I will finish it, but i'm already sceptical of the author given that they rely so much on "harvey uses [word]" -> "word has [synonyms]" -> "synonyms have bad connotations" -> "harvey is basically saying bad things about marx"
E.g. with a priori, author has given a list of imperfect synonyms, and one of the definitions of the term. But even a quick google search reveals (in the american heritate dictionary) that this is but one definition of the term—not even the top definition. Rather than “in a way based on theoretical deduction rather than empirical observation” the impression i got reading Harvey's work is that by a priori he more means "Proceeding from a known or assumed cause to a necessarily related effect; deductive" which is what Marx does, proceeding from known economic categories (and this is in fact what Harvey says Marx does!)
Wrt cryptic, its genuinely sad but to most people in the modern day, marx comes across as very cryptic (in sense sense of mysterious or obscure). Even stuff marx wrote to aid understanding (e.g. the references to popular literature, like shapespeare, goethe or robinson crusoe) have themselves become obscure, cryptic, in need of decoding. I say this from my experience in my org trying to get folks to read capital. Even stuff like the categories are (again, as harvey says) cryptic to the modern reader. Saying that something is difficult isnt some slight or conspiracy against marxism, it is good pedagogical practice.
