Capital Vol. III Part VII Revenues and their Sources 
 
Chapter 52. Classes 
 

The owners merely of labour-power, owners of capital, and land-owners,  
whose respective sources of income are wages, profit and ground-rent, in other  
words, wage-labourers, capitalists and land-owners, constitute then three 
big  classes of modern society based upon the capitalist mode of production. 
 
In England, modern society is indisputably most highly and classically  
developed in economic structure. Nevertheless, even here the stratification of  
classes does not appear in its pure form. Middle and intermediate strata 
even  here obliterate lines of demarcation everywhere (although incomparably 
less in  rural districts than in the cities). However, this is immaterial for 
our  analysis. We have seen that the continual tendency and law of 
development of the  capitalist mode of production is more and more to divorce 
the 
means of  production from labour, and more and more to concentrate the 
scattered means of  production into large groups, thereby transforming labour 
into 
wage-labour and  the means of production into capital. And to this tendency, 
on the other hand,  corresponds the independent separation of landed 
property from capital and  labour,[58] or the transformation of all landed 
property into the form of landed  property corresponding to the capitalist mode 
of 
production. 
 
The first question to he answered is this: What constitutes a class? — and  
the reply to this follows naturally from the reply to another question, 
namely:  What makes wage-labourers, capitalists and landlords constitute the 
three great  social classes? 
 
At first glance — the identity of revenues and sources of revenue. There  
are three great social groups whose members, the individuals forming them, 
live  on wages, profit and ground-rent respectively, on the realisation of 
their  labour-power, their capital, and their landed property. 
 
However, from this standpoint, physicians and officials, e.g., would also  
constitute two classes, for they belong to two distinct social groups, the  
members of each of these groups receiving their revenue from one and the 
same  source. The same would also be true of the infinite fragmentation of 
interest  and rank into which the division of social labour splits labourers as 
well as  capitalists and landlords-the latter, e.g., into owners of 
vineyards, farm  owners, owners of forests, mine owners and owners of 
fisheries. 
 
[Here the manuscript breaks off.]
 
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