Karl Marx's theory of history: a defence/ (Record no. 184934)
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000 -LEADER | |
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fixed length control field | 00351nam a2200133Ia 4500 |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
International Standard Book Number | 0691070687 |
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE | |
Transcribing agency | CUS |
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER | |
Classification number | 335.4119 |
Item number | COH/K |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Cohen,Gerald Allan |
245 #0 - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | Karl Marx's theory of history: a defence/ |
Statement of responsibility, etc. | Gerald Allan Cohen |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Place of publication, distribution, etc. | UK : |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. | Princeton University Press, |
Date of publication, distribution, etc. | 2000. |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Extent | xxviii,442p. : |
Dimensions | 22cm. |
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE | |
Bibliography, etc | Includes index. |
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE | |
Formatted contents note | I. IMAGES OF HISTORY IN HEGEL AND MARX 1<br/><br/>II. THE CONSTITUTION OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES 28<br/><br/>(1) Economic Structure and Productive Forces 28<br/><br/>(2) Some Terminological Points 37<br/><br/>(3) Labour Power 40<br/><br/>(4) Science 45<br/><br/>(5) More Candidates for the Catalogue 47<br/><br/>(6) The Development of the Productive Forces 55<br/><br/>III. THE ECONOMIC STRUCTURE 63<br/><br/>(1) Ownership Rights in Productive Forces 63<br/><br/>(2) Possible and Impossible Ownership Positions of Producers 66<br/><br/>(3) Subordination 69<br/><br/>(4) Redefining the Proletarian 70<br/><br/>(5) The Structural Definition of Class 73<br/><br/>(6) The Individuation of Social Forms 77<br/><br/>(7) Modes of Production 79<br/><br/>(8) Varieties of Economic Change 85<br/><br/>IV. MATERIAL AND SOCIAL PROPERTIES OF SOCIETY 88<br/><br/>(1) Introducing the Distinction 88<br/><br/>(2) Matter and Form in the Labour Process 98<br/><br/>(3) Use-value and Political Economy 103<br/><br/>(4) Revolutionary Value of the Distinction toy<br/><br/>(5) Against Marx on Mill 108<br/><br/>(6) Work Relations III<br/><br/>V. FETISHISM 115<br/><br/>(i) Fetishism in Religion and in Economics 115<br/><br/>(2) What is True and What is False in Fetishism 116<br/><br/>(3) Diagnosis of Commodity Fetishism 119<br/><br/>(4) Diagnosis of Capital Fetishism 122<br/><br/>(5) Commodity Fetishism and Money 124<br/><br/>(6) Commodity Fetishism, Religion, and Politics 125<br/>(7) Communism as the Liberation of the Content 129<br/><br/>VI. THE PRIMACY OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES 134<br/><br/>(1) Introduction 134<br/><br/>(2) Assertions of Primacy by Marx: The Preface 136<br/><br/>(3) Assertions of Primacy by Marx: Outside the Preface 142<br/><br/>(4) The Case for Primacy 150<br/><br/>(5) The Nature of the Primacy of the Forces 16o<br/><br/>(6) Productive Forces, Material Relations, Social Relations 166<br/><br/>(7) 'All earlier modes of production were essentially conservative' 169<br/><br/>(8) Addmdwn 172<br/><br/>VII. THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES AND CAPITALISM 175<br/><br/>(1) The Emergence of Capitalism 175<br/><br/>(2) The Capitalist Economic Structure and the Capitalist Mode of Production 180<br/><br/>(3) Capitalism and the Development of the Productive Forces 193<br/><br/>(4) Four Epochs 197<br/><br/>(5) Capitalism's Mission, and its Fate 201<br/><br/>(6) The Presuppositions of Socialism 204<br/><br/>(7) Why are Classes Necessary? 207<br/><br/>VIII. BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE, POWERS AND RIGHTS 216<br/><br/>(1) Identifying the Superstructure 216<br/><br/>(2) The Problem of Legality 217<br/><br/>(3) Explanation of Property Relations and Law by Production Relations 225<br/><br/>(4) Bases Need Superstructures 231<br/><br/>(5) Is the Economic Structure Independently Observable? 234<br/><br/>(6) More on Rights and Powers 236<br/><br/>(7) Rights and Powers of the Proletariat 240<br/><br/>(8) Addenda 245<br/><br/>IX. FUNCTIONAL EXPLANATION: IN GENERAL 249<br/><br/>(1) Introduction 249<br/><br/>(2) Explanation 251 .<br/><br/>(3) Function-statements and Functional Explanations 253<br/><br/>(4) The Structure of Functional Explanation 258<br/><br/>(5) Confirmation 265<br/><br/>(6) Are any Functional Explanations True? 266<br/><br/>(7) Consequence Explanation and the Deductive-nomological Model 272<br/><br/>X. FUNCTIONAL EXPLANATION: IN MARXISM 278<br/><br/>(1) Introduction 278<br/><br/>(2) Conceptual Criticisms of Functional Explanation 280<br/><br/>(3) Functionalism, Functional Explanation, and Marxism 283<br/><br/>(4) Elaborations 285<br/><br/>(5) Marxian Illustrations 289<br/><br/>XI. USE-VALUE, EXCHANGE-VALUE, AND CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM 297<br/><br/>(1) Introduction 297<br/><br/>(2) The Subjugation of Use-value by Exchange-value 298<br/><br/>(3) A Distinctive Contradiction of Advanced Capitalism 302<br/><br/>(4) Mishan and Galbraith 307<br/><br/>(5) The Argument Reviewed 309<br/><br/>(6) Is Capitalism a Necessary Condition of the Distinctive Contradiction? 313<br/><br/>(7) An Objection 317<br/><br/>(8) The Bias of Capitalism and Max Weber 320<br/><br/>(9) Obiter Dicta 322<br/><br/>XII. FETTERING 326<br/><br/>XIII. RECONSIDERING HISTORICAL MATERIALISM 341<br/><br/>XIV. RESTRICTED AND INCLUSIVE HISTORICAL MATERIALISM 364<br/><br/>XV. MARXISM AFTER THE COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION 389 |
650 ## - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | Dialectical materialism. |
650 ## - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | Marxism. |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Koha item type | General Books |
Withdrawn status | Lost status | Damaged status | Not for loan | Home library | Current library | Shelving location | Date acquired | Full call number | Accession number | Date last seen | Date last checked out | Koha item type |
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Central Library, Sikkim University | Central Library, Sikkim University | General Book Section | 29/08/2016 | 335.4119 COH/K | P39946 | 11/07/2018 | 11/07/2018 | General Books |