On Marx's economic doctrine

2000-05-05 Thread Charles Brown
II Having recognised that the economic system is the foundation on which the political superstructure is erected, Marx devoted his greatest attention to the study of this economic system. Marx's principal work, Capital, is devoted to a study of the economic system of modern, i.e., capitali

Re: On Marx's economic doctrine

2000-05-06 Thread Chris Burford
It is a fine gesture by Charles to commemorate the anniversary of Marx's birth, to reprint the second and third part of "The Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism". This must have been the introduction of tens of millions to marxism. Rather than just take it as a worthy historical

Re: On Marx's economic doctrine

2000-05-09 Thread Charles Brown
>>> Chris Burford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 05/06/00 03:36AM >>>In terms of the "economic >doctrine" I have a reservation about saying > The doctrine of surplus-value is the corner-stone of Marx's economic > theory. This was one of Marx's specific additions to classical economics, but the fact

Re: On Marx's economic doctrine (fwd)

2000-05-06 Thread md7148
Chris Burford wrote: >It is a fine gesture by Charles to commemorate the anniversary of Marx's >birth, to reprint the second and third part of "The Three Sources and >Three >Component Parts of Marxism". I agree. >However it provides no answer in terms of the political process under >conditi

Re: Re: On Marx's economic doctrine (fwd)

2000-05-07 Thread Chris Burford
At 13:06 06/05/00 -0400, Mine Doyran wrote: >Chris Burford wrote: > > >It is a fine gesture by Charles to commemorate the anniversary of Marx's > >birth, to reprint the second and third part of "The Three Sources and > >Three > >Component Parts of Marxism". > >I agree. We come at this from