| I | |
| KARL MARX • FREDERICK ENGELS | |
| 9 | KARL MARX • THESES ON FEUERBACH |
| KARL MARX AND FREDERICK ENGELS • From THE GERMAN IDEOLOGY • CHAPTER I • FEUERBACH. OPPOSITION OF THE MATERIALISTIC AND IDEALISTIC OUTLOOK | |
| 14 | [I] |
| 15 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [I]) [l.] Ideology in General, German Ideology in Particular |
| 17 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [I]) [2. Premises of the Materialistic Conception of History] |
| 18 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [I]) [3. Production and Intercourse. Division of Labour and Forms of Property: Tribal, Ancient, Feudal] |
| 22 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [I]) [4. The Essence of the Materialistic Conception of History. Social Being and Social Consciousness] |
| 24 | [II] • (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [1. Conditions of the Real Liberation of Man] |
| 25 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [2. Criticism of Feuerbach’s Contemplative and Inconsistent Materialism) |
| 27 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [3. Primary Historical Relationships, or the Basic Aspects of Social Activity: Production of the Means of Subsistence, Production of New Needs, Reproduction of People (the Family), Social Communication, Consciousness] |
| 31 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [4. Social Division of Labour and Its Consequences: Private Property, the State, “Estrangement” of Social Activity] |
| 34 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [5. Development of the Productive Forces as a Material Premise of Communism] |
| 35 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [6. Conclusions from the Materialistic Conception of Historyt Continuity of the Historical Process, Transformation of History into World History, the Necessity of a Communist Revolution] |
| 38 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [7. Summary of the Materialistic Conception of History] |
| 40 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [8. Unfoundedness of the Former, Idealistic Conception of History, of German Post-Hegelian Philosophy in Particular] |
| 42 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [II]) [9. Additional Criticism of Feuerbach, of His Idealistic Conception of History] |
| 44 | [III] • (German Ideology, Ch.1, [III]) [1. The Ruling Class and Ruling Consciousness. Formation of Hegel’s Conception of the Domination of the Spirit in History] |
| 47 | [IV] • (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [1. Instruments of Production and Forms of Property) |
| 48 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [2. The Division of Material and Mental Labour. Separation of Town and Country. The Guild-System] |
| 51 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [3. Further Division of Labour. Separation of Commerce and Industry. Division of Labour Between the Various Towns. Manufacture] |
| 56 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [4. The Most Complex Division of Labour. Big Industry] |
| 58 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [5. The Contradiction Between the Productive Forces and the Form of Intercourse as the Basis of a Social Revolution] |
| 59 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [6. Competition of Individuals and the Formation of Classes. Development of Contradiction Between Individuals and the Conditions of Their Life. The Illusory Community of Individuals in Bourgeois Society and the Real Unity of Individuals under Communism. The Subjugation of Society’s Conditions of Life to the Power of United Individuals] |
| 65 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [7. Contradiction Between Individuals and the Conditions of Their Life as a Contradiction Between the Productive Forces and the Form of Intercourse. The Development of the Productive Forces and the Change of the Forms of Intercourse] |
| 67 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [8. The Role of Violence (Conquest) in History] |
