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FEATURES
 1 Front cover
 2 Contents
 3 Editorial
 4 Pathfinders
 5 Red Snapper
 6 What Socialism Means
 7  continued as above
 8  What is Common Ownership?
 9 Cooking The Books 1
 10 Could We Organise Things    Without Money?
 11 Blockbuster Profits
 12 The Rise and Fall of the NHS
 13  continued as above
 14 The Profit Motive: a Case Study
 15 Cooking The Books 2
 16 Reviews
 17 FiftyYears Ago
 18 Meetings
 19 Greasy Pole
 20 Free Lunch and                    Voice From The Back


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socialist standard (est 1904)
  Journal of the Socialist Party a companion party of the World Socialist Movement
100 years for socialism-> -> Standard Online->->Connecting with->-> socialists->-> worldwide  April 2005


Einstein and Socialism


This year sees a double anniversary for Albert Einstein: fifty years this month since his death, and one hundred since the publication of his first seminal papers on quantum theory and relativity. No doubt there will be fulsome, and well-deserved, tributes to one of the great names of twentieth-century science. But it is likely that there will be little if any reference to Einstein’s political views, especially his opposition to capitalism, including his acceptance of the labour theory of value.


           In 1949, Einstein published an article ‘Why Socialism?’ in the first issue of the American left-wing journal Monthly Review. It is available on the web at various places. e.g. http://www.monthlyreview.org/598einst.htm  In it he argued that class society is an instance of ‘the predatory phase’ of human development (in Thorstein Veblen’s phrase). Yet humans depend on society to provide food, clothing, a home and so on. We have a fixed and unalterable biological constitution, but during our lives we acquire a ‘cultural constitution’ which is subject to change. Anthropological research shows that people’s social behaviour differs greatly, so our biological make-up does not determine the way we live.

But small groups of humans cannot be self-sufficient: ‘mankind constitutes even now a planetary community of production and consumption.’ This dependence on society, however, is seen as a threat to our existence rather than as a positive asset. This is largely due to ‘the economic anarchy of capitalist society’. All those who do not share in the ownership of the means of production, Einstein calls workers. Workers’ wages are determined not by the value of what they produce but by their minimum needs. As private capital becomes more and more concentrated, it achieves a power that even democratic politics cannot check.

Under capitalism, he continues, production is for profit, not use. Unemployment exists almost always, and workers are in fear of losing their jobs. Unlimited competition results in an enormous waste of labour. The worst evil of capitalism, he says, is the ‘crippling of individuals’, as education inculcates competitive notions.

Having given a pretty decent sketch of how capitalism works and of what’s wrong with it, Einstein goes on to advocate a planned economy which guarantees a livelihood to everyone and adjusts production to the needs of the community. But a planned economy, he recognises, is not socialism, as it may involve ‘the complete enslavement of the individual’ (so perhaps he had Russian-style state capitalism in mind?). And after a few misguided remarks about so-called problems of socialism (how to limit the power of the bureaucracy? etc), Einstein closes his contribution. It’s a shame that he is so inconclusive, but his article is still well worth reading, even if you can’t get through it at the speed of light.

PB


 

Page 6

Contents Page

The Socialist Party

Red Snapper

Sound bites and
unsound nibbles

" I don’t think we should be battering this subject to death."

Martin McGuinness to John
Humphries, on IRA members who
murdered Robert McCartnery by, er,
battering him to death. BBC R4,
March 9, 8.00am.

"  It will be scrapped. I am determined
to ensure that the rights of those
who play by the rules are respected. "

Michael Howard on the Human
Rights Act, The Guardian, March 19.

"  People who have been
arrested say they've been
brutalised - the tactics
used are beyond belief. "

Dr Rafiullah Bidar, regional director
of the Afghan Independent Human
Rights Commission, on the
treatment of detainess by the US in
Afghanistan. Guardian, March 19.

 " Afghanistan is being
transformed into an
enormous US jail  "

Nader Nadery, of the Human Rights
Commission. Guardian, March 19.

 " One might have expected a
little humility from the Bush
administration after its destruction
and occupation of Iraq.  "

Lindsey German, convenor of March
19th's anti-war protest in London.
Independent, March 19.

" I've not seen anything like
this since the Julius Streicher
Nazi campaign against Jews.  "

Mike Jempson, Mediawise, on The
Sun's recent campaign against
Travellers. bbc.co.uk, March 11.
 War on gipsy free-for-all".
The Sun, March 9

" The man who gave us the
dodgy dossier is now giving us
The Big Lie.... The man is rattled.   "

Liam Fox, co-chairman of the Tory
party, Independent, March 19