|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Agustín Lage DávilaPublisher: Monthly Review Press,U.S. Imprint: Monthly Review Press,U.S. Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.526kg ISBN: 9781685900434ISBN 10: 1685900437 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 31 March 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"""I am confident that even those who desire the failure of Cuban socialism will not abandon the book after reading the Introduction. Champions of ""improved capitalism,"" an oxymoron because it is not possible to improve a system that metastasizes like aggressive cancer, this book will be bad news. If they are enlightened and knowledgeable enemies of socialism, they will have to approach this book with respect. It would not surprise me even if some reconsider their prejudices or ways of thinking.""--Professor Néstor G. Del Prado, Center of Molecular Immunology, Havana" """Agustín Lage is both a participant and an observer in the development of Cuban science, an outstanding molecular biologist, and a militant in the Cuban Communist Party. At the core of Agustín Lage's work: That just as the factory and the farm marked the end of feudal systems of production, the economy of knowledge is the emergence of the new means of production. This is his most penetrating insight into the emerging contradictions of capitalism: scientific knowledge is cumulative and complex so that any company has to buy licenses from their competitors in order to produce something. It is patented and held as private information, undermining the scientific tradition of a community that shared ideas. Competition leads to turn over of labor, which disrupts the tacit knowledge of collectives and makes it not worthwhile (""cost effective"") to educate workers. Just as capitalism gave us the factory system that replaced the artisan guilds, so the economy of knowledge is increasingly incompatible with capitalism and is characteristic of socialism.""--Richard Levins, polymath, revered educator, committed antiwar activist and internationalist, and a scientific advisor for Cuba ""I am confident that even those who desire the failure of Cuban socialism will not abandon the book after reading the Introduction. Champions of ""improved capitalism,"" an oxymoron because it is not possible to improve a system that metastasizes like aggressive cancer, this book will be bad news. If they are enlightened and knowledgeable enemies of socialism, they will have to approach this book with respect. It would not surprise me even if some reconsider their prejudices or ways of thinking.""--Professor Néstor G. Del Prado, Center of Molecular Immunology, Havana ""Cuba, a country with scarce resources which has sustained an economic blockade throughout its modern history, maintains a vigorous biotechnology sector that has developed vaccines against meningitis, cancer, and Covid. In his newly translated book, The Knowledge Economy and Socialism, Agustín Lage, director of Havana's Center of Molecular Immunology and a politically engaged delegate to the National Assembly, accounts for this apparent paradox by describing how science and technology, when unshackled from the constraints of the capitalist profit system, can be directed to solving pressing human needs. The social transformations enabling this are not without problems, and these are discussed frankly and with theoretical depth in this unique and important collection of essays.""--Stuart A. Newman, Professor of Cell Biology and Anatomy, New York Medical College" """Agust�n Lage is both a participant and an observer in the development of Cuban science, an outstanding molecular biologist, and a militant in the Cuban Communist Party. At the core of Agust�n Lage's work: That just as the factory and the farm marked the end of feudal systems of production, the economy of knowledge is the emergence of the new means of production. This is his most penetrating insight into the emerging contradictions of capitalism: scientific knowledge is cumulative and complex so that any company has to buy licenses from their competitors in order to produce something. It is patented and held as private information, undermining the scientific tradition of a community that shared ideas. Competition leads to turn over of labor, which disrupts the tacit knowledge of collectives and makes it not worthwhile (""cost effective"") to educate workers. Just as capitalism gave us the factory system that replaced the artisan guilds, so the economy of knowledge is increasingly incompatible with capitalism and is characteristic of socialism.""--Richard Levins, polymath, revered educator, committed antiwar activist and internationalist, and a scientific advisor for Cuba ""I am confident that even those who desire the failure of Cuban socialism will not abandon the book after reading the Introduction. Champions of ""improved capitalism,"" an oxymoron because it is not possible to improve a system that metastasizes like aggressive cancer, this book will be bad news. If they are enlightened and knowledgeable enemies of socialism, they will have to approach this book with respect. It would not surprise me even if some reconsider their prejudices or ways of thinking.""--Professor N�stor G. Del Prado, Center of Molecular Immunology, Havana ""Cuba, a country with scarce resources which has sustained an economic blockade throughout its modern history, maintains a vigorous biotechnology sector that has developed vaccines against meningitis, cancer, and Covid. In his newly translated book, The Knowledge Economy and Socialism, Agust�n Lage, director of Havana's Center of Molecular Immunology and a politically engaged delegate to the National Assembly, accounts for this apparent paradox by describing how science and technology, when unshackled from the constraints of the capitalist profit system, can be directed to solving pressing human needs. The social transformations enabling this are not without problems, and these are discussed frankly and with theoretical depth in this unique and important collection of essays.""--Stuart A. Newman, Professor of Cell Biology and Anatomy, New York Medical College" Author InformationDr. Agustín Lage Dávila is an internationally known and respected immunologist. He was for many years director of the Cuban Center of Molecular Immunology. A dedicated communist, he has been at the forefront of scientific education and economic development through science in Cuba. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |