sure but there is an implicit critique of phenomenology in marxism, that what matters is not so much the lived experience (as in perception) but what is behind it (the relations of production), which I think is more correct and which matters if we are talking about morality
as I said, as a systematics, and by going behind the perception to the cause of it, it diminishes the importance of phenomenology, also explicitly with the concept of false consciousness and I guess maybe also commodity fetishization, I didn't not say it said it did not matter however
sure but there is an implicit critique of phenomenology in marxism, that what matters is not so much the lived experience (as in perception) but what is behind it (the relations of production), which I think is more correct and which matters if we are talking about morality
how does marxism imply that lived experience doesn't matter?
as I said, as a systematics, and by going behind the perception to the cause of it, it diminishes the importance of phenomenology, also explicitly with the concept of false consciousness and I guess maybe also commodity fetishization, I didn't not say it said it did not matter however