Fulltext results:
- 1.2
- backgrounds.** We assume that - we don’t know everything, - other people know things we don’t, and see t... I learned is based on a fiction. I have to forget everything I learned.” I grew up in a society in which I le... dy how an economic system works, I have to forget everything I learned about the economy from my own life. *... Karl. (1843a) 1978. “For a ruthless criticism of everything existing.” In //The Marx-Engels reader//, edited
- 2.1
- society is a “system of total services” in which everything one does is for someone else, and other people do everything for you. It is a state of total interdependence. ... ed. ===== Tiv spheres of exchange ===== What if everything you owned “wished to return to its birthplace” (Mauss [1925b] 1990, 12)? Everything of value would be **embedded** in social relation
- 2.2
- society is a “system of total services” in which everything one does is for someone else, and other people do everything for you (Mauss [1925] 1990, 5). It is a state of... it. ===== Tiv spheres of exchange ===== What if everything you owned “wished to return to its birthplace” (Mauss [1925] 1990, 12)? Everything of value would be **embedded** in social relation
- 1.1
- f a ruthless criticism [rücksichtslose Kritik] of everything existing, ruthless in two senses: The criticism m... , Karl. (1843) 1978. “For a ruthless criticism of everything existing.” In //The Marx-Engels reader//, edited
- 3.1
- exchange dominates truly a unicentric economy? Is everything for sale? ===== An editorial decision ===== Por
- 4.2
- e teaches people to apply symbols to reality, and everything in one’s reality is sorted into either one symbol
- 6.1
- says that when people give and receive, timing is everything. You have to have a feel for the right time. The
- 2024
- ———. (1843) 1978. “For a ruthless criticism of everything existing.” In //The Marx-Engels reader//, edited