영문목차
NOTE ON REFERENCES AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS=xvi
INTRODUCTION TO THE 2000 EDITION: REFLECTIONS ON ANALYTICAL MARXISM=xvii
I. IMAGES OF HISTORY IN HEGEL AND MARX=1
II. THE CONSTITUTION OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES=28
(1) Economic Structure and Productive Forces=28
(2) Some Terminological Points=37
(3) Labour Power=40
(4) Science=45
(5) More Candidates for the Catalogue=47
(6) The Development of the Productive Forces=55
III. THE ECONOMIC STRUCTURE=63
(1) Ownership Rights in Productive Forces=63
(2) Possible and Imppossible Ownership Positions of Producers=66
(3) Subordination=69
(4) Redefining the Proletarian=70
(5) The Structural Definition of Class=73
(6) The Individuation of Social Forms=77
(7) Modes of Production=79
(8) Varieties of Economic Change=81
IV. MATERIAL AND SOCIAL PROPERTIES OF SOCIETY=88
(1) Introducing the Distinction=88
(2) Matter and Form in the Labour Process=98
(3) Use-value and Political Economy=103
(4) Revolutionary Value of the Distinction=105
(5) Against Marx on Mill=108
(6) Work Relations=111
V. FETISHISM=115
(1) Fetishism in Religion and in Economics=115
(2) What is True and What is False in Fetishism=116
(3) Diagnosis of Commodity Fetishism=119
(4) Diagnosis of Capital Fetishism=122
(5) Commodity Fetishism and Money=124
(6) Commodity Fetishism, Religion, and Politics=125
(7) Communism as the Liberation of the Content=129
VI. THE PRIMACY OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES=134
(I) Introduction=134
(2) Assertions of Primacy by Marx: The Preface=136
(3) Assertions of Primacy by Marx: Outside the Preface=142
(4) The Case for Primacy=150
(5) The Nature of the Primacy of the Forces=160
(6) Productive Forces, Material Relations, Social Relations=166
(7) 'All earlier modes of production were essentially conservative=169
(8) Addendum=172
VII. THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES AND CAPITALISM=175
(I) The Emergence of Capitalism=175
(2) The Capitalist Economic Structure and the Capitalist Mode of Production=180
(3) Capitalism and the Development of the Productive Forces=193
(4) Four Epochs=197
(5) Capitalism's Mission, and its Fate=201
(6) The Presuppositions of Socialism=204
(7) Why are Classes Necessary?=207
VIII. BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE, POWERS AND RIGHTS=216
(1) Identifying the Superstructure=216
(2) The Problem of Legality=217
(3) Explanation of Property Relations and Law by Production Relations=225
(4) Bases Need Superstructures=231
(5) Is the Economic Structure Independently Observable?=234
(6) More on Rights and Powers=236
(7) Rights and Powers of the Proletariat=240
(8) Addenda=245
IX. FUNCTIONAL EXPLANATION: IN GENERAL=249
(1) Introduction=249
(2) Explanation=251
(3) Function-statements and Functional Explanations=253
(4) The Structure of Functional Explanation=258
(5) Confirmation=265
(6) Are any Functional Explanations True?=266
(7) Consequence Explanation and the Deductive-nomological Model=272
X. FUNCTIONAL EXPLANATION: IN MARXISM=278
(I) Introduction=278
(2) Conceptual Criticisms of Functional Explanation=280
(3) Functionalism, Functional Explanation, and Marxism=283
(4) Elaborations=285
(5) Marxian Illustrations=289
XI. USE-VALUE, EXCHANGE-VALUE, AND CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM=297
(1) Introduction=297
(2) The Subjugation of Use-value by Exchange-value=298
(3) A Distinctive Contradiction of Advanced Capitalism=302
(4) Mishan and Galbraith=307
(5) The Argument Reviewed=309
(6) Is Capitalism a Necessary Condition of the Distinctive Contradiction?=313
(7) An Objection=317
(8) The Bias of Capitalism and Max Weber=320
(9) Obiter Dicta=322
XII. FETTERING=326
XIII. RECONSIDERING HISTORICAL MATERIALISM=341
XIV. RESTRICTED AND INCLUSIVE HISTORICAL MATERIALISM=364
XV. MARXISM AFTER THE COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION=389
APPENDIX I. Karl Marx and the Withering Away of Social Science=396
APPENDIX II. Some Definitions=415
LIST OF WORKS CITED=425
NAME INDEX=433
SUBJECT INDEX=437