Category
page 1Dialectical materialism

Marxism–Leninism
thumb|300px|Soviet poster with the slogan "Raise the banner of Marx, [[Engels, Lenin and Stalin!", 1936. In the 1950s Stalin's official significance to Soviet Marxism-Leninism was reduced with de-Stalinization.]]
dialectical materialism
philosophy derived from the works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
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Anti-Dühring
'''''Herr Eugen Dühring's Revolution in Science (), commonly known as Anti-Dühring''', is a book by Friedrich Engels, published in 1878 and first serialised in the newspaper Vorwärts'' in 1877–1878. The work is a polemical response to the philosophical views of Eugen Dühring, a German philosopher and socialist whose ideas were gaining influence within the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). In countering Dühring, Engels provided a comprehensive and accessible exposition of Marxism as a science. The book is divided into three parts—Philosophy, Political Economy, and Socialism—and became a
Materialism and Empirio-criticism
1909 essay by Lenin
Dialectics of Nature
Book
Ludwig Feuerbach and the End of Classical German Philosophy
1886 book by Friedrich Engels
The Dialectic of Sex
feminist theory book by Shulamith Firestone
socialist mode of production
marxian economy centered around use value, planning and contribution-based distribution
The Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism
Article by Vladimir Lenin written in 1913 commemorating the 30th anniversary of Marx's death.

Maurice Cornforth
British Marxist philosopher (1909–1980)
Mathematical manuscripts of Karl Marx
Karl Marx's attempts to understand the foundations of infinitesimal calculus
Dialectical and Historical Materialism
book by Joseph Stalin
Madilog
The Madilog by Iljas Hussein (the pen name of Tan Malaka), first published in 1943, official first edition 1951, is the magnum opus of Tan Malaka, the Indonesian national hero and is the most influential work in the history of modern Indonesian philosophy. Madilog is an Indonesian acronym that stands for Materialisme Dialektika Logika (literally, Materialism Dialectics Logics). It is a synthesis of Marxist dialectical materialism and Hegelian logic. Madilog was written in Batavia where Malaka was hiding during the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies, disguised as a tailor.
theory of productive forces
variation of historical materialism and Marxism that places primary emphasis on technical advances as the basis for advances and changes in the social structure and culture of a given civilization