The Connotation and Revolutionary Significance of Marx's Categories of Practice
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54097/qv06z846Keywords:
Marxism, Practice, Philosophical Revolution, New Worldview.Abstract
The concept of "practice" is an important category of Marxist philosophy. In the course of his revolutionary activities and theoretical research, Marx gradually discovered the fundamental role of "practice" in philosophy, and sublimated its connotation by liquidating his previous beliefs and elevating it to a philosophical ontology. By liquidating his former beliefs, he sublimated the connotation of the category of "practice" and elevated it to a philosophical ontology, basing himself on reality, summarizing history, and creating a new worldview, thus completing a great revolution in the history of philosophy.
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References
Marx & Engels Collected Works: Volume 03[M]. Lawrence & Wishart publisher.2010.298, 332, 336, 337, 342.
Marx & Engels Collected Works: Volume 04[M]. Lawrence & Wishart publisher. 2010.:40.
Marx & Engels Collected Works: Volume 05[M]. Lawrence & Wishart publisher. 2010:6,8.
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