Hegel’s Concept of Corporation as the Mediation between Free Market and State
Hegel’s Concept of Corporation as the Mediation between Free Market and State
Author(s): Paul CobbenSubject(s): Social Philosophy, German Idealism, Marxism
Published by: Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju
Keywords: Corporation; System of Needs; wage labor; rationalization; Hegel; Marx
Summary/Abstract: The experiences of the communist countries in Eastern Europe have made clear that the centralized planned economy (without a free market) does not function. From Hegel’s perspective, it can be said that this experience is not just coincidental: the abolition of the free market includes the abolition of the institutional framework that enables insight into the formation of particular interests. Without this insight, it becomes impossible to determine the content of the general good. Therefore, Hegel’s alternative, self-conscious planning of the economic process while the free market is preserved, seems to be unavoidable. However, it remains highly problematic whether or how this connection between planning and free market can be understood. In this article I investigate whether Hegel’s concept of the corporation can help in finding an answer to this problem.
Journal: Filozofija i društvo
- Issue Year: 28/2017
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 543-559
- Page Count: 17
- Language: English