The German Ideology, Parts I & III"In Brussels, in 1845-46, Marx and Engels labored on this detailed criticism of post-Hegelian thought. The manuscript was not published during their lifetime, being abandoned, as Marx once said, 'to the gnawing criticism of the mice.' Almost ninety years after it was written, the manuscript was recovered and published. This work was Marx' and Engels' first comprehensive statement on historical materialism. The product of a period of undisturbed cooperation, it is a systematic account of their theory of the relationship between the economic, political and intellectual activities of man. It has become one of the classics of Marxist philosophy." - Back cover. |
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Page 13
... towns , no division of importance took place . In agri- culture it was rendered difficult by the strip - system ... towns ; in the newer it only developed later , when the towns entered into mutual relations . The grouping of larger ...
... towns , no division of importance took place . In agri- culture it was rendered difficult by the strip - system ... towns ; in the newer it only developed later , when the towns entered into mutual relations . The grouping of larger ...
Page 45
... towns , where they found an organized community , against which they were powerless , in which they had to subject ... towns created the rabble . These towns were true ' associations , ” called forth by the direct need of provid- ing for ...
... towns , where they found an organized community , against which they were powerless , in which they had to subject ... towns created the rabble . These towns were true ' associations , ” called forth by the direct need of provid- ing for ...
Page 48
... towns to get to know other towns , which had asserted the same interests in the struggle with the same antagonist . Out of the many local corporations of burghers there arose only gradually the burgher class . The conditions of life of ...
... towns to get to know other towns , which had asserted the same interests in the struggle with the same antagonist . Out of the many local corporations of burghers there arose only gradually the burgher class . The conditions of life of ...
Contents
PREFACE BY MARX | 1 |
Dr Georg Kuhlmann of Holstein or | 3 |
The Real Basis of Ideology | 43 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract activity actual already appears basis become big industry bourgeois bourgeoisie Bruno Bauer Cabet capital civil commerce communist competition concept consciousness course criticism crude determined division of labour earlier economy empirical Engels enjoyment epoch expression fact feudal Feuerbach form of intercourse Fourier French further German ideology German science Grün's guilds hand Hegel Hegelian Herr Grün human essence ideas ideologists illusion imagine independent individual existence instruments of production interest landed nobility later life-process manufacture Marx material Max Stirner means ment merely mode movement nations natural capital nature needs ness organization party petty bourgeoisie philosophic political practical premises presupposes private property productive forces proletarians relation relationship religion religious rentiers revolution Reybaud ruling class Saint Bruno Saint-Simon Saint-Simonists self-activity sensuous world separate society stage Stein Stirner struggle things tion totality of existence towns transformation true socialism true socialist unity viduals whole Young Hegelians