This book consists of three movements. In the first movement, the Spinoza-Marx relationship is drawn by describing the affinities between the definition of "common concept" in Spinoza and the definition of "value" in Marx. The sec ...
This book consists of three movements. In the first movement, the Spinoza-Marx relationship is drawn by describing the affinities between the definition of "common concept" in Spinoza and the definition of "value" in Marx. The second movement highlights Marx's creative reading of Spinoza and his loyalty to him in the 1841 manuscript. The third movement explains and expands the theme of poverty-creating power through a detailed comparison of Spinoza's and Marx's writings, as well as their most recent interpretations. Finally, this book attempts to move from Spinoza's "ethics" to ethics about us, about our understanding and action. The world that Spinoza opens to us forms the background and foundation of this small book. Margherita Pascucci studied PhD in Comparative Literature at the City University of New York in the United States, her doctoral dissertation is called "Capital and the Imaginary, a Study of the Commodity as a Poetic Object". He also holds a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Frankfurt, Germany.
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