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OverviewPeter Singer identifies the central vision that unifies Marx's thought, enabling us to grasp Marx's views as a whole. He explains alienation, historical materialism, the economic theory of Capital, and Marx's idea of communism, in plain English, and concludes with an assessment of Marx's legacy. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Peter Singer (Professor of Philosophy, Princeton University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 11.40cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 17.80cm Weight: 0.103kg ISBN: 9780192854056ISBN 10: 0192854054 Pages: 128 Publication Date: 12 October 2000 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviewsI always recommend that undergraduates should read Singer's book to get an overview. I find it a very useful introduction: succinct and sophisticated. --Professor Diana Coole, University of California, Irvine [An] excellent brief presentation of Marx and his teachings, written with clarity and conciseness; up-to-date in its sources, dispassionate in its approach to [Marx] and balanced in its assessment. --Peter McConville, University of San Francisco Clear, concise, insightful, and even-handed. --Susan Armstrong-Buck, Humboldt State University I always recommend that undergraduates should read Singer's book to get an overview. I find it a very useful introduction: succinct and sophisticated. --Professor Diana Coole, University of California, Irvine [An] excellent brief presentation of Marx and his teachings, written with clarity and conciseness; up-to-date in its sources, dispassionate in its approach to [Marx] and balanced in its assessment. --Peter McConville, University of San Francisco Clear, concise, insightful, and even-handed. --Susan Armstrong-Buck, Humboldt State University I always recommend that undergraduates should read Singer's book to get an overview. I find it a very useful introduction: succinct and sophisticated. --Professor Diana Coole, University of California, Irvine [An] excellent brief presentation of Marx and his teachings, written with clarity and conciseness; up-to-date in its sources, dispassionate in its approach to [Marx] and balanced in its assessment. --Peter McConville, University of San Francisco Clear, concise, insightful, and even-handed. --Susan Armstrong-Buck, Humboldt State University I always recommend that undergraduates should read Singer's book to get an overview. I find it a very useful introduction: succinct and sophisticated. --Professor Diana Coole, University of California, Irvine [An] excellent brief presentation of Marx and his teachings, written with clarity and conciseness; up-to-date in its sources, dispassionate in its approach to [Marx] and balanced in its assessment. --Peter McConville, University of San Francisco Clear, concise, insightful, and even-handed. --Susan Armstrong-Buck, Humboldt State University I always recommend that undergraduates should read Singer's book to get an overview. I find it a very useful introduction: succinct and sophisticated. --Professor Diana Coole, University of California, Irvine [An] excellent brief presentation of Marx and his teachings, written with clarity and conciseness; up-to-date in its sources, dispassionate in its approach to [Marx] and balanced in its assessment. --Peter McConville, University of San Francisco Clear, concise, insightful, and even-handed. --Susan Armstrong-Buck, Humboldt State University Confronted with the difficult task of trying to say something both introductory and meaningful about the prolific and world-shaking Karl Marx, philosopher Peter Singer (Monash Univ., Australia) has opted for a minimum of biography and a concentration on the status of Marx's writings. Focusing on the economic and historical theories of Marx, Singer notes that the claim for their scientific status rests largely with Marx himself-and he was using a notion of science which is not that of contemporary natural or social science: there is no room for testing in his theories, outside of history itself. By science, Singer shows, Marx meant a more general idea about systematic knowledge, as had his mentor, Hegel. While the predictions Marx made based on the application of Hegel's ideas to history and economics have failed, Singer thinks it would be wrong to simply reject Marx's views as we would those of a scientist in the same position. Instead, Singer views Marx as preeminently a philosopher whose central concern is freedom, and whose great strength lies in his critique of the individualist notion of freedom prevalent in the English-speaking world. While Singer points out that Marx's own optimistic hopes for a collective propensity for freedom have thus far proved illusory, the hope nevertheless remains. More pointed than David McClellan's Modern Masters Marx, and more concerned with ideas, Singer's introduction manages to squeeze an argument into and around the exposition whereas McClellan attempts an impossible neutrality. Given the constraints imposed by the format, he has done a first-rate job. (Kirkus Reviews) I always recommend that undergraduates should read Singer's book to get an overview. I find it a very useful introduction: succinct and sophisticated. --Professor Diana Coole, University of California, Irvine<br> [An] excellent brief presentation of Marx and his teachings, written with clarity and conciseness; up-to-date in its sources, dispassionate in its approach to [Marx] and balanced in its assessment. --Peter McConville, University of San Francisco<br> Clear, concise, insightful, and even-handed. --Susan Armstrong-Buck, Humboldt State University<br> Author InformationPeter Singer is Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University. He is best known for his book, Animal Liberation, and his other books include Practical Ethics, Rethinking Life and Death, and How Are We to Live?. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |