Library:Fundamental principles of philosophy/Control questions: Difference between revisions
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==== Matter is prior to consciousness ==== | ==== Matter is prior to consciousness ==== | ||
''Return: [[Library:Fundamental principles of philosophy#Matter is prior to consciousness|Matter is prior to consciousness]]'' | ''Return: [[Library:Fundamental principles of philosophy#Matter is prior to consciousness|Matter is prior to consciousness]]'' | ||
# On whom do you think the arguments of subjective idealism can have the most influence? Why do you think so? | |||
# What is meant by the idea of the objectivity of the laws of nature and society? Give examples. | |||
# What does the thesis that consciousness is a reflection of reality mean? | |||
# What is the role of work in the formation of human consciousness? | |||
# Show that consciousness is a product of social development. | |||
# Why do the abstract ideas of science reflect reality with maximum accuracy? | |||
# Show the link between materialism and socialism. | |||
==== The world is knowable ==== | ==== The world is knowable ==== | ||
''Return: [[Library:Fundamental principles of philosophy#The world is knowable|The world is knowable]]'' | ''Return: [[Library:Fundamental principles of philosophy#The world is knowable|The world is knowable]]'' |
Revision as of 18:47, 4 November 2020
Return: Fundamental principles of philosophy.
Study of the marxist dialectical method
Traits of dialectics
Everything is connected (law of reciprocal action and universal connection)
Return: Everything is connected (law of reciprocal action and universal connection)
- Look for examples of reciprocal action.
- Why is a phenomenon (natural or social) unintelligible when isolated from its conditions?
- Show on a specific example how the bourgeoisie, in order to deceive the workers, separates events from their historical conditions.
Everything is changing (law of universal change and of the continuous development)
Return: Everything is changing (law of universal change and of the continuous development)
- How does dialectics conceive of change? Take examples from around you.
- Why does the bourgeoisie have an interest in hiding the fact that all reality is changing?
- Show, by means of one or two examples, the services that knowledge of the second trait dialectics can render to the worker activist.
Qualitative change
Return: Qualitative change
- What is qualitative change?
- Using specific examples, show that there is a necessary link between quantitative change (increase or decrease) and qualitative change.
- How does the third trait of dialectics enable the labour activist to work better on the single front?
The struggle of opposites (i)
Return: The struggle of opposites (i)
- Why is the struggle of opposites the driving force behind all change?
- Briefly recall the characters of the contradiction.
- Use new examples to illustrate points "The contradiction is internal", "The contradiction is innovative", "Unity_of_opposites".
- In what way does the internal character of the contradiction allow us to understand that the revolution "cannot be exported"?
The struggle of opposites (ii)
Return: The struggle of opposites (ii)
- Why do the dividers in the labor movement deny the existence of the struggle of opposites?
- Show on a specific example that not every contradiction is antagonism.
- How is self-criticism a struggle of opposites?
The struggle of opposites (iii)
Return: The struggle of opposites (iii)
- What is the specificity of the contradiction? Illustrate with one or two examples.
- Show how such a great artist, such a great writer knows how to realize in his work the unity of the specific and the universal.
- Show by a specific example how a secondary contradiction becomes the main contradiction.
- Show, by a specific example, how the secondary aspect of a contradiction becomes the main aspect.
- In what way is the struggle of opposites, according to Lenin's expression, the "nucleus of dialectics"?
- Why does socialism degenerate if it breaks with the dialectical method?
Study of marxist philosophical materialism
What is the materialist conception of the world?
Return: What is the materialist conception of the world?
- How to respond to the slander of bourgeois ideologues against "materialism"?
- What is the fundamental problem of philosophy?
- Explain and dispel the confusion maintained by the idealists about the word "idealism".
- What are the three fundamental features of marxist philosophical materialism?
Traits of marxist materialism
The materiality of the world
Return: The materiality of the world
- What are the most widespread forms of objective idealism today?
- Summarize the Marxist thesis of the materiality of the world.
- What was the inadequacy of mechanistic materialism?
- What were the other narrownesses of pre-Marxist materialism?
- What distinction do you make between the inevitability of a phenomenon and the idea of "fatality"?
- How does Marxism approach the question of religion?
- What attitude does a consistent materialist take to the events of social life and also those of his personal life?
Matter is prior to consciousness
Return: Matter is prior to consciousness
- On whom do you think the arguments of subjective idealism can have the most influence? Why do you think so?
- What is meant by the idea of the objectivity of the laws of nature and society? Give examples.
- What does the thesis that consciousness is a reflection of reality mean?
- What is the role of work in the formation of human consciousness?
- Show that consciousness is a product of social development.
- Why do the abstract ideas of science reflect reality with maximum accuracy?
- Show the link between materialism and socialism.
The world is knowable
Return: The world is knowable
Dialectical materialism and the spiritual life of society
The spiritual life of the society is a reflection of its material life
Return: The spiritual life of the society is a reflection of its material life
The role and importance of ideas in social life
Return: The role and importance of ideas in social life
The formation, importance and role of scientific socialism
Return: The formation, importance and role of scientific socialism
Historical materialism
Production: productive forces and production relationships
Return: Production: productive forces and production relationships
The law of necessary correspondence between the relations of production and the character of the productive forces
The class struggle before capitalism
Return: The class struggle before capitalism
The contradictions of capitalist society
Return: The contradictions of capitalist society
The superstructure
Return: The superstructure
Socialism
Return: Socialism
From socialism to communism
Return: From socialism to communism
The materialist theory of state and nation
The state
Return: The state
The nation (i)
Return: The nation (i)
The nation (ii)
Return: The nation (ii)