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Karl Marx

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Title: Karl Marx


1
Karl Marx
  • 1818-1883.
  • German-Jewish family converted to Christianity.
  • Studies Law and Philosophy in Bonn and Berlin
  • Influenced by Hegels dialectics, Smiths and
    Ricardos theories, and utopian socialism.
    Dialectical Materialism.
  • 1844 Meets Friedrich Engels (life-long
    partnership).
  • 1848- Manifesto of the Communist Party
  • Constant moves, live in London since 1849.
  • Helped by Engels and other friends, Marx and his
    family live in extreme poverty.
  • 1867 I Volume of Das Kapital.
  • 1864-1872 leading role in the International
    Working Mens Association.

2
  • Huge philosophical, economical, and historical
    work.
  • No specific work on political theory, though he
    is one of the most influential thinkers of the
    19th century.

3
Thesis Negation- Negations Negation
(Synthesis)In Hegel movement of disclosing of
the IDEA In Marx movement of development of
SOCIAL RELATIONS.
Dialectics
4
Marx, 1845 Theses on Feuerbach
  • Philosophers have only interpreted the world in
    various ways the point is to change it.

5
Alienated Labor Inverted World
  • We have begun from the presuppositions of
    political economy. We have accepted its
    terminology and its laws From political economy
    itself, in its own words, we have shown that the
    worker sinks to the level of a commodity, and to
    a most miserable commodity that the misery of
    the worker increases with the power and volume of
    his production that the necessary result of
    competition is the accumulation of capital in a
    few hands and the whole of society divide into
    the two classes of property owners and
    propertyless workers. (656)

6
Private Property other assumptions
  • Political economy begins with the fact of
    private property it does not explain it. It
    conceives the material process of private
    property, as this occurs in reality, in general
    and abstract formulas which then serve it as
    laws. It does not comprehend these laws
  • in other words, what should be explained is
    assumed. (656)
  • The only motive forces which political economy
    recognizes are avarice and the war between the
    avaricious, competition. (656)

7
Upside Down
  • We shall begin from a contemporary economic
    fact. The worker becomes poorer the more wealth
    he produces and the more his production increases
    in power and extent. The worker becomes an even
    cheaper commodity the more goods he creates. The
    devaluation of the human world increases in
    direct relation with the increase in value of the
    world of things. Labour does not only create
    goods it also produces itself and the worker as
    a commodity, and indeed in the same proportion as
    it produces goods. (657)

8
Alienation
  • The alienation of the worker in his product
    means not only that his labour becomes an object,
    assumes an external existence, but that it exists
    independently, outside himself, and alien to him,
    and that it stands opposed to him as an
    autonomous power. (657)
  • the worker becomes a slave of the object
    (657)
  • Capital is alienated labor, privately
    appropriated.

9
State of Nature?
  • Let us not begin our explanation, as does the
    economist, from a legendary primordial condition.
    Such a primordial condition does not explain
    anything it merely removes the question into a
    grey and nebulous distance. (656)
  • The single, isolated hunter and fisherman, with
    whom Smith and Ricardo begin, belongs to the
    unimaginative fancies of eighteenth-century
    Robinsonades... (...)... Purely aesthetic
    illusion of small and great Robinsonades.
    (Grundrisse, 1857)

10
Bourgeois Society
  • which, since the sixteenth century, has been
    preparing itself for, and, in the eighteenth has
    made giant strides towards, maturity. In this
    freely competitive society the individual appears
    as released from the natural ties...(Grundrisse,
    1857)

11
Labor is Social...
  • The production of the isolated individual outside
    society... Is as much as impossibility as the
    development of language without individuals
    living together and talking to one another.
    (Grundrisse, 1857)

12
Marx Aristotle
  • The further back in history we go, the more does
    the individual, and thus also the productive
    individual, appear as dependent, as part of a
    greater whole... (Grundrisse, 1857)
  • Family Tribe Community

13
  • Man, in the most literal sense, is a zoon
    politikon, not just a social animal but an animal
    which can achieve individuation only in society.
    (Grundrisse, 1857)
  • ( Aristotle)

14
Good Life vs. Mere Life
  • We arrive at the result that man (the worker)
    feels himself to be freely active only in his
    animal functionseating, drinking and
    procreating, or at most also in his dwelling and
    in personal adornmentwhile in his human
    functions he is reduced to an animal. The animal
    becomes human and the human becomes animal.(658)
  • Life itself appears only as a means of life.
    (659)

15
The Workers Revolutionary Task
  • From the relation of alienated labour to private
    property it also follows that the emancipation of
    society from private property, from servitude,
    takes the political form of the emancipation of
    the workers not in the sense that only the
    latters emancipation is involved, but because
    this emancipation includes the emancipation of
    humanity as a whole. (661-2)

16
Communism
  • To be a capitalist, is to have not only a purely
    personal, but a social status in production.
    Capital is a collective product, and only by the
    united action of many members, nay, in the last
    resort, only by the united action of all members
    of society, can it be set in motion. Capital is
    therefore not a personal, it is a social, power.
  • When, therefore, capital is converted into common
    property, into the property of all members of
    society, personal property is not thereby
    transformed into social property. It is only the
    social character of the property that is changed.
    It loses it class character. (670)

17
The Mode of Production
18
In the social production of their life...
  • ...men enter into definite relations that are
    indispensable and independent of their will
    these relations of production correspond to a
    definite stage of development of their material
    forces of production.

19
Structure/Superstructure
  • The sum total of these relations of production
    constitutes the economic structure of society
    the real foundation, on which rises a legal and
    political superstructure and to which correspond
    definite forms of social consciousness.

20
  • ? ? ?
  • ? ???? ? ???
  • ? ? ? ?
  • ??
  • ??? ? ?

NATURE
Productive Forces
Relations of Production
Mode of Production
21
Being determines Consciousness
  • The mode of production of material life
    determines the social, political and intellectual
    life process in general. It is not the
    consciousness of men that determines their being,
    but, on the contrary, their social being that
    determines their consciousness. (1859)

22
Modes of Production
  • Primitive Communism
  • Asiatic (public slavery)
  • Classical slave owning (private slavery)
  • Feudalism
  • Capitalism

23
  • In History,
  • Classes appear with the division of labor, and
    class struggle starts once social labor generates
    a permanent excedent which can be appropriated.

24
The State appeared historically as a weapon in
the class struggle, and it is always controlled
by the ruling class...And it will vanish
together with class exploitation.
25
  • The history of all hitherto existing society is
    the history of class struggles.
  • (663)

26
Politics? Sovereignty?
  • Seen from a strict Marxian perspective,
    Sovereignty is not a real problem...
  • Clearly, the Sovereign is the Ruling Class...
  • And politics is the form of expression of class
    struggle (which will disappear together with it)

27
Revolution
  • At a certain stage of their development, the
    material productive forces in society come in
    conflict with the existing relations of
    production, or what is but a legal expression
    for the same thing- with the property relations
    within which they have been at work before.(...)
    Then begins an epoch of social revolution. (1859)

28
The bourgeoisie appeared in the feudal society
and ended by overthrowing the nobility through
Revolution Capitalism in turn generates the
working class, which now must overthrow the
bourgeois society and build up socialism...PROGR
ESS
29
The 1789 French Revolution
  • Swept away all medieval reminiscences from the
    State
  • Parliamentary Control...
  • Bourgeois State (1830)
  • BUT
  • The State assumed more and more the character of
    the national power of capital over labour...
  • Increasingly REPRESSIVE
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