Marx's theory of alienation

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    his ideas and his development of a philosophy based on the class struggle. Karl Marx is known to be the father of communism, and had a significant involvement with his theory in the establishment of communist political regimes. He is one of the most famous thinkers of the 20th century. He developed over time a revolutionary theory in order to understand the world in order to change and transform it. He had a very big contribution in sociology. In this work we will speak about his life, his ideas…

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    People began to have different values and perspectives, showing alienation, which is exactly what Marx was talking about. Alienated labor takes away the meaning of life and that “life appears only as a means to life.” Living without creativity and only to subsist reduces humans to an animal-like status; they are alienated…

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    Through Karl Marx’s Alienation of Labor during the romanticism era, to artwork, literature, and movies from the modernism era, time wasting away while mindlessly working just to be able to live is what seems to be what the 20th century art and literature was about. The Alienation of Labor by Karl Marx basically talked about how the work industry was dehumanizing the actual laborers. The workers hardly made any money but had to continue to work just to make enough money to live a life. The…

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    upper classes were able to exploit those in the lower classes” (Farganis, 24). In his philosophical work, Marx brought an understanding of how to look at the economic, social and political power and its effects on society. Acknowledging that Marx’s theories have emerged during the French Revolution and that many historical events have occurred since then, the essay below will strive to compare the views of past communism to today’s capitalistic society. Further on, the paper will include…

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    Marx: Emancipation from Illusions As I read Karl Marx’s writings within The Marx-Engels Reader, four key terms became apparent in order to understand his theories regarding religion, politics, and economics: emancipation, alienation, species-being, and proletariat. While I do not intend to summarize his ideas, this essay will resemble an almost ‘thinking out loud’ type of process, helping me to better comprehend Karl Marx, his vision for the world, and his impact on the discipline of religious…

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    While there are many problems with communism being practiced in different nations around the world, the real problems lie within the theory of communism. Ideally everyone would be treated equal and there would be no class struggle or discrimination, but this is impossible due to free will and the need for one to express themselves. There is a problem with alienation in our nation right now, but this problem shouldn’t be solved by such an extreme. Working towards decreasing wealth gaps should be…

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    In Marx’s original theories this relates to his posing of a communist based society in his Communists Manifesto. Of Mice and Men sees Steinbeck ingeniously weave the idyllic American Dream into the plot. George tells of “a little house” with a “cow and some pigs” (pg…

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    Marx’s theory of alienation is a tough concept to digest and is a far cry from the commonly used definition. In looking at the definition; isolation, estrangement and the act of turning away are useful clues a clue to Marx use of the word to describe the relationship between labor and man. Marx’s concept of alienation stems from man’s activity, went but to toward the goal of production. Marx in Estranged Labour held “the worker to his own activity as an alien activity not belonging to him; it…

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    laborers are dehumanized because they are alienated, or disconnected from fundamental human properties, in four aspects – products of labor, labor, species-being, and human-human relations. The basis of Marx’s theory of alienation is the laborer’s estrangement from his labor, which arises from alienation from the laborer’s object of production. According to Marx in the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, “the object which labour produces – labour’s product – confronts it as something…

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    least to some extent. Essentially, because marx doesn't refer to "human nature" as such, he uses the term "species-being". This is mainly due to Marx's theory that the fundamental "nature" of human-beings is there drive to create and express themselves in and through nature. This is why alienation is a major theme and problem in Marx's philosophy. Alienation, or estrangement, of people from aspects of their human nature, Gattungswesen, is a consequence of living in a society or community that…

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