Selected Writings in Sociology and Social PhilosophyWatts, 1956 - 268 pagina's |
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Pagina 128
... bourgeoisie developed , increased its capital , and pushed into the back- ground every class handed down from the Middle Ages . We see , therefore , how the modern bourgeoisie is itself the product of a long course of development , of a ...
... bourgeoisie developed , increased its capital , and pushed into the back- ground every class handed down from the Middle Ages . We see , therefore , how the modern bourgeoisie is itself the product of a long course of development , of a ...
Pagina 137
... bourgeoisie , by the rapid improvement of all instru- ments of production , by the immensely facilitated means of communication , draws all , even the most barbarian nations , into civilization . The cheap prices of its com- modities ...
... bourgeoisie , by the rapid improvement of all instru- ments of production , by the immensely facilitated means of communication , draws all , even the most barbarian nations , into civilization . The cheap prices of its com- modities ...
Pagina 163
... bourgeoisie ( both of them lived for a time in Holland ) , as well as the first political events by which the bourgeoisie in England emerged from its local and pro- vincial limits , and a relatively advanced stage of manufac- ture ...
... bourgeoisie ( both of them lived for a time in Holland ) , as well as the first political events by which the bourgeoisie in England emerged from its local and pro- vincial limits , and a relatively advanced stage of manufac- ture ...
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction | 1 |
I | 51 |
Existence and consciousness | 67 |
Copyright | |
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abstract according activity alienation analysis Année sociologique appears basis become bourgeois society bourgeoisie Capital I 1867 capitalist capitalist mode capitalist production character civil society commodities conception of history conditions of existence consciousness consequently criticism determined division of labour dominant duction economists emancipation Engels England English exchange exploitation expression fact feudal Feuerbach German hand Hegel Hegelian human labour ideas ideology independent individual industry intercourse interest Karl Marx Kritik labour-power landed property Marx Marx's theory Marxist material production means of production means of subsistence MEGA I/3 ment mode of production modern movement natural object organization particular philosophy political economy private property process of production productive forces proletariat published relations of production relationships religion revolution revolutionary ruling class slave slavery social relations socialist sociology sphere struggle surplus value tion Tories trans transformation wages Whigs whole workers workshop writings