The American ConditionDoubleday, 1974 - 407 páginas Analyzes the nature and evolution of freedom in America, arguing that social fragmentation and individualism are threatening its continued existence. |
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Página 333
... structure is still policy , and that structure resembles , because it serves , the dominant forms of private life . Hegel wrote that “ the world spirit is the spirit of the world as it explicates itself in human consciousness " ; in ...
... structure is still policy , and that structure resembles , because it serves , the dominant forms of private life . Hegel wrote that “ the world spirit is the spirit of the world as it explicates itself in human consciousness " ; in ...
Página 366
... structure . Un- like the capitalist , bureaucracies do not retire , nor do they enjoy the goods money can buy . They need not contemplate mortality , and they have no heirs . Although the nature of the capitalist was to accumulate ...
... structure . Un- like the capitalist , bureaucracies do not retire , nor do they enjoy the goods money can buy . They need not contemplate mortality , and they have no heirs . Although the nature of the capitalist was to accumulate ...
Página 390
... structure is symmetrical - will produce a signal stronger than either of the components . The new signal is not the result of either signal , but of their consistency . So , too , economic structure and awareness reinforce one another ...
... structure is symmetrical - will produce a signal stronger than either of the components . The new signal is not the result of either signal , but of their consistency . So , too , economic structure and awareness reinforce one another ...
Términos y frases comunes
alienation assertion authority awareness become behavior belief billion dollars capacity capital capitalist century choice cial companies competition consciousness consequence consumption corporation create creation D. H. Lawrence demand desire dominant relationships economic bureaucracy economic institutions economic power economic process economic relations economic relationships economic structure eliminate enterprise established example existentialism existentialists experience external freedom function growth historical human ideology income increase individual industrial interest investment J. P. Morgan Karl Marx Kennebunk labor labor power liberating limits managers Marx Marxist material ment modern economic moral mysticism nation nature necessary necessity Nietzsche nomic oppression organization owner ownership political possible productive forces purpose reality relations of production revolution scientific reason shared skills social existence social power social process society superego sustain thought tion ture union wealth workers World War II