This book asks how we can resolve conflict from the capitalist world view. It exposes the intellectual basis of contemporary capitalism as a logically flawed dialectic that prevents both revolutionary options in theory and also, in practice, the evolution of capitalism itself towards the revolutionary outcome outlined by Smith and Marx. As a consequence, it practices intolerance-disguised as tolerance-toward radical thinking, which explains its propensity to war and the fascistic features of its economics and politics. True revolution, on the other hand, is radically tolerant of the presence of the other and therefore nonviolent at the core.…mehr
This book asks how we can resolve conflict from the capitalist world view. It exposes the intellectual basis of contemporary capitalism as a logically flawed dialectic that prevents both revolutionary options in theory and also, in practice, the evolution of capitalism itself towards the revolutionary outcome outlined by Smith and Marx. As a consequence, it practices intolerance-disguised as tolerance-toward radical thinking, which explains its propensity to war and the fascistic features of its economics and politics. True revolution, on the other hand, is radically tolerant of the presence of the other and therefore nonviolent at the core.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Andrea Micocci teaches economics at the University of Malta Link Campus, Rome, and International Economic Policies at the Facoltà di Studi Politici e per l'Alta Formazione Europea e Mediterranea Jean Monnet of Seconda Università of Naples, San Leucio (CS), Italy.
Inhaltsangabe
Chapter 1 Foreword Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Individual, State, Community Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Contradiction, Mediation, Opposition Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Capitalism, Politics and Political Theories Chapter 5 Chapter 4. The Pretended Variety of Economic Ideas Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Classical Liberalism Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Economic Liberalism Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Utopian Socialisms and Russian Nihilism Chapter 9 Chapter 8. Marx Chapter 10 Chapter 9. Marxisms. Leninism and Stalinism, Trotzkysm Chapter 11 Chapter 10. Anarchism Chapter 12 Chapter 11. Revisions of Marxism, Fall of the Totalitarian "Socialist" Regimes Chapter 13 Chapter 12. Democratic Theories, Conservatism Chapter 14 Chapter 13. Christian Ideas of Social Reform Chapter 15 Chapter 14. Nationalism, Racism Chapter 16 Chapter 15. Imperialism, Theories of Underdevelopment Chapter 17 Chapter 16. Fascisms Chapter 18 Chapter 17. Communitarianism and Neoliberalism Chapter 19 Chapter 18. New Ideas or New Movements? Chapter 20 Chapter 19. Terrorism Chapter 21 Chapter 20. Moderation against Revolution, Tolerance