1st Edition

Marx's Critical/Dialectical Procedure

By H. Wilson Copyright 1991
    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, first published in 1991, demonstrates that Marx is the legitimate founder of what was to become the critical theory of society. It argues that in order to justify a new conception of humans as collective, cultural and historical beings, Marx undertook a radical critique of the theoretical/analytical method of his predecessors and his contemporaries in political economy, philosophy and the natural sciences. While elements of the methods of some of these thinkers – most conspicuously from the work of Aristotle, Kant and Hegel – were present in Marx’s thought, he achieved a new synthesis of procedural, epistemological and ontological methods.

    1. Marx’s Critique of Political Economy as a Problem-Posing Framework  2. Conceptualization and Critique in Marx and Today  3. The Meaning and Significance of Marx’s Critique of the Method of Political Economy  4. Making Analytical and Practical Sense of Marx’s Critical/Dialectical Procedure  5. Ontological Underpinnings of the Critical/Dialectical Procedure  6. Retroduction and Empiricism in Marx’s Practice and Theory of Understanding  7. Labour as the Objective Basis of Materialist Dialectics

    Biography

    H.T. Wilson