Social Scientist. v 6, no. 70 (May 1978) p. 16.


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16 SOCIAL SCIENTIST

2 Karl Marx, "Preface to a Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy",.

Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works (in two volumes), Vol I, Moscow

1962, p 362. 8 Frederick Engels, "Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political

Economy", Selected Works, Vol I, op.cit., p 369.

4 Karl Marx, "^Contribution to the Critique of HegeFs Philosophy of Right, Introduction", Karl Marx, Early Writings, The Pelican Marx Library, Vol I, 1975, p 256.

5 Ibid., p 250. e /W.,p250.

7 Karl Marx, "Critique of HegeFs Doctrine of the State", Early Writings op.cit., p98.

8 Karl Marx, ^Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts", Early Writings, op.cit.. p331,

9 Ibid,? 381.

10 Karl Marx, "Theses on Feuerbach", Selected Works, Vol II, op.cit., p 403. n Frederick Engels, "Ludwig Feuerbach and the End of Classical German Philosophy" Selected Works, Vol II, op.cit., p 358.

12 Karl Marx, "Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts", op.cit., p 322.

13 Lucio Colletti, "Introduction", Early Writings, op.cit., p 84. Also see, Karl Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy, Moscow 1975, p 101.

14 Karl Marx, "Preface to a Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy", op.cit.. p 364.

15 Karl Marx, "Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts", op.cit., p 881.

16 "Glossary of Key Terms", Karl Marx, Early Writings, op.cit, pp 430, 432. Also see, I Meszaros, Marx's Theory of Alienation, London 1970, p 12.

17 Karl Marx, "A Contribution to the Critique of HegeFs Philosophy of Right. Introduction", op.cit.. p 246.

18 Ibid., p351.

19 Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith, "Preface", Selections rrom the Prison Notebooks of Antonio Gramsci, New York 1971, xiii.

20 Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks, op.cit., p 326.

ai Ibid, p38I.

22 Ibid., p 345.

^ Ibid., p 323.

24 Ibid., pp 326, 324.

26 Ibid., p 13. "Specialist philosopher" is contrasted with '^other specialists", like, say, the specialists in entomology. The specialist philosopher is much more similar to the rest of mankind than are other specialists. "One can find extremely refined, extremely specialized sciences which are necessary, but are not for that reason common. But it is not possible to conceive of any man who is also not a philosopher, who doesn^t think, because thought is proper to man as such, or at least to any man who is not a pathological cretin." Ibid.. p 347.

^ Ibid., p 15.

27 Ibid., p 8.

28 Ibid., p 5.

29 Ibid., p 9. 8° Ibid., p 10. s* Ibid., p 15. s2 Ibid., p 334. 88 Ibid., p 325. ^ Ibid., pp 332-33. as Idid., p 335. »8 Ibid., p 324.



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