Sunday, March 8, 2009

Silver City And Kitchener

The summary of the Manifesto _Borghesia, the proletariat and class struggle

The Communist Manifesto of the Communist (1848), in which Marx seeks to expose 'in the face to the world "the aims and methods of revolutionary action, is a concise summation of the Marxist conception of the world. The main points of it are:
analysis of the historical role of the bourgeoisie and the concept of history as 'class struggle' and the relationship between proletarians and communists;
criticism of non-scientific socialism.
In the first part of the Manifesto Marx describes, with brilliant eloquence, the historical destiny of the bourgeoisie, summarizing, from his point of view, merits and limitations. A differ ¬ ence of the ruling classes of the past, which tended to the preservation of static modes of production, the bourgeoisie, according to Marx, can not exist without constantly revolutionizing the instruments of production and the whole of social relations. It is thus constitutionally dynamic class, which dissolves not only the lives but also the ideas and traditional beliefs. Except that this bourgeoisie, which has awakened as if by magic forces so huge, it looks like the sorcerer that can no longer control the powers of hell evoked. In fact, the modern productive forces, increasing social revolt against the old relations of pro ¬ property, still subject to the logic of private law and private gain, creating crisis terr ¬ ible, which bring into question the very existence of capitalism. So much so that the proletariat, the oppressed class of bourgeois society, can not help but put in place a harsh class struggle, aimed at overcoming of capitalism and its institutional forms and ideological.
The concept of history as "class struggle is one of the most significant of the Manifesto. In The German Ideology Marx poses as an engine of social development, the dialectic between forces production and relations of production, in the Manifesto identifies authenticity as a subject ¬ matic history the struggle between classes. We have already mentioned that, from the standpoint of Marx, speaking of a dialectic between productive forces and relations of production on the one hand, and the class struggle on the other hand, despite some misunderstanding on the part of the interpreters of Marxist thought, it means to say same thing, because the productive forces and production relations are not "structures breasts subject," but are actually embodied by those groups' ¬ living human individuals "who are the classes.
According to his analysis of capitalism as a global fact, Marx also insists on internationalism of the proletarian struggle and ends with the famous revolutionary slogan Manifesto: "Workers of all countries, unite."
FOR CRITICAL TO FALSE society: REFERS TO NOTES TAKEN IN CLASS.

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