Living up to your name, eh?in my opinion, the Marxist explanation for why the predicted class struggle didn't materialize is reasonable. Marxism requires the proletariat to be aware of their condition as a precondition to a revolution. If this didn't happen then their prediction will fail. All that needs to be added to Marxist theory is the necessity for the working class to realize their situation. It's not that radical a change to the theory and so, according to me, Marxism can still be called a scientific theory. — TheMadFool
Actually, the problem is that social sciences have all a normative element. Politics makes it so. If you say something about the society or it's economy, people will immediately jump to normative questions. Hence so many "natural" scientists are with the view that these humanities aren't science.Seems to me Marxism has a normative and a descriptive element. — Joshs
In a way, there should be the possibility, but as usual there are a lot of problems. How accurately it can explain history, how accurately it can make forcasts. But I would note the word should. Something like the laboratory tests of the stem field we obviously cannot do.Is it subject to empirical test? — Joshs
The devil is allways on the premises.This seems a reasonable explanation for a scientific theory failing in its implications (predictions). — TheMadFool
I am therefore not in favor of our hoisting a dogmatic banner. Quite the reverse. We must try to help the dogmatists to clarify their ideas. In particular, communism is a dogmatic abstraction and by communism I do not refer to some imagined, possible communism, but to communism as it actually exists in the teachings of Cabet, Dezamy, and Weitling, etc. This communism is itself only a particular manifestation of the humanistic principle and is infected by its opposite, private property. The abolition of private property is therefore by no means identical with communism and communism has seen other socialist theories, such as those of Fourier and Proudhon, rising up in opposition to it, not fortuitously but necessarily, because it is only a
particular, one-sided realization of the principle of socialism...
Nothing prevents us, therefore, from lining our criticism with a criticism of politics, from taking sides in politics, i.e., from entering into real struggles and identifying ourselves with them. This does not mean that we shall confront the world with new doctrinaire principles and proclaim: Here is the truth, on your knees before it! It means that we shall develop for the world new principles from the existing principles of the world. We shall not say: Abandon your struggles, they are mere folly; let us provide you with true campaign-slogans. Instead, we shall simply show the world why it is struggling, and consciousness of this is a thing it must acquire whether it wishes or not. — Marx, from The Ruthless Criticism of All That Exists
I think the most important thing to take away from Marx is that the capitalist mode of production means a) private owner ship of the means of production b) wage labour c) increased mechanisation of the means of production and d) value extraction from the labourer to the capitalist. — Benkei
It's not clear to me on what you base that. What did Marx do or not do to put it apart from other economics, history or sociology and instead gets qualified as philosophy?
While we're at it, Adam Smith? His economic theories, economics or primarily philosophy? David Ricardo, economics or primarily philosophy? — Benkei
First, aren't you familiar with the fact that Marx is studied primarily, if not exclusively, via philosophy departments? — Terrapin Station
That's part of the answer. It's the first step in answering it (hence "first," announcing that I'm starting there with you, but thats not the finish.) — Terrapin Station
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