Key Elements of Social Theory Revolutionized by Marx
In: Studies in Critical Social Sciences Ser.
Intro -- Key Elements of Social Theory Revolutionized by Marx -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Tables -- Abbreviations -- Note on the Citing of Capital, Volume I -- Introduction -- Part 1: The Atrophy of Philosophy -- 1 The Problem of Hegel -- 1 Hegel and Capital, Volume i, 1st German Edition -- 2 2nd German and French Editions of Volume i -- 3 Sieber on Marx and Criticizing His Use of Hegel -- Marx's Reaction -- 4 After Marx's 1883 Death, Sieber's Decline and Plekhanov's Influence -- 5 Lenin's Evolution toward Dialectical Materialism -- 6 Conclusion Moving Forward -- Part 2: Key Elements of Political Economy -- 2 Marx's Evolution and Revolution with the Concept of Value: Abstract Labor and Labor Power -- 1 Poverty of Philosophy (1847) Economic Concepts Historically Conditioned -- 2 Contribution (1859) Abstract Labor as the Substance of Value -- 3 Capital, Volume I (1867) Labor Power -- 4 Other Additions in Volume I -- 5 Marx's Retrospective on Value -- 3 Not Engels, but Marx's Final Edition of Capital, Volume I (1882) -- 1 Marx's Parts i-vi -- 2 The Structural Divisions Desired by Marx, Contrasted to Engels -- 3 Marx's Parts vii and viii (1882) Compared with Engels' 3rd German Edition (1883) -- 4 Text: "The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation", Sections 1-4, as Desired by Marx (1882) -- 1 Section 1 the Increased Demand for Labour-Power that Accompanies Accumulation, the Composition of Capital Remaining the Same -- 2 Section 2 Changes in the Composition of Capital with the Progress of Accumulation and Relative Diminution of that Part of Capital that is Exchanged against Labor Power -- 3 Section 3 Progressive Production of a Relative Surplus-Population or Industrial Reserve Army -- 4 Section 4 Different Forms of the Relative Surplus-Population. The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation.