The Formation of the Economic Thought of Karl Marx
Table of Contents
1.
From the Critique of Private Property to the Critique of Capitalism
2.
From Condemning Capitalism to Providing a Socioeconomic Vindication of Communism
3.
From Rejection to Acceptance of the Labor Theory of Value
4.
A First General Analysis of the Capitalist Mode of Production
5.
The Problem of Periodic Crises
6.
Perfecting the Theory of Value, the Theory of Surplus Value, and the Theory of Money
7.
The
Grundrisse,
or the Dialectics of Labor Time and Free Time
8.
The Asiatic Mode of Production and the Historical Pre-Conditions for the Rise of Capital
9.
The Final Shaping of the Theory of Wages
10.
From the
Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts
to the
Grundrisse:
From an Anthropological to a Historical Conception of Alientation
11.
Progressive Disalientation Through the Building of Socialist Society, or the Inevitable Alienation in Industrial Society?
Colophon
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From the Critique of Private Property to the Critique of Capitalism