LEADERS of the 75 Communist parties meeting in Moscow—and those conspicuously absent—often argue bitterly about what their faith, Marxism, means. More interesting is the question of what Marxism does.
https://doi.org/10.13169/worlrevipoliecon.9.2.0148 • https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.13169/worlrevipoliecon.9.2.0148 Copy URL This article is a response to David ...
'Orthodox' Marxist crisis theories have, in neglecting Marxism's philosophical roots, wandered into a cul-de-sac of their own logical empiricist making and are unable to offer, therefore, a viable ...
Last week I did one of my routine exercises in my Marxism course at Grove City College. In that class, we scour everything on Marx and various strains and offshoots of Marxism. We read all sides — ...
Kenji Mori has been appointed as a full-time professor with the prestigious university’s School of Philosophy.
Couldn’t the aversion to critical race theory be something other than racism, at least in part? Sure, there are knuckle-dragging cross burners who want all nonwhites removed from the U.S. and believe ...
This article first appeared on page 26 of Issue 21. You probably don’t think about Marxism when you think about Bitcoin. To most people, Marx is known as the guy who didn’t like private property and ...
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