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  1. J. Foster P. Burkett. Philosophy, Environmental Science. 2000. Ecological thinkers have suggested that in applying an “organic/inorganic” distinction to humanity-nature, Marx embraced a dualistic and antagonistic conception of the human-nature relationship.

  2. 1. For a sketchy account of the way in which “nature” came historically to be applied to the social realm, see Louis Althusser's discussion of Montesquieu in Politics and History, (London: New Left Books. 1972). Paradoxically, the concept of nature is conspicuously absent from the rest of Althusser's work. 2.

  3. He shows how Marxism cuts right across the traditional tendency to counterpose an abstract concept of man with an abstract concept of nature. Schmidt stresses the importance in Marxism of the development of industry and science as the mediation between historical man and external nature, leading either to their reconciliation (if positive) or to their mutual annihilation (if negative).

  4. Marx first explains this phrase in the following way: ‘the human lives from [or on] nature and this means that nature is his body, with which he must be in a continuous [ongoing] process [bestandigem Prozeß] in order not to die’.19 His point is then clarified that the human creature is not separable from the life processes on which he/she depends, and that this continuous interchange ...

  5. 15 de ene. de 2023 · In fact, the ‘production of nature’ approach is haunted by an illegitimate kind of anthropocentrism, which undermines nature’s independence and autonomy as non-identical with society. Consequently, they ended up underestimating the impact of the global ecological crisis under capitalism (II). In contrast, Moore’s treatment of the ...

  6. 14 de ene. de 2014 · The Concept of Nature in Marx的书评 · · · · · · ( 全部 2 条) 热门 最新 好友 只看本版本的评论 Hier Tanze 2018-04-07 17:30:39 商务印书馆1988版

  7. 1 de ene. de 1973 · The Concept of Nature in Marx. Hardcover – January 1, 1973. Schmidt’s close reading of Marx’s own writings and his relation of them to the positions of Kant, Hegel, Engels, Lenin, the early Lukacs and Sartre, enables him to establish the significance of the mature Marx’s sense of the interpenetration of nature and society.

    • Alfred Schmidt