The major works that will be discussed herein are: Capital, Volumes I, II and III, and The Communist Manifesto. ... Throughout his vast bibliography, the most major works of Marx include: Capital, Volumes I, II and III, and the most influential, The Communist Manifesto. ... Favorite Work Although these three works have greatly influenced understanding of sociology as a whole, it is Marx's The Communist Manifesto that has left the biggest impact on the world of sociology. ... Unlike the previous three works described, the focus of The Communist Manifesto is much more on the political and s...
Dialectical materialism is the philosophy of the Communist party. And it is the general theory for the Communists because it is so closely linked to the economic and political theories as well as what would be the practical activity for their party. ... The solution to this problem was for a communist society to eliminate the effects of private property. ...
In a Communist Society people are naturally free, loving, caring, and sharing. ... No soldiers can dominate majority if they have weapons, and in a Communist Party if a couple of people are fighting, proper men will break it up. ... Communist wants to abolish private ownership. ...
As quoted in Marx's Manifesto of the Communist Party, "The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles. ... As discussed in the quote from the Manifesto of the Communist Party, classes existed in opposition to each other throughout history. ... This early, primitive communist tribe is described as migratory, consuming the natural resources of each area before moving onto another. ...
Introduction The liberals interpret and fundamentally believe that change must be devoid of any conflict to avoid disrupting the processes in society while the radicals believe otherwise and categorically state that change must be revolutionary especially that conflict is inherent in most capitalist setups in which the class is divided by social formation of the society. Change is concept of development and relates to complete or partial transformation of the society. The liberals and radicals both agree that change in the society and its political life ought to change but only disagree on th...