MarcuseFontana, 1970 - 95 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 44
... Freud's own writings it is continually necessary for the reader to turn back from the theorizing to the case ... Freud , like Marcuse , envisaged man , a unitary hu- man nature , as seeking a goal of happiness , in the search for which ...
... Freud's own writings it is continually necessary for the reader to turn back from the theorizing to the case ... Freud , like Marcuse , envisaged man , a unitary hu- man nature , as seeking a goal of happiness , in the search for which ...
Page 46
... Freud to supply the social psychology that Marxism lacks , since Freud's own political views , both as citizen and as theorist , were highly conservative . It has been conjectured that while a young man in Paris , Freud acquired his ...
... Freud to supply the social psychology that Marxism lacks , since Freud's own political views , both as citizen and as theorist , were highly conservative . It has been conjectured that while a young man in Paris , Freud acquired his ...
Page 48
... Freud supposes . Freud envisages any social order larger than that between sexual partners as founded on a common , enforced , un- recognized renunciation of sexual life . Marcuse wishes to envisage a possible social order in which ...
... Freud supposes . Freud envisages any social order larger than that between sexual partners as founded on a common , enforced , un- recognized renunciation of sexual life . Marcuse wishes to envisage a possible social order in which ...
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Common terms and phrases
according to Marcuse actual advanced industrial societies alienation argued argument asserting attack Beacon Press Boston bourgeois bourgeois society capitalism capitalist claims concept consciousness contemporary contrast criticism culmination culture cuse cuse's dialectical distinction distorted doctrine domination economic elite empirical Engels envisaged Eros and Civilization essence fact false formal logic freedom Freud Freudian function German Ideology goal happiness Hegel Hence Herbert Marcuse history of philosophy human hypothesis Ibid ideas ideology individual insists instinctual institutions interests laws of logic Left Hegelians liberated libido Marcuse says Marcuse's view Marx Max Horkheimer meaning modern Nazism needs notion One-Dimensional ordinary language particular Phenomenology philoso political position positivism possible precisely question rational reality realm recent philosophy relationship repression Right Hegelian sexuality social order Soviet Marxism Soviet Union structure theory thesis thought tion tolerance totalitarianism tradition transcend true understand Vienna Circle whole Wittgenstein writings Young Hegelians