Marx's Concept of Man

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"Marx's Concept of Man" is a philosophical work by Erich Fromm that interprets and humanistically analyzes Karl Marx’s ideas about human nature, freedom, and alienation.

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Marx's Concept of Man canonical 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
aimsTo clarify Marx's view of man as a productive and social being
recover the humanist core of Marx's writings
author Erich Fromm NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
critiquesView dogmatic Marxism
economistic interpretations of Marx
discusses Marx's early writings
relationship between individual and society in Marx
emphasizes Marx's concern with human fulfillment
ethical dimensions of Marx's thought
the concept of alienated labor
field history of ideas
political philosophy
social philosophy
focusesOnConcept alienation in Marx's thought
freedom in Marx's thought
human nature in Marx's thought
humanism in Marx's thought
genre Marxist theory
humanist philosophy
philosophy
hasKeyTheme conditions for human freedom
critique of capitalist society
objectification and alienation
self-realization
hasPerspective humanistic interpretation of Marx
influencedBy Hegelian Marxism NERFINISHED
psychoanalytic humanism
interpretsWorkOf Karl Marx NERFINISHED
language English
mainSubject Karl Marx NERFINISHED
alienation
freedom
human nature
philosophicalTradition Western Marxism NERFINISHED
humanistic Marxism NERFINISHED
relatedTo Marxist humanism NERFINISHED
critical theory
existential Marxism
targetAudience general readers interested in Marx
students of philosophy
students of political theory
usedIn courses on Marxist theory
courses on history of Marxist thought
courses on social and political philosophy

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Erich Fromm notableWork Marx's Concept of Man