TG posted:
p. sure he works at pace university where he teaches picante studies
even then, he is a purveyor of inferior philosophy, as chunky is obviously the better choice.
http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=103859&all=true
The best! I never would've gone to class if it weren't for Kliman! Weekly homework, midterm, and final... pretty easy! Goofy sense of humor and constantly sweats lol... he's a nice man, tho and a great professor!EASY A!!
Cheated the whole time, but the girl I got my answers was smart, but he was easy and he is very lazy, so u can cheat all day, he too fat to walk around the class.
He is a knowledgeable lecturer. Some of the concepts he holds dear are not factually accurate but it is obvious that he prepares for class, as he has examples ready to explain his points. All in all, he is a good professor.
gyrofry posted:
he's the supply side marxist
lol what
also he did a bunch of shit about the transformation problem, coming up with the Temporal Single-System Interpretation Of The Labour Theory Of VAlue in order to get round some stuff nobuo okishio wrote apparently disproving it or something
at least i think thats the brief version of his argument.
Duménil: You’re just bullshitting now. We always, you know,
Kliman: year 2005.
Duménil: Yeah, but you know, I cannot hear that. I mean, you cannot just say anything.
Kliman: In your 20-
Duménil:
Kliman: In your 2005 paper, the data are up to the year 2000,
Duménil: No, you said ’97. So now
Kliman: Wait, wait.
Duménil:
Kliman: No, no, you’re not even listening to me. I said your data are through the year 2000. But when you say the rate of profit has recovered, you’re truncating the data at the year 1997. Okay? That’s a reference to the table where you take a certain movement from a certain date up to the year 1997. This is a fact. Okay?
D:
dm posted:Duménil: You’re just bullshitting now. We always, you know,
Kliman: year 2005.
Duménil: Yeah, but you know, I cannot hear that. I mean, you cannot just say anything.
Kliman: In your 20-
Duménil:
Kliman: In your 2005 paper, the data are up to the year 2000,
Duménil: No, you said ’97. So now
Kliman: Wait, wait.
Duménil:
Kliman: No, no, you’re not even listening to me. I said your data are through the year 2000. But when you say the rate of profit has recovered, you’re truncating the data at the year 1997. Okay? That’s a reference to the table where you take a certain movement from a certain date up to the year 1997. This is a fact. Okay?
D:
hahaha whats this from DM?
http://akliman.squarespace.com/storage/Showdown%20at%20the%20HM%20Corral%20pdf%202.19.10.pdf
maybe i'll see him there
aerdil posted:
if u google it this comes up:
http://akliman.squarespace.com/storage/Showdown%20at%20the%20HM%20Corral%20pdf%202.19.10.pdf
serious ownage
getfiscal posted:
i'm going to go to historical materialism 2012 in toronto
maybe i'll see him there
its cool that you have themes for your birthday parties
i love this man
statickinetics posted:
There appears to be an internal inconsistency in Makerowner's message. He doesn't like the statement that "charges that a theory is internally inconsistent serve to inhibit, on seemingly legitimate grounds, the public's access to the theory, and the study, discussion, and current development of it." Yet he himself acknowledges that Marx's theory "came under fire for its alleged internal inconsistency"! (my emphasis). Hmm. Why "came under fire" rather than "was praised to the skies for its alleged internal inconsistency"? Why "came under fire" rather than "became a required component of the economics curriculum because of its internal inconsistency"? Why "came under fire" rather than "had its development spurred on by lavish public and private funding of research in it, owing to its internal inconsistency"? andrew-the-k 02:02, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Yeah this shit that didn't happen, why did it happen? Why did it happen, George? I don't hear answers. I don't hear anything. What. What. How you gonna carry this. Yeah. That's what I thought. Freshwater, b!tch.
kliman's also been going after the monthly review for abusing data:
A recent article of mine scrutinized Fred Magdoff and John Bellamy Foster’s cover-story article in the March 2013 issue of Monthly Review. I showed that they produced no valid evidence in support of their claims that there has been “a long-term decline in the relative power of the working class, with capital increasingly gaining the upper hand,” and that this shift in power relations has produced a long-term “decline in the share of the economy going to labor.”
I noted that one of the many errors in their article was the fact that “their key evidence … on employee compensation as a share of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) …, is obtained by combining data from different datasets in a glaringly invalid way, without regard to whether the datasets are measuring the same thing.” But it turns out that what they did is even worse than I thought.
roseweird posted:jools' spell didn't work bc he abjured when he shoulda conjured :I
from what i can see, you posted in this thread, and now andrew kliman won't take it seriously.
stegosaurus posted:reading this dudes book now (failure of capitalist production) who else has it, let's talk about this fuckin turkey
So what do you think of it?
"So the notion of state-controlled capital is an oxymoron, like jumbo shrimp"
Kliman 2012, p. 196