Livrel (ePUB, HTML,  Tatouage)  235p.    
    
    (Alter développement) 
 ISBN: 978-2-37918-281-5    
     
  
     Marx is not a philosopher, a historian, an economist, a political
   scientist, or a sociologist. He is not even a scholar of the first
   rank in any of those disciplines. Nor even a talented professor who
   prepared a good multidisciplinary dish cooked with all these
   ingredients. Marx's place is quite outside all that. Marx is the
   beginning of the radical critique of modern times, starting with the
   critique of the real world. This radical critique of capitalism
   demands and allows discovery of the basis of market alienation and,
   inseparable from it, the exploitation of labor. The foundational
   status of the concept of value derives from this radical critique. It
   alone allows a grasp of the objective laws that govern the
   reproduction of the system, underlying those surface movements
   perceptible through direct observation of reality. Marx links to this
   critique of the real world the critique of discourses about that
   reality : those of philosophy, economics, sociology, history, and
   political science. This radical critique uncovers their true nature
   which, in the last analysis, is always an apologetic one, legitimizing
   the practices of capital's dominating power.