Originally posted by Pandemoniak
Who cares if it was published or not ? Marx was already familiar with concepts such as materialism and material/merchant value, else, he wouldnt have been asked to write the manifesto.
Who cares if it was published or not ? Marx was already familiar with concepts such as materialism and material/merchant value, else, he wouldnt have been asked to write the manifesto.
2) Why would he have not specified this, when the basic definitions of Industrial and Material Production (Not the socialist definition of Material Production) are synonomous. Find a common labourer back then who would've been able to make the differentiation without such.
Originally posted by Pandemoniak
You're misreading it, any neutral reader of Marx will clearlyread that Marx wants to abolish child labour, and not pretend that he actually supports it in another form. Anyway, I can give you this link. If you need another, just precise what you look for.
You're misreading it, any neutral reader of Marx will clearlyread that Marx wants to abolish child labour, and not pretend that he actually supports it in another form. Anyway, I can give you this link. If you need another, just precise what you look for.
Remember, "in its present form." Apparently he's got nothing against it, only the present form of it. And then he goes on in his next sentance to describe his view of how Child Labour should be. Or should I add "Paragraphing and sentance structure" to the list of things you can't understand?
Originally posted by Pandemoniak
No, on the contrary, thats the whole point. Quite obvious actually.
No, on the contrary, thats the whole point. Quite obvious actually.
Originally posted by Pandemoniak
No, material production is all kind of work that increase merchant value, not only service industries. Are you sure you read Das Kapital ?
No, material production is all kind of work that increase merchant value, not only service industries. Are you sure you read Das Kapital ?
Originally posted by Pandemoniak
Marx didnt authorized it, he was dead in 1888, IIRC. Anyway, heres a good quote from Engels : since you have the 1888 edition, you probably read the preface, here's a quote :
......
for that reason, no special stress is laid on the revolutionary measures proposed at the end of Section II
......
Marx didnt authorized it, he was dead in 1888, IIRC. Anyway, heres a good quote from Engels : since you have the 1888 edition, you probably read the preface, here's a quote :
......
for that reason, no special stress is laid on the revolutionary measures proposed at the end of Section II
......
for that reason, no special stress is laid on the revolutionary measures proposed at the end of Section II
Yes, I'm aware of this. Even he was horrified by the statements of Marx about Child labour and splitting up the nuclear family. Which is why he tried to marginalize them when he wrote this preface.
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