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  1. Karl Marx (38076 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Kmarx.jpg|frame|right|Karl Marx]]
    2: ...[[International Workingmen's Association]]. While Marx addressed a wide range of issues, he is most famo...
    6: [[Image:German_Trier_KMax_ExHouse.jpg|thumb|Karl Marx's former home; now a museum. Trier, Germany]]
    7: ...rx family was very [[liberalism|liberal]] and the Marx household hosted many visiting intellectuals and ...
    10: Marx received good marks in ''[[gymnasium (school)|gym...

Page text matches

  1. Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
    7: place_of_birth=[[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]] |
    9: place_of_death=[[New York City]], [[New York]]
    22: ...]] to [[Universal Studios]]. Rand then wrote the play, ''[[The Night of January 16th]]'' in [[1934]] ...
    28: ...tlas Shrugged]]'' is often seen as Rand's most complete statement of Objectivist philosophy in any of ...
    31: ...]], all of which she believed helped foster a crippling culture of resentment towards individual human...
  2. Lucille Ball (12427 bytes)
    7: ...many small movie roles in the 1930s as a contract player for [[RKO]]. She switched to [[MGM]] (after l...
    11: ...pressed with the pilot episode produced by the couple's [[Desilu]] production company, so the Arnazes ...
    24: ... comedy in front of a live audience demanded discipline, technique, and close choreography. Among oth...
    28: ...sode of ''[[The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour]]'', the couple [[divorce]]d. One of television's greatest marri...
    32: ...t in production. For instance, she apparently completely misunderstood the premise of one of the comp...
  3. Proletariat (3268 bytes)
    1: ...nitially used in a derogatory sense, until [[Karl Marx]] used it as a positive term to identify what he ...
    3: == The Proletariat in Marxist theory ==
    5: ...ose who receive salaries as the ''salariat''. For Marx, however, wage labor may involve getting a [[sala...
    7: ...wner class) as inherently hostile, since (for example) factory workers automatically wish wages to be ...
    9: ...the [[lumpenproletariat]], who are not in legal employment. [[Socialist]] political parties have often...
  4. Personal life (2762 bytes)
    2: ... There are service industries designed to help people improve their personal lives via [[counselling]]...
    6: ...A common phrase demonstrating this is "Work hard, play hard".
    10: ...ands: their "[[intellectual]] lives", their "[[employment|work]]ing lives", their "[[family]] lives" ...
    12: ...s or [[team]]s - on the sportsfield or in the workplace.
  5. Germany (46412 bytes)
    73: ...to draw up a constitution for the new Germany, completed in [[1849]]. However, the Prussian king [[Fre...
    93: ...ncentration camp]]s were set up for groups and people perceived as threats. Open persecution of [[Jew]...
    97: ... million more [[Roma (people)|Roma]], [[Slavic people|Slavs]], [[homosexual]]s, [[communist]]s, [[Jeho...
    101: ...ern forces [[Berlin Airlift|airlifted food and supplies]].
    103: ...t Germany benefitted from the American [[Marshall Plan]] for the reconstruction of Europe after the wa...
  6. History of science (41710 bytes)
    4: ...ries are known as ''pre-scientific''. Still, many place ancient [[natural philosophy]] clearly within ...
    15: ...ose in the social sciences or humanities (for example, the "[[Science wars]]").
    23: ...he [[habit]]s and [[Abstraction|attributes]] of [[plant]]s and [[animal]]s in the world around him. He...
    27: ...ment of]] [[agriculture]], which allowed for a surplus of food, it became possible for early [[Civiliz...
    29: ...ture of the planets and stars, many theoretical explanations were proposed.
  7. Government (12596 bytes)
    1: ..., whether over an area of land, a set group of people, or an association.
    13: ...m of government|forms of government]] have been implemented. A government in a developed state is like...
    24: ... lack the authority to declare war or carry out diplomatic negotiations).
    47: ...[[Ochlocracy]] - [[Oligarchy]] - [[Panarchy]] - [[Plutocracy]] - [[Technocracy]] - [[Theocracy]] -[[ty...
    53: *[[Plato]] - [[Aristotle]] - [[Thucydides]] - [[Cicero]...
  8. Civilization (29205 bytes)
    5: ... this sense, civilization is an exclusive term, applied to some human groups and not others.
    7: ...society, whether complex and city-dwelling, or simple and tribal. This definition is often perceived a...
    11: ... or crude behavior. In this sense, civilization implies sophistication and refinement.
    15: ...on is a complex society, as distinguished from simpler societies. Everyone lives in a society and a c...
    17: ...rrigation]]. This enables farmers to produce a surplus of food that will not be needed for their own s...
  9. Politics (7193 bytes)
    2: ... decisions for groups. Although it is generally applied to [[government]]s, politics is also observed ...
    4: ...tical behavior and examines the acquisition and application of power, i.e. the ability to impose one's...
    14: ...bes the transformation of human society that took place around [[6th millennium BCE|6000 BCE]] as an u...
    18: ...t was tribal organization. Rule by elders was supplanted by monarchy, and a system of [[Feudalism]] a...
    23: ...r between the [[patrician]] [[aristocracy]] and [[plebian]] general [[citizens]]. It also contained t...
  10. Anthropology (23191 bytes)
    1: ...with anthropological methods now being commonly applied in single society/group studies.
    14: ...nderstanding how it fits into other academic disciplines.
    16: ... the culture concept which is central to the discipline.
