this post was submitted on 15 Aug 2023
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[โ€“] [email protected] 26 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Or some of us might have multiple sociology degrees and/or are in academia. But I'm sure if they wrote comments about Marx (or Weber or Gramsci or Veblen etc) you'd just assume they got it from wikipedia anyway. Though I'm not sure why that's a bad thing. It's not like it makes a difference whether someone read primary texts online or overpaid at the college bookstore. It's the same information. The fact that anyone has a desire to learn, better themselves, and then try to use that knowledge is admirable and a service to society at large. More people should try it.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Im not talking about people who are educated with degrees taught by experts. Im talking about the person who only learns about this stuff through places like facebook, tiktok, youtube and to a lesser extent reddit (one of the major mods on the econ subs, /u/robthorpe, is a Marxist).

The problem with learning from forums is as a novice you have no way of telling that the person running the forum has any idea what they are talking about.

I think some subjects are better learned when you have actual experts to turn to and you might not have that on say the facebook group you ran across.

For example there's a reply here from someone complaining that modern economics still hasn't answered everything from Kapital which ignores that modern economics and economics of Marx's time are very different in methodology and focus.