Liberals will point to how improvements in quality of life have occurred in capitalist countries in recent centuries (debatable, and certainly not true for the entire world, but let’s assume they are correct for now). What is usually implied is that it’s all thanks to capitalism that we have the quality of life that we do, thus capitalism should be allowed to continue.
The thought I had was, do most of the quality of life improvements come down mostly to how agriculture and medicine developed? Meaning, famines were a harsh reality of life for much of human history, and modern agriculture has allowed us to now be in a position where globally, we can produce more than enough food consistently for the whole planet.
Likewise in regards to medicine… in the past just getting sick could be a death sentence. People had to live with incredibly painful conditions their whole life that we now have cures for. Honestly modern medicine is the one reason why I would rather live in 2023 than any other time.
What I’m getting at is… though these advances did occur under capitalism, I don’t think I would give capitalism the “credit” for them. Obviously socialism was not possible 200 years ago. I’m not denying standard Marxist historical progression. What I am doing though, is trying to attack the liberal narrative of treating capitalism as some god who has bestowed his mercy on us - that everything good we have is from Him, and thus we must give Him our praise and continue on His economic system into eternity.
The Soviet Union and China were/are both able to be incredibly productive in agriculture and ended their historic, periodic famines. The Soviet Union (and Cuba!) were/are renowned for their advances in medicine.
I think the only things you can give capitalism “credit” for is developing the productive forces, allowing for high levels of commodity production, and increasing levels of wealth (though not equally shared).
This isn’t debateable. The Imperial Core states and its outposts through the world have living standards more luxurious than ever seen before. We also shouldn’t place the Imperial Periphery, on whose falling standards of living the living standards in the core depend, to the side–this exploitation formed a key part of Marx’s analysis. Improvements in quality of life in the Imperial Core go with and are predicated on increasing impoverishment of the periphery.
This is only true if we refer to history in the narrowest sense (i.e. only the written past) and famine in the broadest sense (i.e. any period of going hungry is famine, regardless of whether or not there were deaths).
Famines in the broader sense are endemic to history in this narrow sense. When you have a stratified class society with surpluses and urban populations doing writing (i.e. fulfil the narrow sense of history) you have an (urban) population with control over distribution of the grain. This population, historically, will restrict the consumption of the ‘lower classes’ to maintain its own (often already inflated to include luxuries as ‘necessary’) consumption, which often leads to relative hunger (but not always or even usually deaths).
As you mention Chinese famines later on, here is an excerpt from Late Victorian Holocausts describing the Qing government’s response to the famine relief in 1743-44, not paralleled in contemporary European famines (where the starving peasants died for lack of cash for the crops they sold to pay rent):
Famines with certain deaths are an invention of the last few millenia, and are particularly concentrated at first in Europe, and thereafter to greater, more rapid extents, in places it colonises. In the narrow historical sense, “producing more than enough food consistently” has been the norm. In the broader sense of history, i.e. the entire human past recorded in writing or not, famines seem to be even less of a regular occurrence. Archaeological evidence suggests that, contrary to this stereotype of hungry and starving hunter-gathers turning into regularly fed farmers, the hunter-gatherers were consistently fed from a variety of sources with less wear and tear from labour.
Not really the case (outside of the (ofc horrible) childhood mortality rates). In a lotta cases, medicine went backwards with the enlightenment as remedies/coping methods/etc for pains were regarded as “superstitions” that didn’t “truly cure the [incurable even today] ailment”. And ofc throughout the world (including Europe at some point) cultures that live on the land tend to know a variety of local medicines based on herbs, animals, plants, etc. These methods are ofc sought after today by multinational corporations so they can copyright them and sell them.
When you say this are you accounting for the fact that, if you were randomly born in 2023 there is a >80% chance you’re born in the Imperial Periphery and therefore, rather than accessing such medicines you’re the one suffering for their production? You might be downwind of some industrial ‘development’ that gives you and your entire family diseases no one has ever heard of before, or you might have your entire village burnt to the ground to mine the minerals or harvest the plants used for the medicines up in the global north. Heck, even in the US or Canada we are still settler-colonial entities; you could very well be born up somewhere in Northern Alberta where much of the food you eat is contaminated with oil and the water has various industrial runoffs.
I would give imperialism the credit for them. Having a large population that doesn’t have to live with the negative consequences of its luxuries (i.e. a nobility) is a key part of imperialism (and a necessity for surplus value realisation).
Did something fundamentally change between 1823 and 1848 when Marx began saying “socialism is possible”?
Marx doesn’t have a “standard historical progression”. Marx has a method of analysing society and looking for ways to transform it for the better. In his early works (e.g. the manifesto or german ideology articles) there is a schematic tendency, but this is abandoned mostly in Capital and totally in later notes and letters (e.g. to Zasulich in 1881). Marx’s near uncritical positivity towards capitalist development of productive forces also fades very quickly, to be replaced with scathing critiques of machines, agriculture (animal and plant), colonisation and peasant-clearing.
Because of how critical he was before the great acceleration and expansion of consumerism, I would think that Marx’s view on the current ‘development of productive forces’ would be rather more critical than you’d expect, especially since his views on all this don’t even take greenhouse gasses into account so he’d probably be even more negative on this.
I disagree on your points about medicine. The last 100 years have seen incredible growth in our ability to reduce mortality. Sepsis, pneumonia and tuberculosis were death sentences that got humbled by antibiotics, the ongoing rise of antibiotic resistant bacteria still pales in the face of the untold millions saved from death and disability by antibiotics. Type 1 Diabetes, also a death sentence, can be managed by insulin that is affordable to manufacture, we just choose the greediest, stupidest way of distributing it. Death from anaphylaxis is largely a bygone thing thanks to epinephrine. Death from dehydration (which is how many childhood and tropical diseases like Ebola* kill) can be mitigated with IV saline. Children with asthma can be saved from death or hypoxic brain injury thanks to Albuterol and asthma controllers. Blood transfusions, TXA, and reliable, clean, readily available orthopedic surgery have all proven incredibly useful in mitigating death secondary to Trauma. You don't have to dig very deep into the last 100-150 or so years of medicine to see that we've come an incredible distance in a lot of places in modern medicine.
This, to me, is the most exasperating part of privatized healthcare. A lot of these incredible innovations are neither very new, nor vastly complicated undertakings, and yet we still ration and price them as though they are, because the rent must be sought.
*The overwhelming majority of Ebola's victims die of dehydration secondary to massive, massive diarrhea. The hemorrhagic manifestation doesn't always happen and is the less common cause of death.