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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
Karl Marx predicted that capitalism was bound to fail and would give way to communism. This 10 page paper looks at the way that Marx used historical analysis in order to examine political models with the emphasis he placed on the modes of production. The paper argues that while his historical facts may have been correct his interpretation of history lead to a constrained understanding. The bibliography cites 5 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEmarxhist.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
future society would develop. He believed that the model of capitalism was bound to fail; that it would be overthrown by communism and workers would seize back their freedom. His
work was not based on political ideals; it was his understanding of what would happen. However, looking back at his theories, although they may be argued as containing interesting and
valuable political philosophies, the future that they predicted has not occurred. With the basis of his ideas originating from his view of history a reader may be left to wonder
if his a errors were due to fallacious philosophy of history. The perspective of Marx was that it was a long process of
class conflict that led to capitalism overthrowing the former feudal system (Bryer, 2000; 49). The changes reflect the way that Marx believed the production mode seen in any society is
made up of the forces of production; these are the material in human means of production as well as a social relations of production (Byer, 2004; 5). Under the feudal
system surplus labour or goods1 were appropriated by the feudal landlords from the self-sufficient peasants in a direct manner. With the capitalist mentality there is a difference, instead of the
direct appropriation of surplus goods or labour there is the attempt to extract value from the surplus goods or labour (Byer, 2004; 5).
If this is the way that Marxs theory concerning the way the agricultural revolution the underlying theory of the way that this took place with the interdependence between modes
of production, social relationships and the couch it is mentalities needs to be considered. Marxs theory proposed a two-step transition (Byer, 2004; 5). The first step takes society from a
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