Marx: Justice and Dialectic
James Daly shows the humane basis of Marx's thinking which differs from the imposed 'economic materialist' views many Marxist thinkers and many modern interpreters of Marx. In particular, he challenges the interpretation that for Marx, justice is defined as the rules arising from the state of development of society at a particular time. He shows that Marx's view of justice belongs to an older, and continuing, tradition of thought in Europe.
144 pages
978-1-871551-28-0
James Daly shows the humane basis of Marx's thinking which differs from the imposed 'economic materialist' views many Marxist thinkers and many modern interpreters of Marx. In particular, he challenges the interpretation that for Marx, justice is defined as the rules arising from the state of development of society at a particular time. He shows that Marx's view of justice belongs to an older, and continuing, tradition of thought in Europe.
144 pages
978-1-871551-28-0
James Daly shows the humane basis of Marx's thinking which differs from the imposed 'economic materialist' views many Marxist thinkers and many modern interpreters of Marx. In particular, he challenges the interpretation that for Marx, justice is defined as the rules arising from the state of development of society at a particular time. He shows that Marx's view of justice belongs to an older, and continuing, tradition of thought in Europe.
144 pages
978-1-871551-28-0