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Marx's Experiments and Microscopes : Modes of Production, Religion, and the Method of Successive Abstractions.

"In Marx's Experiments and Microscopes: Modes of Production, Religion, and the Method of Successive Abstractions, Paul B. Paolucci examines how Marx brought conventional scientific practice together with dialectical reason to produce his unique approach to sociological research. Though sch...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Paolucci, Paul B.
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Boston : BRILL, 2019.
Colección:Studies in Critical Social Sciences Ser.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro
  • Marx's Experiments and Microscopes: Modes of Production, Religion, and the Method of Successive Abstractions
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • 1 A Provocation and a Challenge
  • 2 The Nature of the Evidence
  • 3 Uncovering the Evidence
  • 4 The Method of the Book
  • 1 Marx's Method of Successive Abstractions
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Marx and the Experimental Model
  • 2.1 Comparisons, Lumping, Splitting, and Further Comparisons
  • 2.2 General Rules for Taxonomy and Comparisons
  • 3 The Method of Successive Abstractions
  • 3.1 The General Abstract, the Specific Abstract, the General Concrete, and the Specific Concrete
  • 3.2 Abstracting Successively, Controlled Comparison, Lumping/Splitting
  • 3.3 Re-abstracting in Marx's Method
  • 3.4 Marx's Method of Successive Abstractions as a Microscope
  • 4 Using Comparisons in the Method of Successive Abstractions
  • 4.1 Comparisons across Successive Abstractions
  • 4.1.1 General Abstract to General Abstract
  • 4.1.2 General Abstract to Specific Abstract
  • 4.1.3 General Abstract to General Concrete
  • 4.1.4 General Abstract to Specific Concrete
  • 4.1.5 Specific Abstract to Specific Abstract
  • 4.1.6 Specific Abstract to General Concrete
  • 4.1.7 Specific Abstract to Specific Concrete
  • 4.1.8 General Concrete to General Concrete
  • 4.1.9 General Concrete to Specific Concrete
  • 4.1.10 Specific Concrete to Specific Concrete
  • 4.2 Additional Guidelines for Re-abstraction and Comparison
  • 5 Summary and Discussion
  • 2 Marx's Method and Modes of Production
  • 1 Why Marx's Presentation Is a Problem and How to Understand It
  • 2 Modes of Production through the Method of Successive Abstractions
  • 2.1 Social Development of Productive Forces
  • 2.2 The Subject of Production
  • 2.2.1 The Natural Economy
  • 2.2.2 Exchange, the Commodity-Form, the Money-Form, and Trade
  • 2.2.3 Hoarding
  • 2.2.4 Merchant's Capital
  • 2.3 Terms of Labor Non-forced and Forced
  • 2.4 Historical Surplus-Value Relations Rent, Taxes, and Usury
  • 2.4.1 Landed Property and Rent
  • 2.4.2 Taxes
  • 2.4.3 Usury
  • 3 Marx's Modes of Production
  • 3.1 Non-class versus Class Systems
  • 3.2 Primitive Communism
  • 3.3 The Ancient Mode of Production
  • 3.4 The Asiatic Mode of Production
  • 3.5 The Feudal Mode of Production
  • 3.5.1 Trade, Usury, Money-Rent, and the Transition to Capitalism
  • 3.5.2 Landed Property and the Transition to Capitalism
  • 3.5.3 The Creation of Free Wage-Laborers and the Transition to Capitalism
  • 3.5.4 Colonialism and the Transition to Capitalism
  • 3.6 The Capitalist Mode of Production
  • 4 Discussion
  • 3 Slavery, Capitalist Development, and the Method of Successive Abstractions
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Slavery and the Method of Successive Abstractions
  • 2.1 Ancient and Asiatic Labor Plebeians, Peasants, and Serfs Compared to Slavery