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Philosophy after Marx : 100 Years of Misreadings and the Normative Turn in Political Philosophy.

Henning's Philosophy after Marx recapitulates the history of Marx-interpretations as a history of misinterpretation. Illustrating how Marx's original theories are more sustainable than their critiques from sociology, economics or philosophy, the work culminates in a criticism of recent cri...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Henning, Christoph
Otros Autores: Henninger, Max
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Alemán
Publicado: Leiden : BRILL, 2014.
Colección:Historical materialism book series ; 65.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Sandblasting Marx'
  • A Review by Fredric Jameson ; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The problem; 1.2 Retaining Marx? A preliminary account of his theory ; 1.3 The lacuna in contemporary social theory; 1.4 On the method employed in this study ; 1.4.1 The choice to work with texts only ; 1.4.2 The focus on German-language texts ; 1.5 The structure of the study ; 2 Marx Yesterday: A Genealogy of Misconceptions ; 2.1 Marx in the theory of Social Democracy ; 2.1.1 The Erfurt Programme ; 2.1.2 Revisionism ; 2.1.3 Neo-Kantianism: a fortunate coincidence ; 2.1.4 Orthodoxy.
  • 2.1.5 Key elements of Marxian theory I: the schemes of reproduction 2.1.6 Key elements of Marxian theory II: the falling rate of profit ; 2.2 Marx in the theory of communism ; 2.2.1 The role of violence ; 2.2.2 The organisation of the party ; 2.2.3 The dictatorship of the proletariat ; 2.2.4 A creative evolution of Marxism? ; 2.2.5 Trotskyism
  • a lesser evil?; 2.2.6 Key elements of Marxian theory III: imperialism ; 2.3 Marx in economic theory ; 2.3.1 Marx between economic paradigms ; 2.3.2 Neoclassical refutations of Marx; 2.3.3 Adoption of the neoclassical approach by Marxists.
  • 2.3.4 Diffusion of the paradigm into neighbouring sciences 2.3.5 Key elements of Marxian theory IV: the theory of money ; 2.4 Marx in (German) sociology ; 2.4.1 The division of the world into norm-free functions and normative frames ; 2.4.2 Whence the predominance of the neoclassical approach in sociology? ; 2.4.3 Normativity as a placeholder for incomplete worldviews ; 2.4.4 The flaws are projected onto the symbolic figure Marx ; 2.4.5 Critique of the technocracy-hypothesis and of industrial sociology ; 2.4.6 The sociological approach to social classes.
  • Key elements of Marxian theory V: classes Classes (and more) in Max Weber ; Classes in Helmut Schelsky ; Classes in Luhmann ; 2.5 'From Marx to Heidegger': Social Philosophy ; 2.5.1 A categorisation attempt by René König ; 2.5.2 Confronting the philosophical history of idealism ; The influence of Fichte ; The influence of Nietzsche ; The influence of Hegel ; Vitalism and the philosophy of Weltanschauung ; 2.5.3 Rudolf Eucken as precursor ; 2.5.4 Georg Lukács as mediator ; 2.5.5 Martin Heidegger as offshoot ; Heidegger and Marx ; Heidegger and nihilism.
  • 2.5.6 Niklas Luhmann's philosophy of systems 2.5.7 Key elements of Marxian theory VI: Marx and Hegel ; Marx as a critic of Hegel ; Hegelian Marxism: semantic displacements ; 2.6 Critical theory or the dissolution of critique in religion ; 2.6.1 Horkheimer's vitalism ; 2.6.2 Pollock's hermetic analysis of state capitalism ; 2.6.3 Adorno's quietist utopianism ; 2.6.4 Key elements of Marxian theory VII: Marx's critique of religion ; 2.6.5 The critique of religion as a political issue ; 2.6.6 Four theological views of Marx ; Rejection of 'atheism' ; Tolerance in spite of 'atheism'