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  1. James D. White: Marx and Russia: The Fate of a Doctrine London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019, 240 pp, ISBN-10: 1474224067; ISBN-13: 978-1474224062. [REVIEW]Andrey Maidansky - 2021 - Studies in East European Thought 73 (1):113-116.
  • Marxism as a science of interpretation: beyond Louis Althusser.M. John Lamola - 2013 - South African Journal of Philosophy 32 (2):187-196.
    Inspired by Louis Althusser’s polemic that Marxism is a science and not a philosophy, we enquire about the nature of this ‘scientificity’ of Marxism. The result is a clarification that Marxism is a social theory within the discourse of hermeneutics. Drawing on William Dilthey’s categorisation of human science as Geisteswissenschaft, which essentially is an interpretive science when differentiated from Naturwissenschaft, we point out that Marxism should be understood and used as a socio-hermeneutic theory. We highlight that at the pinnacle of (...)
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  • Theory and Practice in Marx and Marxism.Richard Kilminster - 1982 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 14:157-176.
    The identification of theory and practice is a critical act, through which practice is demonstrated rational and necessary, and theory realistic and rational. In contemporary sociological and political theory the opposition of theory and practice refers to a number of aspects of the relationship between theories of various kinds and social life. It can refer, for example, to the relationships between the various sciences and their ‘objects’, between scientific knowledge and its necessary practical applications and broadly between social science and (...)
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  • Theory and Practice in Marx and Marxism.Richard Kilminster - 1982 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series 14:157-176.
    The identification of theory and practice is a critical act, through which practice is demonstrated rational and necessary, and theory realistic and rational (Antonio Gramsci).In contemporary sociological and political theory the opposition of theory and practice refers to a number of aspects of the relationship between theories of various kinds and social life. It can refer, for example, to the relationships between the various sciences (particularly the social sciences) and their ‘objects’, between scientific knowledge and its necessary practical applications and (...)
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  • Mechanical materialism and modern physics.Boris M. Hessen - 2021 - Science in Context 34 (1):155-186.
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  • Marian Smoluchowski (On the tenth anniversary of his death).Boris M. Hessen - 2021 - Science in Context 34 (1):137-141.
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  • Communism: The Philosophical Foundations.Antony Flew - 1991 - Philosophy 66 (257):269-282.
    ‘Karl Marx was a German philosopher.’ It is with this seminal sentence that Leszek Kolakowski begins his great work on The Main Currents of Marxism: its Rise, Growth and Dissolution. Both the two terms in the predicate expression are crucial. It is most illuminating to think of Marx as originally a philosopher, even though nothing in his vastly voluminous works makes any significant contribution to philosophy in any academic understanding of that term. It is also essential to recognize that for (...)
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  • Philosophy in the Soviet Union.Eugene Kamenka - 1963 - Philosophy 38 (143):1 - 19.
    Soviet philosophy has no great reputation in the Western philosophical world. Physicists, mathematicians, geographers and geomorphologists, medical scientists and men working in certain branches of history and linguistics have found it profitable to follow the researches of their Soviet counterparts; philosophers have not. Academician Mitin, it is true, told the Soviet Academy of Sciences early in 1943 that ’philosophy has been raised to an unparalleled level in the Soviet Union, making the U.S.S.R. a country of high philosophical culture . Many (...)
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  • Communism: The Philosophical Foundations.Antony Flew - 1991 - Philosophy 66 (257):269 - 282.
  • The Need for Empirically-Led Synthetic Philosophy.Spencer Scoular - unknown
    The problem of unifying knowledge represents the frontier between science and philosophy. Science approaches the problem analytically bottom-up whereas, prior to the end of the nineteenth century, philosophy approached the problem synthetically top-down. In the late nineteenth century, the approach of speculative metaphysics was rejected outright by science. Unfortunately, in the rush for science to break with speculative metaphysics, synthetic or top-down philosophy as a whole was rejected. This meant not only the rejection of speculative metaphysics, but also the implicit (...)
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