The German Ideology"This new edition makes easily available the really living parts of the authors' first exposition of the new revolutionary philosophy, written with all the freshness of a new discovery. It includes the vital first part of the book, which remains a basic text for every student of Marxism, and the most telling points, fully relevant today, out of the polemics which occupy the rest of the work. Added as appendices are Marx's famous theses on Feuerbach and his unfinished "Introduction to a critique of political economy," not previously published in English. The present edition has been edited by C.J Arthur, of the School of Social Studies at Sussex University, England, who supplies a lucid introduction on the place of the work in the evolution of Marxism"--Page 4 of cover. |
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Contents
EDITORS PREFACE | 1 |
Preface | 37 |
Proletarians and Communism | 82 |
Conquest | 89 |
SELECTIONS FROM THE REMAINING PARTS OF | 97 |
Will as the Basis of Right | 106 |
The Philosophy of Enjoyment | 114 |
SUPPLEMENTARY TEXTS | 121 |
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Common terms and phrases
abolish abstract activity actual already appears aspects basis become big industry bourgeois society bourgeoisie Bruno Bauer capital civil society commerce communist competition concept concrete concrete category consciousness consumption contradiction created definite determined distribution division of labour domination economists egoists emancipation empirical epoch evolved exchange exploitation expression fact factor of production feudal Feuerbach form of intercourse German Ideology hand Hegel hence human ideas ideologists illusion imagination independent individuals insofar instrument of production interests Karl Marx landed nobility landed property later manufacture Marx and Engels Marx's material materialist means mode of production modern nations nature needs object organisation ownership particular philosophers political economy political emancipation practice premises presupposes private property productive forces proletariat realise reality relations of production relationships religion religious revolution ruling class self-activity sensuous separate serfs stage Stirner struggle theory things towns trade transformation universal whole workers Young Hegelians