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11 July 2026

Capitalism and Feudalism: A Change in Words, Not in Truth

Abstract

This paper looks at capitalism in a new way. Instead of seeing capitalism as something brand new, it argues that capitalism is really just feudalism with different names and new tricks. The main idea is simple: in both systems, a small group of people profit from the hard work of a large group of people. In feudalism, this small group was made up of lords and ladies. In capitalism, they are called business owners or entrepreneurs. This paper also looks at profit itself and argues that profit works like a hidden tax that the few place on the products and services made by the many. It questions the idea of "free labor," showing how that freedom was forced into being by taking away people's land and resources. It argues that technological progress comes from science, cooperation, and access to resources, not from money or from capitalists. It also shows that capitalism did not end slavery, and that there is more slavery in the world today than at any point in history, because capitalism cares only about profit, not about how that profit is made. This paper aims to define capitalism based on real physical evidence, meaning how the system actually works in the real world, not on the ideas that philosophers debate at dinner parties. This is the first in a set of papers, and it leads into two more that will define socialism and communism in the same clear and evidence-based way.

Introduction

Most people think of capitalism as a modern system, very different from the old days of kings, lords, and peasants. But is it really so different? This paper argues that the answer is no. While the words have changed, the basic setup has stayed much the same. A few people at the top still profit from the work of the many people below them.

The purpose of this paper is to compare capitalism and feudalism and to show how similar they truly are. This topic matters because it helps us look past the surface and ask hard questions about how our economy really works. When we understand these deeper patterns, we can think more clearly about fairness, work, and who really benefits from all the labor being done.

In this paper, we will look at what feudalism was, how capitalism works, how the two connect, the idea of profit as a hidden tax, the myth of "free labor," how that free labor was really created, the truth about who drives technological progress, and the hard fact that capitalism never ended slavery.

What Was Feudalism?

Feudalism was an economic and social system that was common in Europe during the Middle Ages, roughly from about 800 AD to 1400 AD. In feudalism, society was shaped like a pyramid.

At the top was the king. Below the king were the lords and ladies, who were given large pieces of land. At the bottom were the peasants and serfs, who did most of the actual work. These workers farmed the land, raised animals, and produced almost everything that was needed.

But here is the key part: the peasants did not keep most of what they made. Instead, they had to give a large share of their crops and goods to the lord who owned the land. In return, the lord offered protection and let them live on the land. The lord did little of the actual labor but received much of the wealth.

So in feudalism, we see a clear pattern. A few people at the top lived well because of the hard work of the many people at the bottom.

How Capitalism Repeats the Same Pattern

Now let us look at capitalism. At first, it seems very different. There are no kings or lords. People are free to choose their jobs. Anyone can, in theory, start a business. But if we look closely, the same pyramid shape appears.

At the top of the pyramid today, we have business owners, company bosses, and wealthy investors. At the bottom, we have workers who do most of the actual labor. These workers make the products, serve the customers, drive the trucks, and run the machines.

But just like the peasants of old, these workers do not keep most of the wealth they create. A worker might make products worth a lot of money in a day, but they only receive a small paycheck. The rest of the value goes to the business owner as profit.

In this way, the entrepreneur has simply taken the place of the feudal lord. The words have changed. The clothing has changed. The technology has changed. But the basic truth has not: a few people profit from the labor of the many. The lords and ladies did not disappear. They just learned to play the system in a new way.

Profit as a Hidden Tax

One of the main ideas in this paper is that profit works like a tax placed by the few on the many.

Think about it this way. When workers make a product or offer a service, that product or service has value. But before the worker sees any reward, a share is taken out and given to the owner as profit. This is money that the worker created but does not receive.

In the old feudal system, the lord openly took a share of the crops. Everyone knew it was a kind of payment or tax to the lord. In capitalism, this same thing still happens, but it is hidden inside the system. It is not called a tax. It is called profit. Yet the result is much the same. Every person who buys the product or service pays a little extra on top of the real cost, and this extra money goes straight to the owner or the investors, much like a sales tax that everyone quietly pays without noticing.

So when we buy products or services, part of the price we pay is really this hidden tax. It is the extra amount added on top so that the owner can profit. In this view, profit is only a change in wording, not a change in the real relationship between the few and the many.

The Myth of "Free Labor"

One of the biggest changes that came with capitalism is the idea of "free labor." In feudalism, peasants were often tied to the land and could not leave. They were forced to work for one lord. Capitalism seems different because workers can choose where they work and can quit if they want.

But is this freedom real, or is it only partly real?

