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Sean Sayers

University of Kent
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  •  Publications
    221
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  •  Events
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 More details
  • University of Kent
    Retired faculty
University of Kent
PhD, 1986
Homepage
Areas of Interest
Social and Political Philosophy
19th Century Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
  • All publications (221)
  •  3
    Freedom and the "Realm of Necessity"
    This paper gives an original account of one of the most discussed passages in Marx dealing with the concepts of work and freedom. It criticises the view that there are two conflicting strands in Marx's thought (Cohen, Arendt, et al.). It demonstrates that it is a mistake to interpret Marx as opposing the realms of `necessity' and `freedom'. It refutes the common idea that Marx's views on work and freedom changed significantly in his later writings and argues for a more utopian vision.
  •  1
    Analytical Marxism and Morality
  • Communitarianism and Moral Realism
  • Engels and Materialism
  •  1
    Work, Leisure and Human Needs
  • The Actual and the Rational
  •  2
    Higher and Lower Pleasures
  •  9
    Alienation as a critical concept
    This paper discusses Marx's concept of alienated (or estranged) labour, focusing mainly on his account in the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844. This concept is frequently taken to be a moral notion based on a concept of universal human nature. This view is criticized and it is argued that the concept of alienation should rather be interpreted in the light of Hegelian historical ideas. In Hegel, alienation is not a purely negative phenomenon; it is a necessary stage of human develop…Read more
    This paper discusses Marx's concept of alienated (or estranged) labour, focusing mainly on his account in the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844. This concept is frequently taken to be a moral notion based on a concept of universal human nature. This view is criticized and it is argued that the concept of alienation should rather be interpreted in the light of Hegelian historical ideas. In Hegel, alienation is not a purely negative phenomenon; it is a necessary stage of human development. Marx's account of alienated labour should be understood in similar terms. It is not a merely subjective discontent with work; it is an objective and historically specific condition, a stage in the process of historical development. Marx usually regards it as specific to capitalism. The criticism of capitalism implied in the concept of alienation, it is argued, does not appeal to universal moral standards; it is historical and relative. Overcoming alienation must also be understood in historical terms, not as the realization of a universal ideal, but as the dialectical supersession of capitalist conditions of labour. Marx's account of communism as the overcoming of alienation is explained in these terms.
  •  1
    Marx and Alienation: Essays on Hegelian Themes
    What does Marx mean by 'alienation'? What role does the concept play in his critique of capitalism and his vision of a future society? Marx and Alienation deals in depth with some of the most important philosophical assumptions of Marx's work. It sets Marx's account of alienation and its overcoming in the context of the Hegelian philosophy from which it derives, and discusses it in relation to contemporary debates and controversies. It challenges recent accounts of Marx's theory, and shows that …Read more
    What does Marx mean by 'alienation'? What role does the concept play in his critique of capitalism and his vision of a future society? Marx and Alienation deals in depth with some of the most important philosophical assumptions of Marx's work. It sets Marx's account of alienation and its overcoming in the context of the Hegelian philosophy from which it derives, and discusses it in relation to contemporary debates and controversies. It challenges recent accounts of Marx's theory, and shows that knowledge of Hegel's philosophy is essential for an understanding of central themes in Marx's philosophy. Marx and Alienation explains and discusses Marx's ideas in an original and accessible fashion and makes a major contribution to Marxist philosophy.
  •  3
    Review of David Leopold, The Young Karl Marx and Douglas Moggach, The Philosophy and Politics of Bruno Bauer
  • Hegel, Marx and Dialectic: A Debate
    with Richard J. Norman
  • Hegel, Marx and Dialectic: A Debate
    with Richard J. Norman
  •  2
    Marxist Philosophy in Britain: An Overview
  •  1
    Hegel and Marx's theory of Creative activity and alienation
  •  1
    Religion and Politics in the Modern World
  •  1
    Review of Iseult Honohan, Civic Republicanism
  • Adriaan T. Peperzak, Modern Freedom: Hegel's Legal, Moral, and Political Philosophy
  •  1
    Reviews: The Collapse of the Fact/Value Dichotomy and Other Essays
  • Review of Alasdair MacIntyre, Dependent rational animals: Why human beings need the virtues and Stuart Hampshire, Justice is Conflict
  • Review of G.A. Cohen, If you're an egalitarian, how come you're so rich?
  •  1
    Review of Ian Hunt, Analytical and Dialectical Marxism
  •  6
    Identity and Community
  •  1
    Plato's Republic: An Introduction
  •  1
    Progress and Social Criticism
  •  3
    Who are my peers? The Research Assessment Exercise in philosophy
  •  2
    Review of Lectures on natural right and political science: The first philosophy of right, Heidelberg 1817-1818, with additions from the lectures of 1818-1819 - Hegel,GWF
  •  1
    Review of Kevin Anderson, Lenin, Hegel, and Western Marxism: A Critical Study
  • Dialectic and Social Criticism
  •  1
    The Value of Community
  • Moral Values and Progress
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