Karl Marx and Communism

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Karl Marx and Communism

Were Karl Marx ideas on communism moral? It is quite obvious that some societies do or did believe that communism was a good way of life. Even though there are many drawbacks to communism there are still some advantages. Karl Marx is a man of intrigue he only did what he wanted to and not what others wanted him to do. Upon completion of my research I feel that Marx was a very bright man. His ideas may not be all together but a man that can introduce communism to the world and actually get people to follow Marx ideas is powerful to me. In my research paper I would like to tell you a little about the life and times of Karl Marx, and how is ideas effect the economy today.

Karl Marx was born at 2 am on May 5, 1818. Marx was one of eight children he had two brothers and five sisters. His mother Henriette Prockmon called Karl, Gluckskind meaning child of fortune. She loved Karl and his sibling all the same and felt fortunate to have children. But Karl's father thought that Marx was "possessed by a demon" (Padover 22) it was probably since Karl always never did what his father expected of him. Karl's siblings even saw him as a tyrant he would use his siblings as a horse and ridicule them all for being slow intellectually since he was gifted at learning compared to them. Marx's childhood was not all peachy he had two brothers and one sister die of tuberculosis, which ran in the family and kept Marx out of military service (Padover 38). Karl was raised as a Jewish man but in 1824 a Prussian government decree conformed a long-

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standing practice that Non-Christians could not attend schools. So in August 1824 he was baptized in the Trier Evangelical church. Therefore he had his road to college...

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... a name that will be around for many more years as the man behind communism.

Bibliography:

Karl Marx: The Man Behind Communism 7

References

Appelbaum, Richard P. Karl Marx. Vol 7

Newbury Park: Sage, 1988. 7 vols.

Cameron, Kenneth Neill. Marxism: The Science of Society an Introduction.

Massachusetts: Bergin & Garvey, 1985.

Carver, Terrell. Marx & Engles. Bloomington: Indiana University press,

1983.

Linklater, Andrew. Beyond Realism and Marxism. St. Martin's Press:

New York, 1990.

Marx, Karl. Wage -- Labor and Capital. http://csf.colorado.edu/psn/marx/Archive/1849-

WLC/wlc9.txt, 11 November 98.

Padover, Saul K. Karl Marx: an intimate Biography. Abridged ed.

Canada: Meridian, 1980.

Rigby, S.H. Engles and the Formation of Marxism. New York:

Manchester, 1992.

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