KARL MARX’S THEORY OF HISTORY A DEFENCE
G.A. Cohen
1978
Pages : 470
I.
IMAGES OF HISTORY IN HEGEL AND MARX 1
II.
THE CONSTITUTION OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES 28
(1) Economic Structure and Productive
Forces 28
(2) Some Terminological Points 37
(3) Labour Power 40
{4) Science 45
(5} More Candidates for the Catalogue
47
(6) The Development of the Productive
Forces 55
III.
THE ECONOMIC STRUCTURE 63
(1) Ownership Rights in Productive
Forces 63
(2) Possible and Impossible Ownership
Positions of Producers 66
(3) Subordination 69
(4) Redefining the Proletarian 70
(5) The Structural Definition of Class
73
(6) The Individuation of Social Forms
77
(7) Modes of Production 79
(8) Varieties of Economic Change
85
IV
MATERIAL AND SOCIAL PROPERTIES OF SOCIETY 88
(1) Introducing the Distinction 88
(2) Matter and Form in the Labour
Process 98
(3) Use-value and Political Economy
103
(4) Revolutionary Value of the
Distinction 105
(5) Against Marx on Mill 108
(6) Work Relations in
V
FETISHISM 115
(1) Fetishism in Religion and in
Economics 115
(2) What is True and What is False in
Fetishism u6
(3) Diagnosis of Commodity
Fetishism 119
(4) Diagnosis of Capital Fetishism 122
(5) Commodity Fetishism and Money 124
(6) Commodity Fetishism, Religion, and
Politics 125
(7) Communism as the Liberation of the
Content 129
VI.
THE PRIMACY OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES 134
(1) Introduction 134
(2) Assertions of Primacy by Marx; The
Preface 136
(3) Assertions of Primacy by Marx: Outside
the Preface 142
(4) The Case for Primacy 150
(5) The Nature of the Primacy of the
Forces 160
(6) Productive Forces, Material
Relations, Social Relations 166
(7) 'All earlier modes of production
were essentially conservative' 169
(8) Addendum 172
VII.
THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES AND CAPITALISM 175
(1) The Emergence of Capitalism 175
(2) The Capitalist Economic Structure
and the Capitalist Mode of Production 180
(3) Capitalism and the Development of
the Productive Forces 593
(4) Four Epochs 197
(5) Capitalism's Mission, and its Fate
201
(6) The Presuppositions of Socialism
204
(7) Why are Classes Necessary? 207
VIII.
BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE, POWERS AND RIGHTS 216
(1) Identifying the Superstructure 216
(2) The Problem of Legality 217
(3) Explanation of Property Relations
and Law by Production Relations 225
(4) Bases Need Superstructures 231
(5) Is the Economic Structure
Independently Observable? 234
(6) More on Rights and Powers 236
(7) Rights and Powers of the
Proletariat 240
(8) Addenda 245
IX.
FUNCTIONAL EXPLANATION: IN GENERAL 249
(1) Introduction 249
(2) Explanation 251
(3) Function-statements and Functional
Explanations 253
(4) The Structure of Functional
Explanation 258
(5) Confirmation 265
(6) Are any Functional Explanations
True? 266
(7) Consequence Explanation and the
Deductive-nomological Model 272
X.
FUNCTIONAL EXPLANATION: IN MARXISM 278
(1) Introduction 278
(2) Conceptual Criticisms of
Functional Explanation 280
(3} Functionalism, Functional
Explanation, and Marxism 283
(4) Elaborations 285
(5) Marxian Illustrations 289
XI.
USE-VALUE, EXCHANGE-VALUE, AND CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM 297
(1) Introduction 297
(2) The Subjugation of Use-value by
Exchange-value 298
(3) A Distinctive Contradiction of
Advanced Capitalism 302
(4) Mishan and Galbraith 307
(5) The Argument Reviewed 309
(6) Is Capitalism a Necessary
Condition of the Distinctive Contradiction? 313
(7) An Objection 317
(8) The Bias of Capitalism and Max
Weber 320
(9) Obiter Dicta 322
X
II FETTERING 326
XIII.
RECONSIDERING HISTORICAL MATERIALISM 341
XIV.
RESTRICTED AND INCLUSIVE HISTORICAL MATERIALISM 364
XV
MARXISM AFTER THE COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION 389
APPENDIX I Karl
Marx and the Withering Away of Social Science 396
APPENDIX II Some
Definitions 415
LIST OF WORKS CITED 425
NAME INDEX 433
SUBJECT INDEX 437
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