Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Marxism - Coggle Diagram
Marxism
Developed in the Mid 19th Century
Classical Marxism Consists of 3 Related Ideas
Economic and Political Program
Underlying Everything for the Real Basis of Society is the Economic Structure
"material forces of production"
The Labor and Means of Production
"relations of production"
The Social and Political Arrangements that Regulate Production and Distribution
Above the Economic Structure Rises the Superstructure
Theory of History
Philosophical Anthropology
Karl Marx
Philosophy Must Become Reality
One must be concerned with transforming the world
Transforming the world itself and human consciousness of it
Critique of Experience
Critique of Ideas
Marx believes that all knowledge involves the critique of ideas.
Concepts
Praxis
Alienation
Creative Labour
Appropriation
Value
Characteristics of Marxist Thought
Dynamic Relation of Problems
Historical
Social
Political
Economic
Basis for Marx Analysis of Society
A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy
"Historical Materialism"
Applied to a Capitalist Society
Capital
The Communist Manifesto
Friedrich Engels
Post-WWII Non-Dogmatic Marxism
Martin Heidegger
Sigmund Freud
Edmund Husserl
Soviet Marxism
Vladimir Iiich Lenin
Marxist-Leninism
Joseph Stalin
Chinese Marxist Leninism
Mao Zedong
Anti-Marxist Leninism
Leon Trotsky
Marxism is a Radical Critique of Philosophy (Especially Hegel's purely theoretical discourse)
Philosophers
G.W.F. Hegel
Idealist System
Philosophies of the Left Post-Hegelians
Philosophies of the Right Post-Hegelians
Johann Fichte
Immanuel Kant
Adam Smith
David Ricardo
John Stuart Mill
Critical Theory
Post Modernism
Developing Worlds Marxism