| 68 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [9. The Development of Contradiction Between the Productive Forces and the Form of Intercourse in the Conditions of Big Industry and Free Competition. Antithesis Between Labour and Capital] |
| 70 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [10. The Necessity, Conditions and Consequences of the Abolition of Private Property] |
| 72 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [11.1 The Relation of State and Law to Property |
| 75 | (German Ideology, Ch.1, [IV]) [12. Forms of Social Consciousness] |
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The End. KARL MARX From THE POVERTY OF PHILOSOPHY KARL MARX AND FREDERICK ENGELS From MANIFESTO OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY^^32^^ 1 BOURGEOIS AND PROLETARIANS^^*^^ II PROLETARIANS AND COMMUNISTS KARL MARX From WAGE LABOUR AND CAPITAL KARL MARX From THE CLASS STRUGGLES IN FRANCE 1848 TO 1850^^33^^ KARL MARX AND FREDERICK ENGELS From ADDRESS OF THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE TO THE COMMUNIST LEAGUE^^38^^ FREDERICK ENGELS From THE PEASANT WAR IN GERMANY FREDERICK ENGELS From REVOLUTION AND COUNTER-REVOLUTION IN GERMANY^^41^^ KARL MARX From THE EIGHTEENTH BRUMAIRE OF LOUIS BONAPARTE^^13^^ KARL MARX SPEECH AT THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE PEOPLE’S PAPER KARL MARX PREFACE TO A CONTRIBUTION TO THE CRITIQUE OF POLITICAL ECONOMY KARL MARX From AFTERWORD TO THE SECOND GERMAN EDITION OF THE FIRST VOLUME OF CAPITAL KARL MARX From CAPITAL VOL. I Part VIII^^*^^ THE SO-CALLED PRIMITIVE ACCUMULATION CHAPTER XXVI The Secret of Primitive Accumulation CHAPTER XXXII Historical Tendency of Capitalist Accumulation KARL MARX From CAPITAL VOL. III FREDERICK ENGELS From THE HOUSING QUESTION KARL MARX From CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAMME^^71^^ MARGINAL NOTES TO THE PROGRAMME OF THE GERMAN WORKERS’ PARTY I II III IV FREDERICK ENGELS From KARL MARX FREDERICK ENGELS From SOCIALISM: UTOPIAN AND SCIENTIFIC^^78^^ FREDERICK ENGELS SOCIAL CLASSES-NECESSARY AND SUPERFLUOUS FREDERICK ENGELS From ANTI-D\:UHRING FREDERICK ENGELS From INTRODUCTION TO DIALECTICS OF NATURE FREDERICK ENGELS From LUDWIG FEUE REACH AND THE END OF CLASSICAL GERMAN PHILOSOPHY^^97^^ FREDERICK ENGELS From PREFACE TO THE FIRST, 1884 EDITION OF THE ORIGIN OF THE FAMILY, PRIVATE PROPERTY AND THE STATE FREDERICK ENGELS From PREFACE TO THE 1888 ENGLISH EDITION OF MANIFESTO OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY FREDERICK ENGELS From THE 1891 INTRODUCTION TO MARX’S THE CIVIL WAR IN FRANCE FREDERICK ENGELS From SPECIAL INTRODUCTION TO THE 1892 ENGLISH EDITION OF SOCIALISM: UTOPIAN AND SCIENTIFIC FREDERICK ENGELS INTRODUCTION OF 1895 TO KARL MARX’S WORK THE CLASS STRUGGLES IN FRANCE 1848 TO 1850^^115^^ LETTERS MARX TO P. V. ANNENKOV IN PARIS MARX TO J. WEYDEMEYER IN NEW YORK MARX TO L. KUGELMANN IN HANOVER ENGELS TO P. L. LAVROV IN LONDON ENGELS TO C. SCHMIDT IN BERLIN ENGELS TO OTTO VON BOENIGK IN BRESLAU ENGELS TO J. BLOCK IN KONIGSBERG ENGELS TO C. SCHMIDT IN BERLIN ENGELS TO F. MEHRING IN BERLIN ENGELS TO W. BORGIUS INT BRESLAU II V. I. LENIN From WHAT THE "FRIENDS OF THE PEOPLE" ARE AND HOW THEY FIGHT THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATS (A Reply to Articles in Ttu&skoye Bogatstvo Opposing the Marxists^^148^^) From THE ECONOMIC CONTENT OF NARODISM AND THE CRITICISM OF IT IN MR. STRUVE’S ROOK (The Reflection of Marxism in Bourgeois Literature) P. STROVE. "CRITICAL REMARKS ON THE SUBJECT OF RUSSIA’S ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT". ST. PETERSBURG, 1894^^184^^ From REVIEW Karl Kautsky. "Bernstein und das sozialdemokratische Programm. Eine Antikritik"^^*^^ From WHAT IS TO BE DONE? Burning Questions of Our Movement^^196^^ From REVOLUTIONARY DAYS From POLITICAL SOPHISMS From TWO TACTICS OF SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY IN THE DEMOCRATIC REVOLUTION^^210^^ From THE LATEST IN ISKRA TACTICS, OR MOCK ELECTIONS AS A NEW INCENTIVE TO AN UPRISING SOCIALISM AND RELIGION From