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Marx - Coggle Diagram
Marx
1.Communism
Creating an equal/fairy society, under a way of getting better for all people, not just those with money and power.
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Communism is the positive transcendence of private property, as human selfestrangement, and therefore, is the real appropriation of the human essence by and for man.
Communism, therefore, is the complete return of man to himself as a social (i.e., human) being—a return become conscious, and accomplished within the entire wealth of previous development.
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2.Individual
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Totality
Man, much as he may therefore be a particular individual (and it is precisely his particularity which makes him an individual, and a real individual social being), is just as much the totality—the ideal totality—the subjective existence of thought and experienced society present for itself; just as he exists also in the real world as the awareness and the real enjoyment of social existence, and as a totality of human life-activity.
According to Marx, every society is divided among a number of social classes, whose members have more in common with one another than with members of other social classes.
Karl Marx considers the individual, his nature, freedom and development as inseparably connected with society... These two moments --- economic interests and belonging to a class, a social group --- finally determine the characteristic and behaviour of the masses and form the various social types of the individual.
3.Artistic Talent
Relations of production
Capitalist production is hostile to certain aspects of intellectual production, such as art and poetry.
4.Kant
Kant has a definition of art, and he sees fine art the art of a genius, and Marx declares the object of art, like any other product, creates an artistic and beautiful-enjoying public. Production thus produces not only an object for the individual, but also an individual for the object.
Marxism
Marxism is different from communism, Marxism is a social, political, and economic theory, focusing on the struggles between capitalists and the working class. Communism is based upon the ideas of common ownership and the absence of social classes, money and the state.