    18: ...s increasingly atomized and dispersed. As [[Karl Marx]] and [[Friedrich Engels]] observed in the [[1840...
    20: ...ion the products of distant lands and climes. In place of the old local and national seclusion and se...
  11. Economics (30960 bytes)
    1: ...social sciences)|positive]] when it attempts to explain the consequences of different choices given a ...
    3: ...omics may in principle be (and increasingly is) applied to any problem that involves choice under scar...
    5: Some economists use [[price]] and [[supply and demand]] to create [[Model (economics)|econo...
    15: ...national income and output|national income]], [[employment]] and [[inflation]]. Note that [[general eq...
    19: ...nto the macro-micro categorization. These subdisciplines include: [[international economics]], [[labou...
  12. Religion (72319 bytes)
    1: ...defined it as the sum total of answers given to explain humankind's relationship with the universe. I...
    2: ...anization" – that is, an organization of people that supports the exercise of some religion, oft...
    19: ...rience with the Divine. This narrower definition places "religion" in contradistinction with [[ration...
    21: ...us, who see metaphysical claims as necessary to explain natural phenomena at a fundamental level.
    23: ...or, institutionalized religions. This definition places "religion" in contradistinction to "spiritual...
  13. Thomas More (15893 bytes)
    2: ...[[1516]]. He is chiefly remembered for his principled refusal to accept King [[Henry VIII of England|...
    7: ... father's great displeasure, More seriously contemplated abandoning his legal career in order to becom...
    12: ...nfluential in the government, welcoming foreign diplomats, drafting official documents, and serving as...
    19: ... (Indeed, the title of Erasmus's book is partly a play on More's name, the word ''folly'' being ''mori...
    23: ...d [[William Shakespeare]]'s play ''[[Richard III (play)|Richard III]]''. Both More's and Shakespeare'...
  14. Causes of the French Revolution (11170 bytes)
    2: ...itain]] and the [[Netherlands]] did the common people have more freedom and less chance of arbitrary p...
    5: ...he relatively greater prerogatives of the townspeople.
    7: ...e [[American Revolution]] showed them that it was plausible that Enlightenment ideals about government...
    9: ...philistinism]]." [http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/12/15.htm]
    15: ...the revolution, France was deeply indebted, so deeply as to be effectively bankrupt. Extravagant expen...
  15. Agnosticism (14359 bytes)
    34: ...ting [[Charles Kingsley]] and [[Asa Gray]] as examples, and for himself, he had "never been an Atheist...
    36: ...uld the world be? Surely "his own illustrious example" encouraged freethinkers to proclaim truth "abro...
    42: ...'Am I An Atheist Or An Agnostic?'' (subtitled ''A Plea For Tolerance In The Face Of New Dogmas''), he ...
    46: ...le. In ''[[Language, Truth and Logic]]'' Ayer explicitly rejects agnosticism on the grounds that an ...
    51: ...phical position from terminological vagaries. Examples come from attempts to associate agnosticism wit...
  16. Philosophy (30964 bytes)
    3: '''Philosophy''' can mean the academic exploration of various questions raised by philosopher...
    27: ...ons behind a belief, or about methods by which people reason.
    29: ...te the relative merits of these methods. For example, they may ask whether philosophical "solutions" ...
    39: ...e (as in "philosophy of life") or the basic principles behind, or method of achieving, something (as i...
    41: ...ualized detachment. This usage arose from the example of [[Socrates]], who calmly discussed the nature...
  17. March 22 (9294 bytes)
    6: *[[1621]] - The [[Pilgrims]] of [[Plymouth Colony]] sign a peace treaty with [[Massaso...
    14: *[[1894]] - The first playoff game for the [[Stanley Cup]] starts.
    15: *[[1895]] - First display (a private screening) of [[motion pictures]] by...
    24: *[[1963]] [[Please Please Me]] first [[Beatles]] [[album]] released in ...
    29: ...n the school. The charges are later dropped as completely unfounded.
  18. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (15483 bytes)
    1: ... well as the [[historical materialism]] of [[Karl Marx]].
    9: ...ons inherent in the preceding movement''. For example, the French Revolution for Hegel constitutes the...
    13: ...nciple of it and the other form is its specific application to the actual events in history. He contin...
    19: ...vidual case. To do so would involve comparing examples of events of history with their archetypal form...
    21: ...e called "deliberately confusing") his work is perplexing for modern audiences because he had an organ...
  19. List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
    391: *[[Frederick Copleston]], (1907-1994)
    896: *[[David Kaplan (philosopher)|David Kaplan]], (born 1933){{fn|O}}
    897: *[[Mordecai Kaplan]], (1881-1983){{fn|R}}
    907: *[[Johannes Kepler]], (1571-1630){{fn|C}}{{fn|R}}
    973: *[[Pierre-Simon Laplace]], (1749-1827){{fn|C}}{{fn|O}}
  20. History of Christianity (35391 bytes)
    8: ... to an early rift between Christianity and the temple priesthood, and later rabbinic Judaism.
    12: ...music]] in hymns and prayer, and [[ascetic]] disciplines such as [[fasting]] and [[alms|almsgiving]]. ...
    40: *[[Polycarp]], bishop of Smyrna and disciple of [[John the Evangelist]]
    64: ...ced by [[Nestorius]], a [[patriarch of Constantinople]])
    73: ...adherents. This was observed quite early, for example, the second century [[Celsus]] (whose words are ...

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