What is critical urban theory?
... but most crucially here, Frankfurt School theorists also applied it to the realm of social science. In this sense, critical theory entails a forceful rejection of instrumental modes of social scientific knowledge—that is, those designed to render existing institutional arrangements more efficient an ...
... but most crucially here, Frankfurt School theorists also applied it to the realm of social science. In this sense, critical theory entails a forceful rejection of instrumental modes of social scientific knowledge—that is, those designed to render existing institutional arrangements more efficient an ...
Marxian Political Economy: Legacy and Renewal
... The third revolution, a financial revolution, occurred in the financial sector or, more accurately, affected the relationship between this sector and the new corporations. The financial sector backed the corporate revolution, in a complex relationship where both support and control were involved. Ru ...
... The third revolution, a financial revolution, occurred in the financial sector or, more accurately, affected the relationship between this sector and the new corporations. The financial sector backed the corporate revolution, in a complex relationship where both support and control were involved. Ru ...
- The Bichler and Nitzan Archives
... inform this analysis. However, my understanding of how the capitalist logic plays out, and therefore how resistance ought to respond, is very different within CasP. A central claim that Nitzan and Bichler make about accumulation, understood to be solely financial, is that it only makes sense differe ...
... inform this analysis. However, my understanding of how the capitalist logic plays out, and therefore how resistance ought to respond, is very different within CasP. A central claim that Nitzan and Bichler make about accumulation, understood to be solely financial, is that it only makes sense differe ...
Necessity of Marxism
... Smith was closely linked to the Scottish Historical School whose intellectual positions in many ways paralleled Hegel’s.1 Adam Smith these days is often portrayed as the pioneer among the “free marketeers”, a rather early Thatcherite! Nothing could be farther from the truth. The most consistent theo ...
... Smith was closely linked to the Scottish Historical School whose intellectual positions in many ways paralleled Hegel’s.1 Adam Smith these days is often portrayed as the pioneer among the “free marketeers”, a rather early Thatcherite! Nothing could be farther from the truth. The most consistent theo ...
Marxism and the Uno School
... Marx himself did both theoretically and by incorporating a great deal ofhistorical material in all his economic writings-is, according to Uno and his followers, to risk mixing science with ideology? There is no doubt that the Uno school, through the sheer elegance of its analysis, has highlighted mu ...
... Marx himself did both theoretically and by incorporating a great deal ofhistorical material in all his economic writings-is, according to Uno and his followers, to risk mixing science with ideology? There is no doubt that the Uno school, through the sheer elegance of its analysis, has highlighted mu ...
Karl Marx `Class Struggles in France, 1848
... “Historical Materialism is the thesis that there is, throughout history’s course, a tendency towards growth of productive power, and that forms of society rise and fall when they promote or impede that growth” (Cohen, 2000:364) ...
... “Historical Materialism is the thesis that there is, throughout history’s course, a tendency towards growth of productive power, and that forms of society rise and fall when they promote or impede that growth” (Cohen, 2000:364) ...
Classical Social Theory
... • Historical period: 15th, 16th, 17th or 18th century - ???? • Attitude to time: critical reflection/distance from past (as history) + actively shaping the collective future • Idea of progress (<-> cycle) • Opposite of „tradition“ • Tradition: accepting the way things have always been, following pre ...
... • Historical period: 15th, 16th, 17th or 18th century - ???? • Attitude to time: critical reflection/distance from past (as history) + actively shaping the collective future • Idea of progress (<-> cycle) • Opposite of „tradition“ • Tradition: accepting the way things have always been, following pre ...
Marx and Marxist historiography seminar (Stephen`s groups)
... ‘In the social production of their existence, men inevitably enter into definite relations, which are independent of their will, namely relations of production appropriate to a given stage in the development of their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of production consti ...
... ‘In the social production of their existence, men inevitably enter into definite relations, which are independent of their will, namely relations of production appropriate to a given stage in the development of their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of production consti ...
A HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT, I I Rubin Ink Links, London
... are not told the mechanism which made this transcendence possible for Quesnay but impossible for others the process remains merely an anomaly, a mystery. This 'mystery' leads into the crucial weakness of Rubin's and similar accounts of economic theory. Taken seriously they imply that the real itself ...
... are not told the mechanism which made this transcendence possible for Quesnay but impossible for others the process remains merely an anomaly, a mystery. This 'mystery' leads into the crucial weakness of Rubin's and similar accounts of economic theory. Taken seriously they imply that the real itself ...
GEOG 240: Day 2 Chapter 2: Approaches to Economic Geography
... The transition from traditional to spatial economic geography involved a shift from qualitative field work to quantitative statistical work. In this sense, they shared similarities with economists. In the late 60s, there was a revolt against spatial analysis and some, especially younger, geographers ...
... The transition from traditional to spatial economic geography involved a shift from qualitative field work to quantitative statistical work. In this sense, they shared similarities with economists. In the late 60s, there was a revolt against spatial analysis and some, especially younger, geographers ...