Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6778651> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 50 of
50
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6778651 subject Q7216548.
- Q6778651 abstract "There is no specific "Marxist philosophy of nature", as Karl Marx didn't conceive of Nature as separate from Society. As the young Marx exposed in the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844, labor transforms Nature which becomes the "inorganic body" of Man. In the same way, Marx's conception of "human nature" (Gattungswesen) is problematic, since he opposed himself to the traditional conception of an eternal human nature which remained the same in all places and times. Later, Friedrich Engels wrote the Dialectics of Nature (1883), in opposition to German Naturphilosophie. Marx and Engels' thought was then codified into "dialectical materialism", which is what is usually referred to when speaking of a "Marxist philosophy of nature". Such a doctrine was rejected by several Marxist philosophers, starting by Georg Lukács and Walter Benjamin.".
- Q6778651 wikiPageExternalLink anthropogenesis.htm.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1063.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1076509.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q11577.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1208426.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q12725.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q151523.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1639471.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q167323.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q169219.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q17051382.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q181207.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q190558.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q2034058.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q210501.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q252552.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q2917466.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q295347.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q309314.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q34787.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q347930.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3497299.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q35758.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3699251.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q468777.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q4833077.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q5380799.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q544.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q574630.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q582558.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q6025162.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q609370.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q61078.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q6186.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q7087.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q7216548.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q72390.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q742609.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q83500.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q866081.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q9061.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q910963.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q9235.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q9510.
- Q6778651 wikiPageWikiLink Q988290.
- Q6778651 comment "There is no specific "Marxist philosophy of nature", as Karl Marx didn't conceive of Nature as separate from Society. As the young Marx exposed in the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844, labor transforms Nature which becomes the "inorganic body" of Man. In the same way, Marx's conception of "human nature" (Gattungswesen) is problematic, since he opposed himself to the traditional conception of an eternal human nature which remained the same in all places and times.".
- Q6778651 label "Marxist philosophy of nature".