Genesis and Development of Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge A Marxist Between Anthropological Materialism and Physiology için kapak resmi
Genesis and Development of Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge A Marxist Between Anthropological Materialism and Physiology
Başlık:
Genesis and Development of Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge A Marxist Between Anthropological Materialism and Physiology
ISBN:
9789401132985
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1991.
Yayın Bilgileri:
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1991.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
IX, 246 p. online resource.
Series:
Sovietica ; 55
Contents:
ONE George Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge -- I. The Formative Years -- II. Against Revisionism -- III. Deba'tes And Other Developments -- TWO Philosophical Influences on Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge -- I. The History Of Ma l'erialism -- II. Spinoza -- III. The Eighteenth- Century Materialists -- IV. The Non-Materialists' Contribution: Kant And The German Idealists -- V. Ludwig Feuerbach -- VI. Feuerbach In Russia: Nikolaj Chernyshevsky -- THREE The Scientific Referents of Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge -- I. Physiology In Russian Culture At The End Of The Nineteenth Century -- II. Ivan M. Secenov -- III. Plekhanov And The Natural Sciences -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Appendix: Plekhanov's Theory of Knowledge in Soviet Studies.
Abstract:
1. One of the most outstanding leaders within Second International Marxism, George Plekhanov has interested Western scholars primarily as a historical and political figure, specifically as the first full-fledged Marxist among the Russian intelligentsia. At the end of the nineteenth century he was the leader in putting Russian progressive culture in touch with Western Marxism, breaking away from Populism and, at the same time, resuming materialistic tradition within Russian progressive thought. Among Russian revolutionaries, a few others to be sure had been interested in Marx before Plekhanov. The translations of some of Marx' works into Russian show this clearly. In 1869 Mikhail Bakunin translated The Communist Manifesto. Three years later Nikolaj Daniel'son, a populist, completed the first foreign-language version of the first book of Marx' Capital and within six months about a thousand copies had been sold. In the middle of the 1870's, an 'academic' economist, N. !. Ziber, helped to spread Marx' economic ideas by teaching them in Kiev and writing articles in the journal Slovo, which to some extent influenced Plekhanov's later choices. But it was Plekhanov who first analyzed the Russian situation as a whole in Marxist terms, thereby earning renown as the "Father of Russian Marxism". 1 His writings became the school for a whole generation of revolutionaries. At the beginning respected and venerated, then rejected and criticized, Plekhanov for long held the leadership of Russian Marxism, as its best-known 'Master'.
Dil:
English