GUERRILLA WARFARE From ON THE QUESTION OF A NATION-WIDE REVOLUTION From AGAINST BOYCOTT Notes of a Social-Democratic Publicist MARXISM AND REVISIONISM From MATERIALISM AND EMPIRIC-CRITICISM Critical Comments on a Reactionary Philosophy^^244^^ CERTAIN FEATURES OF THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF MARXISM THE THREE SOURCES AND THREE COMPONENT PARTS OF MARXISM [introduction.] I II III From LIBERAL AND MARXIST CONCEPTIONS OF THE CLASS STRUGGLE Note From KARL MARX (A Brief Biographical Sketch with an Exposition of Marxism) [introduction.] The Materialist Conception of History The Class Struggle From THE COLLAPSE OF THE SECOND INTERNATIONAL ON THE SLOGAN FOR A UNITED STATES OF EUROPE^^266^^ From THE SOCIALIST REVOLUTION AND THE RIGHT OF NATIONS TO SELF-DETERMINATION 1. IMPERIALISM, SOCIALISM AND THE LIBERATION OF OPPRESSED NATIONS 2. THE SOCIALIST REVOLUTION AND THE STRUGGLE FOR DEMOCRACY 3. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION AND ITS RELATION TO FEDERATION 4. THE PROLETARIAN-REVOLUTIONARY PRESENTATION OF THE QUESTION OF THE SELF-DETERMINATION OF NATIONS 5. MARXISM AND PROUDHONISM ON THE NATIONAL QUESTION 8. THE CONCRETE TASKS OF THE PROLETARIAT IN THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE From THE DISCUSSION ON SELF-DETERMINATION SUMMED UP From A CARICATURE OF MARXISM AND IMPERIALIST ECONOMISM^^282^^ From THE MILITARY PROGRAMME OF THE PROLETARIAN REVOLUTION From IMPERIALISM AND THE SPLIT IN SOCIALISM From STATISTICS AND SOCIOLOGY From LETTERS ON TACTICS Prom WAR AND REVOLUTION A Lecture Delivered on May 14 (27), 1917 From THE STATE AND REVOLUTION The Marxist Theory of the State and the Tasks of the Proletariat in the Revolution^^305^^ Chapter I CLASS SOCIETY AND THE STATE 1. The State—A product of the Irreconcilability of Class Antagonisms 2. Special Bodies of Armed Men, Prisons, etc. 3. The State—An Instrument for the .Exploitation of the Oppressed Class 4. The "Withering Away" of the State, and Violent Revolution Chapter II THE STATE AND REVOLUTION. THE EXPERIENCE OF 1848-51 1. The Eve of the Revolution 2. The Revolution Summed Up 3. The Presentation of the Question by Marx in 1852^^*^^ Chapter III THE STATE AND REVOLUTION. EXPERIENCE OF THE PARIS COMMUNE OF 1871. MARX’S ANALYSIS 1. What Made the Communards’ Attempt Heroic? 2. What Is to Replace the Smashed State Machine? 3. Abolition of Parliamentarism 4. Organisation of National Unity 5. Abolition of the Parasite State Chapter V THE ECONOMIC BASIS OF THE WITHERING AWAY OF THE STATE [introduction.] 1. Presentation of the Question by Marx 2. The Transition from Capitalism to Communism 3. The First Phase of Communist Society 4. The Higher Phase of Communist Society MARXISM AND INSURRECTION A Letter to the Central Committee of the R.S.D.L.P.(B.) From ROUGH OUTLINE OF THE DRAFT PROGRAMME FOR THE EXTRAORDINARY SEVENTH CONGRESS OF THE R.C.P.(B.) From THE IMMEDIATE TASKS OF THE SOVIET GOVERNMENT From SPEECH AT THE FIRST CONGRESS OF ECONOMIC COUNCILS MAY 26, 1918 From THE PROLETARIAN REVOLUTION AND THE RENEGADE KAUTSKY HOW KAUTSKY TURNED MARX INTO A COMMON LIBERAL BOURGEOIS AND PROLETARIAN DEMOCRACY From THE ACHIEVEMENTS AND DIFFICULTIES OF THE SOVIET GOVERNMENT From A GREAT BEGINNING (Heroism of the Workers in the Rear. "Communist Subbotniks") THE STATE A Lecture Delivered at the Sverdlov University July 11, 1919 From ECONOMICS AND POLITICS IN THE ERA OF THE DICTATORSHIP OF THE PROLETARIAT From "LEFT-WING" COMMUNISM-AN INFANTILE DISORDER A CONTRIBUTION TO THE HISTORY OF THE QUESTION OF THE DICTATORSHIP (A Note) From SPEECH DELIVERED AT AN ALL-RUSSIA CONFERENCE OF POLITICAL EDUCATION WORKERS OF GUBERNIA AND UYEZD EDUCATION DEPARTMENTS, NOVEMBER 3, 1920 From SPEECH IN DEFENCE OF THE TACTICS OF THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL DELIVERED AT THE THIRD CONGRESS OF THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL JULY 1, 1921 From ON CO-OPERATION OUR REVOLUTION (Apropos of N. Sukhanov’s Notes)^^410^^ I II NOTES NAME INDEX |
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Notes