The Nature of Human Brain Work - Couverture souple

Dietzgen, Joseph

 
9781604860368: The Nature of Human Brain Work

Synopsis

Dietzgen was a pioneer of dialectical materialism and a fundamental influence on anarchist and socialist thought. He discovered that the thinking process involves two opposing events: generalisation and specialisation, therefore dialectical in nature. Although a philosophical materialist, he extended these concepts to include manyy factors that had a real impact on the world. Thought and matter were no longer radically separated. This work is vital for theorsits today by laying a basis for a non-dogmatic, flexible yet principled socialist politics.

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À propos des auteurs

Born near Cologne in 1828, Joseph Dietzgen worked most of his life as a tanner. A self-educated man, he participated in the Revolution of 1848 where he first read the writings of Karl Marx and became one of his supporters. Exiled from Germany after the failed revolution, he spent time in both America and Russia, where he wrote his most famous work The Nature of Human Brain Work, published in 1869, before returning to Germany. In 1884 he moved to the United States for the third and last time after being imprisoned in Germany for his political writing. He became editor of the anarchist Chicagoer Arbeiterzeitung when it's previous editors were hung by the State in response to the Haymarket bombings. When he died 2 years later he was buried beside them in Chicago.



Larry Gambone grew up in logging towns on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, where he was active in the anti-nuclear weapons 'Ban-the-Bomb' movement. He attended Simon Fraser University between 1967-70 and was involved in the campus New Left. He formed a campus IWW branch, and later joined the Vancouver Yippies. Gambone briefly lived on a commune in the Kootenays in the 1970's, helped form the anarchist paper Open Road and became involved in the Surrealist Movement. In the 1980's he began a serious study of working class movements and the autodidact thinkers that influenced them, which lead to an interest in the writings of Joseph Dietzgen. Gambone remains active in his community and continues to study and write about anarchism and other social movements.

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