This paper argues that the freedom is mostly an illusion. Yes, a worker can leave one company. But then what? They must find another company to work for. They cannot simply choose to keep all the value of their own labor. In the end, they are only free to pick which owner will profit from their work.

It is a bit like being told you are free to choose your master. You have some choice, but the basic situation remains the same. You must work for someone who will take a share of what you produce. The idea that workers are "free" may make them feel better, but it does not change the deeper truth. This clever idea of free labor seems to date back at least a thousand years, and perhaps even earlier, growing slowly as feudalism gave way to newer systems.

How "Free Labor" Was Really Created

We have said that "free labor" is mostly an illusion. But where did it come from in the first place? The historian Michael Perelman studied this question in his book The Invention of Capitalism, and he found something important. Free labor did not appear on its own. It had to be forced into being.

For most of human history, ordinary people could take care of themselves. They could farm small plots of land, hunt, fish, and gather food from land that everyone shared. This shared land was called the commons. As long as people had access to these resources, they did not need to work for a boss. They could feed their own families.

But early capitalism needed workers who had no other choice. So the common lands were slowly taken away. Rich landowners and governments fenced off the land that people once shared and made it private property. This was called enclosure. Once people lost their access to land and resources, they had no way to survive except by selling their labor to an owner for wages.

This is powerful evidence. It shows that the freedom of workers was taken away on purpose. People were not naturally free to choose wage work. They were pushed into it once their other options were removed. This connects directly to a key idea in this paper: what people truly need is access to resources. Capitalism grew by cutting off that access, leaving the many with no choice but to work for the few.

Capitalism Did Not End Slavery

Many people believe that capitalism helped end slavery and made the world more free. But when we look at the real evidence, this belief does not hold up. In truth, there is more slavery in the world today than at any point in history.

Experts who study this say that tens of millions of people around the world are trapped in some form of forced labor right now. People are made to work in fields, factories, mines, and homes against their will. Some are children. Many make the very products that are sold in wealthy countries.

Why does this still happen in a capitalist world? The answer is simple. Capitalism cares about profit. It does not care how that profit is made. If forced labor makes a product cheaper, then the system quietly allows it, because a cheaper product means more profit. The system does not ask whether the workers were treated fairly. It only asks whether money was made.

So capitalism did not truly free the many. In many parts of the world, it has kept the oldest and cruelest form of the few profiting from the many fully alive. This is more evidence that the deep pattern has not changed. The few still take the wealth, and the many still do the suffering.

Who Really Drives Technological Progress?

One common defense of capitalism is that it brings technological progress. People often say that because business owners want to make money, they create new and better inventions. But this paper argues that this credit is misplaced.

The real reason for technological progress is science, not capitalism. Capitalists do try to innovate, because a new invention can give them an advantage over their competitors. If one company has a better product, more people will buy it, and the owner will make more money. So capitalists have a reason to want new technology.

But wanting something is very different from creating it. The capitalist does not build the invention. The actual work is done by scientists and engineers. These are the people who study, test, design, and build. They spend years learning how the world works and then use that knowledge to make real tools, machines, and medicines.

So even here, we see the same old pattern. The capitalist, like the feudal lord, wants a reward. But the real labor and skill come from others, the scientists and engineers, whose work is then used by the owner to earn profit. The people who truly make progress happen are not the ones who gain the most from it. Once again, the few profit from the labors of the many.

Applications and Use Cases: Seeing the Pattern Today

This way of thinking can help us understand many things in the modern world.

The Wage Gap

When we hear that a company boss earns hundreds of times more than a regular worker, this pattern explains why. The many at the bottom create the wealth, and the few at the top collect most of it, just like the lords of old.

Big Companies

Large companies employ thousands of workers who do the real labor, while a small group of owners and investors gain the biggest rewards. This is the feudal pyramid on a giant scale.

Scientists and Engineers

Many workers who create new technology are paid a salary while the company earns huge profits from their inventions. The people who make progress happen are often not the ones who become rich from it.

Forced Labor in Supply Chains

Many everyday products are made by people working under harsh or forced conditions in faraway places. The profit flows to the owners, while the workers gain little or nothing. This is the old pattern hidden inside the modern world.

The Feeling of Being Stuck

Many workers feel that no matter how hard they work, they cannot get ahead. This feeling makes sense if the system is built so that most of the value they create flows upward to someone else.

Comparing the Two Systems Side by Side

Let us place feudalism and capitalism next to each other.

What Is the Same

  • A few people at the top gain from the work of the many.

  • The workers do not keep most of the wealth they create.

  • Power and money stay mostly with the small group at the top.

What Is Different

  • In feudalism, the lord was born into power. In capitalism, a person can, in some cases, rise to the top by starting a business.

