| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities - 1960 - 562 pagina’s
...philosophy itself is nothing more than the mere reflection of this process in the thinking brain.18 . . . Thus dialectics reduced itself to the science of the...motion, both of the external world and of human thought. . . ." How, then, does the world move, according to this philosophy? The key to motion is, as has already... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities - 1959 - 168 pagina’s
...philosophy itself is nothing more than the mere reflection of this process in the thinking brain.18 . . . Thus dialectics reduced itself to the science of the...motion, both of the external world and of human thought. . . ." How, then, does the world move, according to this philosophy? The key to motion is, as has already... | |
| Georg Lukacs - 1972 - 412 pagina’s
...The statements of Marx and Engels on this point could hardly be more explicit. "Dialectics thereby reduced itself to the science of the general laws of motion — both in the external world and in the thought of man — two sets of laws which are identical in substance"... | |
| George Lichtheim - 1965 - 434 pagina’s
...the concepts in our heads once more materialistically—as images (Abbilder) of real things. . . . Thus dialectics reduced itself to the science of the...of motion, both of the external world and of human thought—two sets of laws which are identical in 1 Dialectics of Nature, pp. 300 ff. ' Nor should... | |
| Howard Selsam, Harry Martel - 1963 - 390 pagina’s
...necessary to explain the generally known propositions of materialism. In Ludwig Feuerbach also we read that "the general laws of motion — both of the external world and of human thought — [are] two sets of laws which are identical in substance but differ in their expression in so far... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 2004 - 298 pagina’s
...relationships could be discovered in the pattern of events which were individually the result of chance. Thus "dialectics reduced itself to the science of the general laws of motion . . . these laws assert themselves unconsciously, in the form of external necessity in the midst of... | |
| Margaret Cohen - 1993 - 288 pagina’s
...of regarding the real things as copies of this or that stage of development of the absolute concept. Thus dialectics reduced itself to the science of the general laws of motion—both of the external world and of human thought—two sets of laws which are identical in... | |
| Cyril Smith - 1996 - 200 pagina’s
...things instead of regarding the real things as images of this or that stage of the absolute concept. Thus dialectics reduced itself to the science of the...motion, both of the external world and of human thought — both sets of laws which are identical in substance, but differ in their expression in so far as... | |
| John Rees - 1998 - 324 pagina’s
...Fenerbach and the End of Classical German Philosophy, Engels wrote that although "dialectics was . . . the science of the general laws of motion, both of the external world and of human thought" and that although they were "two sets of laws which are identical in substance," they were necessarily... | |
| David Marsh, Tony Tant - 1999 - 396 pagina’s
...images of real things'. Hence, when extracted from its idealist shell, materialist dialectics became "the science of the general laws of motion, both of...two sets of laws which are identical in substance'. In this way, 'the dialectic of concepts became merely the conscious reflex of the real world' (Engels,... | |
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