Shana
Hi! I am reading this piece about labour. I think I can get the overal point, but to fully interpret it on my own is still difficult. The last sentence " But in the abstraction which seperates them....". I don't know what is "which" referring to, is "the animal"? 🙏🙏 So,"In the abstraction, animal seperates human from other human activities in the world, and turns human to the sole and ultimate end"?
May 5, 2024 10:09 AM
Answers · 10
I don't get it at all. It just seems like a lot of nonsense.
May 5, 2024 6:37 PM
I came across another translation in English of this section. It is a little more comprehensible. Certainly eating, drinking, procreating, etc., are also genuinely human functions. But taken abstractly, separated from the sphere of all other human activity and turned into sole and ultimate ends, they are animal functions.
May 11, 2024 6:30 AM
Shana, I agree with you. I think I get the overall point, but the last sentence especially, doesn't make much sense to me. The overall point is also poorly written, whatever it is. If seems to say "dressing-up" is an animal function? Really? I thought only humans wore clothes. And humans are animals; we are primates, to be specific. I guess the word "worker" suggests some humans have jobs that are no better than what animals do - pure physical labour, for example. Throughout history, most humans worked at back-breaking agricultural labor and had little time or energy for anything more "human". If that is the point, it could be made much more clearly! Probably this is just a bad translation you have come across.
May 5, 2024 2:32 PM
Hi Shana, it looks like the 'separate's them' is referring to the animal functions (eating, drinking, procreating). Basically, even though these functions are also human, when the human element is removed from them, they are animal functions.
May 5, 2024 10:29 AM
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!