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Landmarks of Scientific Socialism: "Anti-Duehring" cover

Landmarks of Scientific Socialism: "Anti-Duehring"

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The author aims to dismantle a rival philosopher's attempt to construct an all-embracing system and to replace aprioristic foundations with a materialist and dialectical method. He systematically rejects absolute or eternal truths and applies dialectical analysis to natural philosophy, morality, and logic, treating concepts such as quantity, negation, and development. In political economy he examines method, critiques force-based explanations, and develops analyses of value, labor, capital, surplus value, and ground rent. Finally he outlines practical socialist prescriptions for production and distribution and discusses the transformations of the state, the family, and education under a socialist order.

About the Author

Engels, Friedrich portrait

Friedrich Engels

Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) was a German philosopher, social scientist, and political theorist, best known for his collaboration with Karl Marx. Together, they laid the foundations of modern socialism and communism. Engels's influential works include "The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844," which provides a critical analysis of the social and economic conditions of the working class during the Industrial Revolution. He also authored "Socialism: Utopian and Scientific," where he distinguishes between different forms of socialism. Engels's writings continue to be significant in discussions of class struggle, economic theory, and social justice.

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