as their labour increases capital” (Marx and Engel, 1946, pg. 116). Labourers were simply described as “a commodity” (Marx and Engel, 1946, pg. 117) by the ruling class; they are but pieces of a large, intricate gear system, all for the profit of those above them. In this, the worker loses touch with their essence. This concept is referred to, more or less, as alienation. Alienation is a form of separation of how one sees themselves, and how one sees themselves in what they do. Alienation, in many ways, relates to the idea of false consciousness. False consciousness, for Marx, revolves around the idea of misleading society; It is an ideological way of thinking in which no true perception of the world can be achieved. Both alienation and false consciousness delve into the notion of what constitutes true reality. Alienation describes how those that are controlled by the ruling class are subject to a form of disconnect, and false consciousness is a hierarchal idea in
7. According to Marx, how does capitalism alienate workers? How did Marx feel that workers could overcome their alienation?
Marx presented four types of alienation in his Manuscripts of 1844. The first type is where the worker is alienated from the product they produce. Neither workers nor consumers influence the design and technology of a product, but the capitalist class. Capitalists utilize labor to produce and then influence consumer tastes and preferences in order to maximize profits (Marx, 1844). Second, workers are alienated from working or from the actual production. This refers to the fact that the work that the worker performs does not belong to the worker but it is a means of survival to have food, shelter, so the worker is forced to work under hostile situations to perform for someone else. Because of this, his work does not have any intrinsic value.
Marx’s theory of alienated labour is structured around a class-based system. It is vital to acknowledge that Marx’s evaluation of the capitalist system is based focused the Industrial Revolution a century and a half ago, and therefore must be kept somewhat in that context. Within Marx’s simplified capitalist society model, one class of people own and control the raw materials and their means of production. They are referred to as capital, bourgeoisie, or the owning class. The capitalist does not just own the means of production, but also all the items produced. By virtue of their ownership of production property they receive an income and earn a living from the operations of their factories and shops. The owning class owns the productive resources, though they do not usually operate the production means themselves.
The division of labour ensures that each worker only does one job, and the labour market decides which job any particular worker will do. During labour, the worker uses capital not under his own control. The capital available determines the nature of the work. On top of all this, the worker has no choice but to work, as wages are needed to provide the worker's means to life. Work is seen to be 'not voluntary, but forced' (3). This shows that in a capitalist society, the worker is separated from the decisions of whether or not to work, what the work will be, and what form the work will take. This alienation of labour is the separation of man from his life-activity.
Alienation, in Marxist terms, refers to the separation of the mass of wage workers from the products of their own labor. Marx first expressed the idea, somewhat poetically, in his 1844 Manuscripts: "The object that labor produces, its product, stands opposed to it as something alien, as a power independent of the producer."
Topic: One of the essential elements to Marx’s alienation concept is that of people or workers being alienated from each other under capitalism, it is still relevant in explaining the problems of the modern world.
Before the industrial revolution, people were defined by their work. For example, a bread maker. They were in charge of the process of making bread, selling the bread and the profit. According to Marx, under capitalism the proletarian experienced “alienation.” This is where an individual is isolated from society, work and sense of self. Marx discussed four different types of alienation: alienation from product, process of labor, from species and of man from man (Murray, Lecture 3). The first being alienation from the product. In Marx’s time and today’s world, we engage in a lot of mass production in our capitalist system. People often are placed in positions where they are responsible for making a small part of the product or engage in a very specific task. Going back to the bread example, under capitalist system, a person may only be in charge of adding the flour to the machine and the rest of the work is done by the machine. The person is not involved in any other aspect of the work. Today many people work to make a produced that they do not own for other people to consume with the purpose of being to sell of that product and make the maximum amount of profit. But in today’s world, the profit is owned by the capitalist owner who is in charge of the production, and distribution of the product. The second type of alienation is the alienation from one’s own labor. Making products in the capitalist system puts people in a repetitive position. The laborers end up going through the motions they have one highly specialized job in production the whole product. The labor does not give input into the purpose design distribution or marketing of the product. Simply, the worker is a small piece of the puzzle. The third is the alienation from others. To Marx, this human essence was not separate from activity or work, but being separate from other human species. The fourth is alienation from man to man where the worker can’t connect to other worker. Workers compete with each other. A capitalist system sees the labor of the worker to a commercial commodity that can be traded in the competitive labor-market. It does not view labor as a constructive socioeconomic activity that is part of the collective common effort performed