—“The great basic question of all philosophy is that concerning the relation of thinking and being.”— [Engels]
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SOCIALISM: UTOPIAN AND SCIENTIFIC, Engels
A Workers' Inquiry, Marx
Introduction to Programme of French Workers' Party, Marx
To Meeting for 50th Anniversary of 1830 Polish Revolution
Letters |
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First draft of Letter to Vera Zasulich
Mathematical Manuscripts
Notes on Wagner (Bilingual)
Articles for The Labour Standard, Engels
Letters
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Bruno Bauer and Early Christianity, Engels
Letters
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“On the 14th of March, at a quarter to three in the afternoon, the greatest living thinker ceased to think. He had been left alone for scarcely two minutes, and when we came back we found him in his armchair, peacefully gone to sleep -- but for ever.” [Engels at Marx's Graveside] |
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THE DIALECTICS OF NATURE, Engels
Articles on Karl Marx's Death
Letters
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ORIGIN OF THE FAMILY, PRIVATE PROPERTY, AND THE STATE
Marx and the Neue Rheinische Zeitung (1848-1849)
Letters
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CAPITAL, VOLUME II
History of the Communist League
Letters
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LUDWIG FEUERBACH & THE END OF CLASSICAL GERMAN PHILOSOPHY
Letters
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The Role of Force in History
Letters
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Letters
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Letters
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Letters
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20th Anniversary of the Paris Commune
Critique of the Erfurt Program
Brentano vs. Marx
Letters
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Socialism in Germany, Engels 1892
Biography of Marx, Engels 1892
The Mark
L'Eclair Interview with Engels
Letters
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Le Figaro Interview with Engels
Daily Chronicle Interview with Engels
Letters
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On the Peasantry & Precapitalist Societies
The Peasant Question in France and Germany
On The History of Early Christianity
CAPITAL, VOLUME III
The Future Italian Revolution and the Socialist Party
Letters
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“The day when we are in the majority, what the French army did instinctively in not firing on the people will be repeated in our country quite consciously. Yes, whatever the frightened bourgeois say, we are able to calculate the moment when we shall have the majority of the people behind us; our ideas are making headway everywhere, as much among teachers, doctors, lawyers, etc. as among the workers. If we had to start wielding power tomorrow, we should need engineers, chemists, agronomists. Well, it is my conviction that we would have a good many of them behind us already. In five or ten years we shall have more of them than we need.” [Engels interview with Le Figaro] |
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Letters
Introduction to Class Struggles in France 1848-1850
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