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table of contents
Table of Contents
- Front Matter
- Introduction: The Practical Importance of the Social Sciences
- a. The Social Sciences and the Demands of the Struggle of the Working Class
- b. The Bourgeoisie and the Social Sciences
- c. The Class Character of the Social Sciences
- d. Why is Proletarian Science Superior to Bourgeois Science?
- e. The Various Social Sciences and Sociology
- f. The Theory of Historical Materialism as a Marxian Sociology
- 1: Cause and Purpose in the Social Sciences (Causation and Teleology)
- a. The Uniformity of Phenomena in General and of Social Phenomena in Particular
- b. The Nature of Causation, Formulation of the Question
- c. Teleology and Objections to Teleology, Immanent Teleology
- d. Teleology in the Social Sciences
- e. Causality and Teleology; Scientific Explanations are Causal Explanations
Notes
- 2: Determinism and Indeterminism (Necessity and Free Will)
- a. The Question of Freedom or Lack of Freedom of the Individual
- b. The Resultant of the Individual Wills in Unorganized Society
- c. The Collectively Organized Will (the Resultant of Individual Wills in Organized Communist Society)
- d. Accidentalism in General
- e. Historical “Accident”’
- f. Historical Necessity
- g. Are the Social Sciences Possible? Is Prediction Possible in this Field?
- 3: Dialectical Materialism
- a. Materialism and Idealism in Philosophy; the Problem of the Objective
- b. The Materialist Attitude in the Social Sciences
- c. The Dynamic point of View and the Relation Between Phenomena
- d. The Historical Interpretation of the Social Sciences
- e. The Use of Contradictions in the Historical Process
- f. The Theory of Cataclysmic Changes anal the Theory of Revolutionary Transformations in the Social Sciences
Notes
- 4: Society
- 5: The Equilibrium between Society and Nature
- a. Nature as the Environment of Society
- b. Relations between Society and Nature; the Process of Production and Reproduction
- c. The Productive Forces; the Productive Forces as an Indicator of the Relations between Society and Nature
- d. The Equilibrium Between Nature and Society; Its Disturbances and Readjustments
- e. The Productive Forces as the Point of Departure in Sociological Analysis
- Bibliography
Notes
- 6: The Equilibrium between the Elements of Society
- a. Connection between the Various Social Phenomena; Formulation of the Question
- b. Things, Persons, Ideas
- c. Social Technology and the Economic Structure of Society
- d. The Outlines of the Superstructure
- e. Social Psychology and Social Ideology
- f. The Ideological Processes considered as differentiated labour
- g. The Significance of the Superstructure
- h. The Formative Principles of Social Life
- i. Types of Economic Structure; Types of Various Societies
- j. The Contradictory Character of Evolution; External and Internal Equilibrium of Society
- Bibliography
Notes
- 7: Disturbance and Readjustment of Social Equilibrium
- a.The Process of Social Changes and the Productive Forces
- b.The Productive Forces and the Social-Economic Structure.
- c.The Revolution and its Phases
- d.Cause and Effect in the Transition Period; Cause and Effect in Periods of Decline
- e.The Evolution of the Productive Forces and the Materialization of Social Phenomena (Accumulation of Civilization)
- f. The Process of Reproduction of Social Life as a Whole
- Bibliography
Notes
- 8: The Classes and the Class
- a. Class, Caste, Vocation
- b. Class Interest
- c. Class Psychology and Class Ideology
- d. The “Class in Itself”, and the “Class for Itself”
- e. Forms of a Relative Solidarity of Interests
- f. Class Struggle and Class Peace
- g. The Class Struggle and the State Power
- h. Class, Party, Leaders
- i. The Classes as an Instrument of Social Transformation
- j. The Classless Society of the Future
Notes