Something or other about efficiency and having the total wealth be increased far more quickly than any other economic system.
Yes. I can understand that.
It's just this nomenclature of capitalist philosophy that's getting to me.
It doesn't seem to chime with what I see on the ground, as it were.
Capitalism, it seems to me, is a thing that's grown out of a long history of actions by individuals.
Who are these capitalist philosophers? Does it mean everyone who isn't a Marxist, for example?
And yet strangely the only well-known work that I can think of that features Kapital in its title was by Marx. Does this mean that Marx was a capitalist philosopher?
Or is a capitalist philosopher merely a Western liberal economist? But then no two of those agree so is it meaningful to talk about them as capitalist philosophers?
Or is Castro simply talking about the "bourgeois philosophers" who inhabit the Western world, in general?
Or is a capitalist philosopher someone who upholds the virtue of the market as the epitome of human endeavour (at a rough guess)? But I don't think any one does that. Or do they? Ayn Rand, maybe? But she's just some random nutter and hardly an important thinker on the subject (or do I betray my prejudices?).
Or is it someone of the likes of Milton Friedman? (And even he seems to think he made some kind of mistake.)
I don't know.
I'm rather intrigued by what he can mean.
edit: but anyway, the thread's about Syria.