If you accept the notion of *intangible capital* and *human capital* it's a both alarming and perplexing to claim the state should control all access to capital. But I admit yours is a very idiosyncratic take I haven't really wrapped my head around.
I believe what I'm doing here is bringing things like human and intangible capital back into the picture from Cockshott's foundation in Towards a New Socialism, which largely neglected them
If you accept the notion of *intangible capital* and *human capital* it's a both alarming and perplexing to claim the state should control all access to capital. But I admit yours is a very idiosyncratic take I haven't really wrapped my head around.
I believe what I'm doing here is bringing things like human and intangible capital back into the picture from Cockshott's foundation in Towards a New Socialism, which largely neglected them