The Great Evasion: An Essay on the Contemporary Relevance of Karl Marx and on the Wisdom of Admitting the Heretic Into the Dialogue about America's FutureQuadrangle Books, 1964 - 189 pages |
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Page 92
... production goes much further . It creates a sys- tem that can in many respects — and they are very many , indeed – control itself . A cybernated production line not only changes products automatically , but it can correct its own errors ...
... production goes much further . It creates a sys- tem that can in many respects — and they are very many , indeed – control itself . A cybernated production line not only changes products automatically , but it can correct its own errors ...
Page 95
... production went up 17.4 percent , employment in production jobs went down by 5.8 percent . The rate may even be increasing : a Department of Labor study of two hundred manufacturing plants between 1957 and 1961 revealed a production ...
... production went up 17.4 percent , employment in production jobs went down by 5.8 percent . The rate may even be increasing : a Department of Labor study of two hundred manufacturing plants between 1957 and 1961 revealed a production ...
Page 96
... production increased 27 percent between 1955 and 1962 while production jobs decreased by 3 percent . In the thirteen years after 1947 , textile production held constant while employment dropped about 40 percent . Or , to visu- alize the ...
... production increased 27 percent between 1955 and 1962 while production jobs decreased by 3 percent . In the thirteen years after 1947 , textile production held constant while employment dropped about 40 percent . Or , to visu- alize the ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 11 |
THREE Increasing Misery | 56 |
Economic Misery | 72 |
Copyright | |
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achievement Adam Smith alienation American capitalism argument axioms become Bolivia bourgeois capi capitalist marketplace capitalist system central cold war competitive marketplace concerned confrontation corporation capitalism course created creative crisis crucial Cuba cybernated production defined depression economic effort emancipation entrepreneur established ethical and equitable example existing expansion failure farmers feudal framework Franklin Delano Roosevelt freedom functioning Hoover human ideas income increasing misery industry informal empire inherent involved issue Jacksonian Democracy John Quincy Adams Karl Marx kind labor Latin America leaders limits Marx's analysis ment mercantilists Metropolis million national class nature Negro offers Open Door Policy operating percent political economy possessive individualism principles problems proletarianization proved Marx wrong Puerto Rico reality realize reformers relationship result revolution role sector sense significant social society Soviet sustain talist taxpayer tion true unemployment United wealth WILLIAM APPLEMAN WILLIAMS women world marketplace