Major Figures: Karl Marx

Undergraduate section — PHIL 4326

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Professor
Matthew J. Brown
Email:
Phone:
972-883-2536
Office Location and Hours:
JO 5.522 – TBD
Appointments:
https://doodle.com/mm/matthewjbrown/book

This class is concurrent with PHIL 6391: Major Figures.

Course Description

This seminar focuses on the philosophy and thought of Karl Marx, including his political, economic, epistemological, and ethical views. After a brief look at his early work, this seminar will focus on analyzing the arguments of his masterwork, Capital, in detail.

Student Learning Objectives

  1. Student will demonstrate knowledge of the significance of Karl Marx in the history of philosophy, economics, and political thought through class discussion and writing assignments.
  2. Through engaging with the works of Karl Marx, students will articulate and employ the methodologies of philosophical enquiry and textual engagement in class discussion and writing assignments.
  3. Student will engage with central philosophical concepts and ideas concerning value, justice, alienation, authenticity through discussion and make use of those concepts and ideas in their written work.
  4. Students will demonstrate philosophical argumentation and clear communication through writing assignments.

Required Textbooks

Some additional readings will be distributed as PDFs.

These sources will help you better understand the structures and arguments of Marx’s texts, especially Capital.

Suggested Primary Sources

  • Karl Marx, Grundrisse – Marx’s notebooks of 1857-58, consisting of a length unfinished manuscript on “Fundamentals of a Critique of Political Economy.” Valuable in tracing the development of Marx’s thinking in Capital and on clarifying certain aspects of his theories.
  • Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party – Marx’s most widely read and programmatic work.
  • Karl Marx, Theories of Surplus Value – A draft of what would have been Volume IV of Capital (or vols. IV, V, and VI, given that it is typically published in 3 volumes itself). It is primarily a critical history of the economic theories of Marx’s time.

Suggested Secondary Sources

  • David Harvey, A Companion to Marx’s Capital: The Complete Edition – Another valuable source of aid in grasping the core ideas and arguments of Marx’s Capital.
  • Sidney Hook, Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx: A Revolutionary Interpretation – An influential early interpretation of Marx by an American philosopher and student of John Dewey.
  • William Clare Roberts, Marx’s Inferno: The Political Theory of Capital – Situates Marx’s work in the context of political theory, the worker’s movement, and the literary structure of Dante’s Inferno.
  • Joan Robinson, An Essay on Marxist Economics – A reading of Marx’s theories by a leading post-Keynesian economist.
  • Tom Rockmore, Marx’s Dream: From Capitalism to Communism – Situates Marx in the philosophical tradition primarily as a moral philosopher.
  • Helena Sheehan, Marxism and the Philosophy of Science: A Critical History – Traces the influence of Marx on the history of the philosophy of science.
  • Jonathan Wolff, Why Read Marx Today?
  • G.A. Cohen, If You’re an Egalitarian, How Come You’re So Rich? – Explores the connections between Marxism and Rawlsian liberalism.

Video Series on Marx

Class Schedule by Week

  1. Introduction
  2. The Early Marx on Alienation
    • Read: Selections from Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (WYM pp. 283-314)
    • Secondary Reading: Wood, Part I
  3. Early Marx on Method, Ideology, and Historical Materialism
    • Read: “Theses on Feuerbach”, selections from The German Ideology and The Poverty of Philosophy (WYM 400-2, 403-429, 474-495)
    • Secondary Reading: Wood, Part II; Sweezy, Ch 1 (See also: Wood, Parts 3-4 & Ch 13)
  4. The Theory of Value in Classical Political Economy
  5. Marx’s Theory of Value
    • Read: Capital vol. I, part I
    • Secondary Reading: Wolff, UM 4.1; Sweezy Ch. 2; Wood, Ch 15. (See also, Sweezy Ch. 3)
  6. Irony and Mystification: Literary and Methodological Issues
  7. The Concept of Capital
    • Read: Capital vol. I, part II & Chs. 7-8; vol. III, Ch. 24
    • Secondary Reading: Sweezy pp. 56-66
  8. Exploitation and Surplus Value
    • Read: Capital vol. I, Chs. 9-11; vol. III, Ch 48
    • Secondary Reading: Sweezy, pp. 67-71; Wolff, UM 4.2-5.1; Wood, Ch 16
  9. Technical Progress
  10. Economic and Social Reproduction
    • Read: Capital, vol I, Chs 23-24; vol. II, Chs. 18-20
    • Secondary Reading: Sweezy, pp. 75-79; Wolff, UM Ch. 1
  11. Prices and Profits
    • Read: Capital, vol III, parts I-II
    • Secondary Reading: Sweezy, pp. 109-130; Wolff, UM 5.2 – Ch. 6 & Envoi
  12. The Accumulation of Capital
    • Read: Capital, vol I, Ch 25; vol. II, Chs. 21
    • Secondary Reading: Sweezy, pp. 79-95
  13. Crises of Capitalism
    • Read: Capital, vol III, part III
    • Secondary Reading: Sweezy, pp. 96-108 & Part III
  14. Fall Break
  15. Original Accumulation
  16. Wrap-up and Marx’s Influence

Assignments and Grading

  1. Participation (15%) – Participate in class discussion and peer activities regularly and well, in such a way that demonstrates you are well prepared.
  2. Discussion Questions (25%) – Each week students will submit 1-2 substantive, interpretive or evaluative questions about the reading.
  3. Term paper (60%) – 2,500-4,000 word paper engaging philosophically with some aspect of Marx’s thought covered in the course. The paper will have multiple preparatory stages such as topic proposal and outline draft.

Course and Instructor Policies

Class Meeting expectations

You are expected to have read the assignments before class, and it would be to your benefit to also read them again after class. You are expected to have the readings for each day’s class open to refer to during discussion. You are expected to listen respectfully to the professor and your fellow students, and participate in class discussions and activities.

Late Work, Make-Up, and Completion

It is important to stay on track with the class schedule, or else you will fall behind and not be able to complete the work to a satisfactory standard. Extensions will be given upon request, within reason, as long as you ask before the deadline.

Cheating and Plagiarism

Don’t do it! If you incorporate any work that is not your own into any project that you do, and you do not cite the source properly, this counts as plagiarism. This includes someone doing the work for you, taking work done by another student, verbatim copying of published sources, paraphrasing published work without citation, and paraphrasing in an inappropriate way even with citation. Re-using work created for another course also counts as plagiarism in most contexts. Unless group work is explicitly permitted or required, it is expected that all of the work that you turn in is original and your own, and that any sources that you make use of are correctly cited. If you are caught cheating or plagiarizing, it is absolutely mandatory for me to turn you in to the Dean of Students Office of Community Standards and Conduct.

University Policies

The information contained in the following link constitutes the University’s policies and procedures segment of the course syllabus: http://go.utdallas.edu/syllabus-policies