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  • ...on. Since then, this murky metaphor has been applied to everyone from Karl Marx to Adam Smith, from Mao to Reagan to LePen, yet I have never seen anyone gi
    24 KB (3,967 words) - 17:24, 16 December 2020
  • ...a in 1787 was not foreordained. The members of the Constituent Assembly in Paris in 1791, whose ideals were not radically distant from those of the American ...om of conscience, the right to vote. In "On the Jewish Question,"the young Marx accused bourgeois rights of destroying community. It has never been dear, h
    57 KB (8,804 words) - 22:01, 1 May 2015
  • ...s conspiracy. Babeuf claimed to be vindicating the voice of the people of Paris who cried “Bread and the Constitution of 1793!” in opposing the post- ...t Workers’ Party (the Gotha Programme) was interpreted--most famously by Marx--as demanding that the “undiminished” proceeds of labor (the whole gros
    71 KB (11,348 words) - 01:04, 15 July 2013
  • ...ot fed up by the conservative scholastic philosophy that was prevailing in Paris at the time and moved on to Bruges in 1512, and in 1517 to Louvain, one of ...government. Thus, Montesquieu (L'Esprit des Lois (1748), section XXIII/29, Paris: Flammarion, Vol.2, p. 134): "The State owes all its citizens a secure subs
    110 KB (17,946 words) - 13:32, 2 August 2013
  • 8 For this sort of reason, Marx and Engels were hostile to the immigration of Irishmen into the industrial ...chal, Jean-Paul eds. Garantir le revenu: une des solutions a l'exclusion, Paris: Transversales Science Culture, Document no. 3, mai 1992.
    63 KB (9,879 words) - 12:58, 2 August 2013
  • ...nd Europe, which I did when I was twenty-five. Since then, I have not left Paris, except for a few brief trips.” In Paris, he joined the French National Center for Scientific Research, and, later,
    26 KB (4,386 words) - 22:13, 25 March 2014
  • ...ise is provocative and profoundly bleak. Prof. Piketty, a professor at the Paris School of Economics, says the postwar economic boom of the last century -- ...ing to dominate our debates and influence our lives as few have since Karl Marx's book of the same title....
    16 KB (2,702 words) - 17:04, 16 December 2017
  • ...tle “Made in Austria: Will Friedrich von Hayek be the Tea Party’s Karl Marx?” One Tea Party activist reported that his group’s goal is to fill Cong ...-five years later, Hayek’s implicit prediction is a failure, rather like Marx’s forecast of the coming “immiserization of the working class.”
    27 KB (4,334 words) - 21:20, 21 August 2014
  • I would argue that she is closer to the utopian Marx. See Marx’s Paris Manuscripts and the Grundrisse.
    48 KB (7,966 words) - 13:14, 7 April 2019
  • [[Category:Paris Marx]] ...he Second Avenue Subway cost $2.5 billion per mile, a similar expansion of Paris’s Metro is on track to cost only $450 million per mile. There are many fa
    12 KB (2,050 words) - 21:53, 20 November 2019
  • ... in Paris while Marx was exiled there. Their friendship finally ended when Marx responded to Proudhon's The System of Economic Contradictions, or The Philo
    34 KB (5,057 words) - 22:24, 24 September 2019
  • ...id “grand theory” in the style of Auguste Comte, G.W.F. Hegel and Karl Marx. Yet the motivation for avoiding this sort of grand theory was not so much –––, 1985. Making Sense of Marx, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    55 KB (8,232 words) - 22:30, 16 August 2020
  • (incl. tax policies) in their favour (Bartels, 2009; Emmenegger and Marx, 2019; Gilens, 2005; Hacker and Pierson, 2010; Svallfors, 2016), which sugg Emmenegger, P., Marx, P., 2019. The Politics of Inequality as Organised Spectacle: Why the Swiss
    48 KB (7,200 words) - 20:39, 17 December 2020

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