  • In feudalism, workers were tied to the land. In capitalism, workers can move between jobs.

  • In feudalism, the sharing of crops was open. In capitalism, the same sharing is hidden inside the idea of profit.

So the differences are real, but they are mostly about the outside look of the system. The inside structure, where the few gain from the many, stays much the same.

Challenges and Limitations

It is only fair to point out that this view has some limits, and not everyone will agree with it.

Some Workers Do Rise

In capitalism, some workers do become owners. A person can start with very little and build a big company. This was almost impossible in feudalism, where your place in society was fixed at birth. So capitalism does offer more chances to move up, even if these chances are rare.

Owners Take Risks, But Is the Risk Worth It?

Some people argue that owners deserve profit because they take risks. If a business fails, the owner can lose money. Workers, in most cases, do not lose their own money in the same way. At first, this sounds fair.

But we have to ask a deeper question. Is that risk really worth hundreds of times the salary of an employee? A company boss may earn hundreds of times more than a regular worker, and the reason given is that the boss took a risk. Yet the risk does not match the reward. If an owner risks losing money, that is a one-time danger. A worker, on the other hand, shows up every single day and gives their time, effort, and health to the company. If a worker loses their job, they may not be able to pay for food or a home. In many ways, that is a far greater risk than the owner faces.

So the risk taken by the owner does not truly explain why they earn so much more than the people who do the actual work. The gap is far too large to be fairly explained by risk alone. When we look at the real evidence, we see that the reward the owner takes is much bigger than the risk they take. This fits the pattern we have seen all along: the few at the top gain far more than their share, while the many who do the real work receive far less than they deserve.

What Progress Really Needs

Some people claim that progress needs money, and that capitalists provide it. But this is not really true. Money is a fairly recent invention in human history. Long before money existed, people still made great progress. Early humans invented tools, learned to farm, built shelters, and discovered fire, all without any money at all.

What scientists, engineers, and workers truly need is not money. What they need is access to resources, such as materials, tools, and time, and the ability to see a real need that must be filled. When people can reach the resources around them and clearly understand a problem, they can create solutions. Money is only one way of moving resources around, and it is not the only way.

The thinker Peter Kropotkin studied nature and human history and found that cooperation, not competition, is what helped both animals and people survive and move forward. This challenges the common belief that competition is what drives progress. He also pointed out that all our modern wealth, tools, and knowledge were built by countless people over many generations. No single owner created these things. They were inherited from the shared work of the many. So no owner truly has the right to claim all of it and profit from it. So the idea that capitalists are needed because they provide money is weaker than it first appears. The resources, cooperation, and the human drive to solve problems came first, and they are what really matter.

This paper aims to define capitalism based on real physical evidence, meaning how the system actually works when we look at real people, real labor, and real resources. It is not based on the ideas that philosophers like to argue about at dinner parties. Our goal is to see the system as it truly is.

Conclusion

This paper has argued that capitalism and feudalism are more alike than they first appear. In both systems, a small group of people profit from the labor of a large group. The lords and ladies of the past have simply become the business owners of today. They learned to play the system in new ways, but the basic power balance has not changed.

We also looked at profit as a kind of hidden tax placed by the few on the products and services made by the many, a cost that every buyer quietly pays. We showed how "free labor" was forced into being by taking away people's land and shared resources. We saw that capitalism never ended slavery, and that there is more forced labor today than ever before, because the system cares only about profit and not about how that profit is made. And we argued that real progress comes from science, cooperation, and access to resources, not from money or from capitalists.

Throughout this paper, the goal has been to define capitalism based on real physical evidence, on how the system actually works in the real world. By looking at real labor, real resources, and real results, we can understand capitalism more clearly than by only talking about ideas and theories.

This paper is the first in a set of three. Now that we have defined capitalism by looking at how it truly works, the next paper will define socialism in the same clear and evidence-based way. The paper after that will define communism. By studying all three systems side by side, and by always looking at real evidence rather than only ideas, we can build a full and honest picture of the different ways human societies can organize work, resources, and wealth.

References

  • Marx, K. (1867). Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. Verlag von Otto Meissner.

  • Perelman, M. (2000). The Invention of Capitalism. Duke University Press.

  • Kropotkin, P. (1902). Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. William Heinemann.

  • Kropotkin, P. (1892). The Conquest of Bread. Chapman and Hall.

  • Bloch, M. (1961). Feudal Society. University of Chicago Press.

  • Mazzucato, M. (2013). The Entrepreneurial State. Anthem Press.

  • Pirenne, H. (1937). Economic and Social History of Medieval Europe. Harcourt, Brace and Company.

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