Karl Marx, most well known as the author of “The Communist Manifesto”, shaped the political and economic theory known as Marxism, which is the most well-known and practiced variation of Communism, around the theories of others. Aspects of his theory came primarily from Hegel and British political economy. Hegel is a writer of French socialist utopia and was the hopeful result from how he saw the current environment (Hegel). This being that up until this point, progress of society and mankind had been driven by class conflict. Marx constructed the idea that all people were in two classes – the oppressor and the oppressed (Marx). Who was in what and their relationship was determined by what the society produced at the time. At the time of the Manifesto’s writing, the two classes of people were the Bourgeoisie and the proletariat (Marx). Eventually, there will be a communist revolution. Once the worker take power, the oppressed then become the oppressors and this event is inevitable. …show more content…
For example, according to Socrates via Kreeft in “Socrates Meets Marx”, a lie can still be successful if enough people think the lie is what is really true (Kreeft). We may not know the truth or what exists, but we are still human. This idea then was leading Socrates to theoretically sell Marx out since his ideas were based on religion, even though Marx is not religious. This then showed and proved that Marx was basing his teachings off of something that he himself did not believe in, therefore showing people that he was liar. This theoretical Socrates was also able to prove that his ideas were not scientific