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1980 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

General Introduction

Author : David McLellan

Published in: Marx’s Grundrisse

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK

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The subject of our discussion is first of all material production. Individuals producing in society, thus the socially determined production of individuals, naturally constitutes the starting point. The individual and isolated hunter or fisher who forms the starting point with Smith and Ricardo belongs to the insipid illusions of the eighteenth century. They are adventure stories which do not by any means represent, as students of the history of civilisation imagine, a reaction against over-refinement and a return to a misunderstood natural life. They are no more based on such a naturalism than is Rousseau’s contrat social, which makes naturally independent individuals come in contact and have mutual intercourse by contract. They are the fiction and only the aesthetic fiction of the small and great adventure stories. They are, rather, the anticipation of ‘civil society’, which had been in course of development since the sixteenth century and made gigantic strides towards maturity in the eighteenth. In this society of free competition the individual appears free from the bonds of nature, etc., which in former epochs of history made him part of a definite, limited human conglomeration.

Metadata
Title
General Introduction
Author
David McLellan
Copyright Year
1980
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-05221-9_2