Marcuse |
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Page 15
... freedom to happiness . According to Marcuse freedom and happiness are intimately connected . " Happiness , as the fulfilment of all potentialities of the individual , presupposes freedom ... at root , it is freedom . " Because moral ...
... freedom to happiness . According to Marcuse freedom and happiness are intimately connected . " Happiness , as the fulfilment of all potentialities of the individual , presupposes freedom ... at root , it is freedom . " Because moral ...
Page 28
... freedom and reason and in this name is overthrown . Robespierre proclaimed in words which , as Marcuse has noted ... freedom . What the social forms are which might transcend the competitiveness of individualist civil society and realize ...
... freedom and reason and in this name is overthrown . Robespierre proclaimed in words which , as Marcuse has noted ... freedom . What the social forms are which might transcend the competitiveness of individualist civil society and realize ...
Page 37
... freedom as a goal is the acceptance of the possibility that in utilizing their freedom men will pro- duce situations which invoke frustration , sacrifice and un- happiness . Marcuse believes that for men to be satisfied they must be ...
... freedom as a goal is the acceptance of the possibility that in utilizing their freedom men will pro- duce situations which invoke frustration , sacrifice and un- happiness . Marcuse believes that for men to be satisfied they must be ...
Contents
Marcuses Early Doctrine | 7 |
Marcuses Interpretation of Hegel and Marx | 23 |
Eros and Civilization | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
according to Marcuse actual advanced industrial societies Alasdair MacIntyre alienation analysis argued argument asserting attack bourgeois bourgeois society character claims concept Conor Cruise O'Brien consciousness contrast criticism culmination culture cuse David Caute Dimensional distinction domination economic Edmund Leach elite empirical Engels envisages Eros and Civilization essence fact false formal logic Freud Freudian function goal Hegel Hence Herbert Marcuse history of philosophy human hypothesis Ibid ideas ideology individual insists instinctual institutions interests interpretation law-governed laws of logic liberated libido Marcuse says Marcuse's account Marcuse's position Marcuse's view Marcusean Marx Marx's meaning ment modern Nazism needs notion ordinary language particular phenomenology philo political positivism possibility precisely question rational reality realm Reason and Revolution recent philosophy relationship repression sexuality social order sophical Soviet Marxism structure thesis thought tion tolerance totalitarianism tradition transcend transition true understand Vienna Circle whole Wittgenstein writings Young Hegelian