Full Description
This book expounds the dialectical conception of science largely implicit in the writings of Marx and Engels, offering a sympathetic reconstruction of a philosophy of science commensurate with Marx's thought. Drawing on a reading of dialectics found in Plato and Hegel, it recasts Marx's implicit ontology in terms of dialectical conceptions of the world, as these conceptions have responded to the growing sophistication of modern science. It thus deepens our understanding of materialist philosophy as it relates to science and draws out Marx's logic of science in light of continuing discussions. As such, it will appeal to philosophers with interests in the nature and development of science and Marxist thought.
Contents
Introduction: historical materialism and the lingering war on science
1: Dialectics and materialist science
2: The dialectic of subject and object
3: Ontology, relations, and fetishism
4: The materialist matrix of classical Marxian science
5: The external and internal relationship of theory and reality
6: The logical character of Marx's scientific achievements