This is taken into account with the volume change point.
internal cost sets the lowest bar possible without a profit, it does not set what the price will be in the face of competition because companies charge as much as they can to maximize profit. That maximization either comes in the form of per-unit profit or volume profit.
Right. Companies are compelled to competitively price their product. They still seek profit, but are not at will to price whatever they want. I'm not sure then how you arrive at the conclusion that "the free market trumpeteers are wrong."
I don't think anyone disagrees that companies must price their product competitively and that they seek profit, those are uncontroversial facts.
It's there, that you cannot see it is neither a damnation of the point, nor a refutation of it. If you cannot find a way to respond to the actual point being made there is no discussion to be had here.
internal cost sets the lowest bar possible without a profit, it does not set what the price will be in the face of competition because companies charge as much as they can to maximize profit. That maximization either comes in the form of per-unit profit or volume profit.