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    Marx and Abortion

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    to the international debate over the rights of the unborn. “Human Life and Fetal Images‚” an essay by Rebecca Albury‚ appeared in the Australian publication on August 10 of this year. Albury made the following statements about the teachings of Karl Marx and their relationship to the unborn: A Marxist believes that personality and human value are imparted by the external and economic environment‚ not by any inherent spiritual value‚ or even by biological processes. The fetus‚ according to a Marxist

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    Marx And Religion

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    Freud was just one of the many thinkers that criticized religion. Karl Marx was another one of these important thinkers. He was a nineteenth-century philosopher and political theorist‚ famous for being a contributor of the “Communist Manifesto‚” and is considered one of the greatest thinkers in history. Marx wrote about a wide range of topics‚ and did not spare his thoughts on religion. Similarly‚ to Freud‚ Marx had criticized religion‚ especially Christianity. However‚ the nature of Marx’s arguments

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    Marx and Law

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    JOURNAL OF LAW AND SOCIETY VOLUME 20‚ NUMBER 4‚ WINTER 1993 0263-323X Marx and Law ANDREW VINCENT* There is no sense in which Marx can be described as just a legal theorist. He did not write any systematic works on legal science or jurisprudence; however‚ his observations on law are both immensely penetrating and contain an extremely subtle interweaving of philosophical‚ political‚ economic‚ and legal strands. Marx was also at the centre of many crucial intellectual and political debates

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    Marx and Weber

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    Marx and Weber: Critics of Capitalism In spite of their undeniable differences‚ Marx and Weber have much in common in their understanding of modern capitalism: they both perceive it as a system where "the individuals are ruled by abstractions (Marx)‚ where the impersonal and "thing-like" (Versachlicht) relations replace the personal relations of dependence‚ and where the accumulation of capital becomes an end in itself‚ largely irrational.           Their analysis of capitalism cannot be separated

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    Philosphy Marx

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    Karl Marx and The Alienation of labor Sparknotes Summary: First Manuscript Under the economic system of private ownership‚ society divides itself into two classes: the property owners and the property-less workers. In this arrangement‚ the workers not only suffer impoverishment but also experience an estrangement or alienation from the world. This estrangement occurs because the worker relates to the product of his work as an object alien and even hostile to himself. The worker puts his

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    Marx Alienation

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    Karl Marx was one of the founding fathers of sociology. He ideas were highly influential in establishing the socialist movement. Marx was born in 1818 in Trier‚ Germany‚ to a German-Jewish family. In 1848‚ Marx co-wrote The Communist Manifesto‚ alongside his close friend‚ and fellow supporter Fredrich Engels. This is his most famous piece of work. Marx’s main social theory was the alienation of the worker in a capitalist society. From a Marxist perspective‚ the alienation of the worker discusses

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    Marx

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    “In creating an objective world by his practical activity‚ in working-up inorganic nature‚ man proves himself a conscious species being‚ i.e.‚ as a being that treats the species as its own essential being‚ or that treats itself as a species being” (76) “It is just in the working-up of the objective world‚ therefore‚ that man first really proves himself to be a species being. This production is his active species life. Through and because of this production‚ nature appears as his work and his reality

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    Marx and Nietzsche

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    humanity to suffer. In‚ the most interesting work from this past half-semester‚ The Communist Manifesto‚ Karl Marx is reacting to this fact by describing his vision of a perfectly balanced society‚ a communist society. Simply put‚ a communist society is one where all property is held in common. No one person has more than the other‚ but rather everyone shares in the fruits of their labors. Marx is writing of this society because‚ he believes it to be the best form of society possible. He states

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    Karl Benz

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    Karl Benz was born on 25th November 1844 in Karlsruhe‚ the son of an engine driver. The middle of the last century‚ when Benz was an apprentice‚ was a time of widespread fascination with the "new technology". The first railway line in Germany from Nuremberg to Furth had been opened in 1835‚ only twenty years before‚ and in the space of just a few decades the railways‚ steamships and new production processes had ushered in a new era in technology‚ industry and everyday life. Karl Benz attended the

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    Karl Jaspers

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    KARL JASPERS‚ Way to Wisdom: an Introduction to Philosophy (New Haven and London: Yale University Press‚ 2003) pp.208. Paper Back Edition. $ 14.95 Way to wisdom: An Introduction to Philosophy; by looking at this title and after a moment of reflection‚ I made a judgment that it must be a guide to beginners of philosophy. But after completing some parts of this book I realized that this book is to be recommended as a general introduction to the philosophical work of Karl Jaspers and to the history

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