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Historical materialism: Difference between revisions

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(This is a direct citation of Stalin. It makes no sense to cite Engels here.)
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'''Historical materialism''' broadly refers to applying the philosophy of materialism to the study of social life.<ref>[[Engels]]: [[Library:Socialism: utopian and scientific|''Socialism: utopian and scientific'']]</ref>
'''Historical materialism''' broadly refers to applying the philosophy of materialism to the study of social life.<ref>[[Stalin]]: [[Library:Dialectical and historical materialism|''Dialectical and historical materialism'']]</ref>


In this way, one is able to understand how material conditions affected societies of the past, how they reacted to them and thus how these societies came to be or ceased to exist; ultimately explaining why the world is how it is today.
In this way, one is able to understand how material conditions affected societies of the past, how they reacted to them and thus how these societies came to be or ceased to exist; ultimately explaining why the world is how it is today.

Revision as of 01:03, 21 November 2020

Historical materialism broadly refers to applying the philosophy of materialism to the study of social life.[1]

In this way, one is able to understand how material conditions affected societies of the past, how they reacted to them and thus how these societies came to be or ceased to exist; ultimately explaining why the world is how it is today.

It is often used alongside dialectical materialism as dialectics are also an inextricable part of historical development.

References

External links

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