Other Commodity Command Systems Parts

(Page 25) End item NSN parts page 25 of 30
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
143-022-01-1002 Electrical Receptacle Connector
005527174
143-022-01-1005 Electrical Receptacle Connector
005527174
143-022-01-1006 Electrical Receptacle Connector
005527174
143-022-01-107 Electrical Receptacle Connector
005527174
143-022-10 Electrical Receptacle Connector
005527174
143-036-01-107 Electrical Receptacle Connector
000567514
143-755 Electrical Receptacle Connector
000070837
143201130 Transistor
004970895
14323B-101 Electrical Receptacle Connector
003554919
144SEB6339 Transistor
010733784
146-4P25 Paper Metallized Fixed Capacitor
000686969
1467 Cartridge Fuse
002522022
147-20001-158 Unitized Semiconductor Devices
004688427
148-031 Tip Jack
000816290
148718-1 Electrical-electron Mounting Pad
009293729
148P242-PYL Plastic Dielectr Fixed Capacitor
008343015
149-29867-02 Arbitrary Scale Meter
009882393
149009501 Transistor
009305325
149860-001 Power Supply
011911690
15-09523-00 Transistor
007619379
Page: 25

Other Commodity Command Systems

Picture of Other Commodity Command Systems

In Karl Marx's critique of political economy, commodity fetishism is the perception of the social relationships involved in production, not as relationships among people, but as economic relationships among the money and commodities exchanged in market trade. As such, commodity fetishism transforms the subjective, abstract aspects of economic value into objective, real things that people believe have intrinsic value.

The theory of commodity fetishism is presented in the first chapter of Capital: Critique of Political Economy (1867), at the conclusion of the analysis of the value-form of commodities, to explain that the social organization of labor is mediated through market exchange, the buying and the selling of commodities (goods and services). Hence, in a capitalist society, social relations between people—who makes what, who works for whom, the production-time for a commodity, et cetera—are perceived as economic relations among objects, that is, how valuable a given commodity is when compared to another commodity. Therefore, the market exchange of commodities obscures the true economic character of the human relations of production, between the worker and the capitalist.

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