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Description
For some time there has been no direct critique of Marx's ideas from those who value the position he most harshly attacked, bourgeois capitalism. The few who did criticize Marx were economists such as Thomas Sowell, Eugen Böhm-Bawerk, and Ludwig von Mises. Others attacked Marx's ideas, but did not actually defend the concept of capitalism.
In 1987, shortly before the fall of the Soviet Union, David Conway published his Farewell to Marx, which offered a philosophical critique of Marx. This work, however, developed, in part, from a position that uncritically embraces economism, or what the author calls the "homo economicus conception of human life." In Revisting Marxism, Tibor Machan contrasts Marx's historicist collectivism with a neo-Aristotelian individualism as presented by, among others, David L. Norton and Ayn Rand. It criticizes Marxism based on this position, the one he most directly disparaged.
Also included in this volume is an exchange between the author and the late Sidney Hook, perhaps the most sympathetic social democratic champion of Marx's ideas.
Table of Contents
2 Acknowledgements
3 Essentials of Marxism
4 Further Vital Elements of Marxism
5 Definitions, Human Nature, and Alienation
6 People, Capitalism, and Exploitation
7 Socialism as Reactionary Conservatism
8 Liberty versus Marxist Liberation
9 Socialism-Democratic or Dictatorial?
10 Communism: Humanity Matured?
11 Marxism versus Free Capitalism
12 Appendix: A Dialogue on Marxism by Sidney Hook and Tibor Machan
13 References
14 Index
Product details
Published | Oct 28 2005 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 236 |
ISBN | 9780761832959 |
Imprint | University Press of America |
Dimensions | 227 x 176 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A critical assessment of Marx that take his ideas seriously but in the end defends bourgeois individualism rather than a socialist collectivism…Recommended. Public and undergraduate library collections.
R.B. Emmett, James Madison College, Choice Reviews