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I Starting Points
A. Ills of Industrial Revolution: from Germany, Marx moves to England and witnesses first
hand many of the evils produced by the Industrial Revolution.
- view of history as spiritual and teleological, with mind and spirit as primary.
- embodied by G. F. Hegel and others; dialectic process (thesis-antithesis-synthesis) as basic
dynamic of all reality, leading to ascendancy of Absolute Spirit.
A. Basic Problem: workers’ labor has produced “for the rich wonderful things,” and yet for
workers it has produced “deformity,” has turned them into “machines,” and mired them
in “idiocy [and] cretinism” (p. 73, par. 3).
B. Estrangement of Labor: the object of labor is “man’s species life,” i.e., through labor,
man is able to reproduce himself both consciously and in reality, unlike animals who
cannot distinguish themselves from its “life activity” (p.76, pars. 1-3); instead, however,
with the Industrial Revolution what has transpired is a situation of estrangement or
alienation, of …
- the worker from the product of labor: the product exercises power over him rather than
vice-versa (p.74, par. 5).
- the worker from his own labor activity: “activity as suffering … turned against him” (p. 75,
par. 1).
- man from his own “species being,” or man from his own body: species life as a means to
his existence, like animals (p. 77, par. 3).
- man from other men: result of man’s alienation from his species being (p.77, pars. 3-4).
C. Result of Alienated Man and Estranged Labor: Private Property (p. 79, par. 3).
D. Solution: to counter servitude to private property and the yoke of other men, need for the
“emancipation of workers” (p. 80, par. 4).
A. Premise of Human History: not “arbitrary ones” of German Philosophy but the
“existence of living human individuals,” and their production of their “means of
subsistence” (p. 149, last par. to p. 150, first par.).
- the base of history is a particular mode of production (p. 150, par. 2). This is comprised,
first, of the forces of production, i.e. the. means of subsistence in a particular era,
technological and industrial developments, etc.
- a second element of the mode of production is the intercourse or relation of men [other
translations, a “relations of production”] involving allocation of production and division of
labor (p. 150, par. 3).
B. Production of Consciousness.
- thus consciousness itself is a “social product” (p. 158, par. 1); it is “interwoven with the
material activity and the material intercourse of men,” consciousness is dependent on these
and thus not have an independent existence, an ascent “from earth to heaven” (p. 154, par.
3).
- IMPORTANT: critique of idealism, p. 164, par. 1 ff.; “revolution is the driving force of
history,” especially through class struggle.
- also importance of power relations, “the ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the
ruling ideas” (p. 172, par. 3).