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What is Human Nature?
What is Human Nature?

Lewis on Freud and Marx
Lewis on Freud and Marx

Rationality, ideology, and morality in Marx`s social theory
Rationality, ideology, and morality in Marx`s social theory

Albert Camus
Albert Camus

Document Version - Kent Academic Repository
Document Version - Kent Academic Repository

1: Marx: PhilEc - Personal Websites
1: Marx: PhilEc - Personal Websites

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Traditional Western View

PDF - Brunswick Group
PDF - Brunswick Group

influence of environment on human needs satisfying
influence of environment on human needs satisfying

Niall Ferguson
Niall Ferguson

Libertarianism
Libertarianism

DOC - commoner.org.uk
DOC - commoner.org.uk

KARL MARX - SUNY Press
KARL MARX - SUNY Press

Metaphysical Economics: The Deep Sources of our
Metaphysical Economics: The Deep Sources of our

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Themes and Thematic Ideas of

Marx and Violent Revolution - Agora: Journal for Undergraduate
Marx and Violent Revolution - Agora: Journal for Undergraduate

from Nature, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
from Nature, by Ralph Waldo Emerson

Chapter 14:(Part one) the power and limits f professional knowledge
Chapter 14:(Part one) the power and limits f professional knowledge

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Philosophy 220

Back to the Past: Marxist Concepts Reborn
Back to the Past: Marxist Concepts Reborn

Did Marx have a Principle of Distributive Justice - IFCH
Did Marx have a Principle of Distributive Justice - IFCH

Ethics at a Glance - RHCHP Learning Technologies
Ethics at a Glance - RHCHP Learning Technologies

Slide 1
Slide 1

You are what You Do
You are what You Do

Karl Marx as a Philosopher of Human Emancipation
Karl Marx as a Philosopher of Human Emancipation

< 1 ... 7 8 9 10 11 12 >

Marx's theory of human nature

Marx's theory of human nature has an important place in his critique of capitalism, his conception of communism, and his 'materialist conception of history'. Marx, however, does not refer to ""human nature"" as such, but to Gattungswesen, which is generally translated as 'species-being' or 'species-essence'. What Marx meant by this is that humans are capable of making or shaping their own nature to some extent. According to a note from the young Marx in the Manuscripts of 1844, the term is derived from Ludwig Feuerbach’s philosophy, in which it refers both to the nature of each human and of humanity as a whole.[1] However, in the sixth Thesis on Feuerbach (1845), Marx criticizes the traditional conception of ""human nature"" as ""species"" which incarnates itself in each individual, on behalf of a conception of human nature as formed by the totality of ""social relations"". Thus, the whole of human nature is not understood, as in classical idealist philosophy, as permanent and universal: the species-being is always determined in a specific social and historical formation, with some aspects being biological.
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