Marx-Engels Reader,Reader, MarxengelsTucker, Robert CWhy, I
Marx inherits from the Enlightenment the overarching goal of human liberation, but unlike the liberal focus on removing external forms of coercion, such as authoritarian governments or the institution of slavery, Marx emphasizes the importance of identifying and resisting internalized coercion. Accordingly,...
I know I am not alone. There must be hundreds of other women, may be thousands, who feel as I do. There may be hundreds of men who want the same drastic things to happen. But how do you hook up with them? How can you interlink your own struggle and goals with these myriad, hypo...
17.03. Introduction to Political Thought Lecture Outline: MarxReader, MarxengelsTucker, Robert CCapital, I Das Kapital
SeeThe Marx-Engels Reader, edited by R. C. Tucker (New York, 1972) p. 187. Google Scholar G. A. Cohen,Karl Marx’s Theory of History: A Defence(Oxford, 1978). In addition, see Cohen’s later argument inNomos, vol 26 (New York, 1983). ...
The German Ideology has rarely been considered in its entirety; its belated publication1 and translation has obscured its contents. Its most lengthy section, ‘Saint Max’, a detailed examination of Max Stirner’s book The Ego and his Own (Der Einzige...