Beyond Capital: Toward a Theory of TransitionMerlin Press, 1995 - 994 pages "Not only profound in its analysis, but also so passionately inspired by sympathy for the downtrodden and their struggle for liberation. . ." "This is an important book, heavy in size and tone. It belongs in every serious library." --This text refers to an alternate edition |
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Résultats 1-3 sur 93
Page 30
... conception of history had to be diametrically opposed to that of Hegel . To be sure , Marx's concept of capital as a dynamically developing and all - encompassing historical order was linked in its origin to the Hegelian conception of ...
... conception of history had to be diametrically opposed to that of Hegel . To be sure , Marx's concept of capital as a dynamically developing and all - encompassing historical order was linked in its origin to the Hegelian conception of ...
Page 298
... conception of subjectivity - wedded to a conception of the isolated individual's ' autonomous selfhood ' as the foundation of truth ban- ished from the horizon . It was revised by the Hungarian philosopher by asserting that social ...
... conception of subjectivity - wedded to a conception of the isolated individual's ' autonomous selfhood ' as the foundation of truth ban- ished from the horizon . It was revised by the Hungarian philosopher by asserting that social ...
Page 446
... conception of the social individual - oriented and motivated within the frame- work of a specific social consciousness has really nothing in common . - THE fundamental difference between a speculative and a materialist conception of ...
... conception of the social individual - oriented and motivated within the frame- work of a specific social consciousness has really nothing in common . - THE fundamental difference between a speculative and a materialist conception of ...
Table des matières
Preface | 7 |
PART | 10 |
Chapter page | 10 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
absolute actually Adam Smith Alfred Marshall alienation alternative antagonisms articulation assert bourgeois bourgeoisie capitalist century Class Consciousness command structure conception concerned constituted contradictions countries course crisis despite destructive determinations dialectical division of labour dominant dynamics economic emancipation envisaged existing expansion fact framework functions global capital system Hayek Hegel Hegelian historical ascendancy History and Class human Ibid idealized identical subject-object ideological imperatives individuals intellectual labour force limits Lukács Lukács's Margaret Thatcher Marx Marx's Marxian material matter means microcosms mode of social nature necessary objective particular party personifications of capital philosophical political positive postcapitalist postulated potential practical principle problematical problems production proletariat radical rate of exploitation rational relations revolution rule of capital second order mediations social metabolic control social metabolic order social metabolic reproduction social reproductive socialist project socioeconomic solution Soviet standpoint substantive equality surplus-labour technostructure theory tion totally unemployment weakest link workers