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Please tell me if your sure that's the answer or not.

Karl Marx and Vladimir I. Lein are the idealists behind the system
called?
a.Feudalism
b. Laissez-faire communism
c. socialism
d. market economy
e. b and c only

2007-02-14 11:34:27 · 5 answers · asked by yummycrummy07 1 in Education & Reference Homework Help

5 answers

I vote for E or both communish and socialism. Karl Marx and Vladimir Ilich Lenin had very specific views on the bourgeois society of the 19th and 20th centuries. Both agreed that the upper ruling class dominated the capitalist society, and that this society was against the lower classes. Marx and Lenin believed that private ownership was the cause of all social ills, and that the way to remedy these ills was to establish a communist state. They saw the abolition of the existing class structure and society as necessary. Marx and Lenin wanted to create an economically advanced society with "the capacity to provide all its members with the means to live diverse and fulfilling lives."[

2007-02-14 11:48:21 · answer #1 · answered by Bud B 7 · 0 0

B ( Laissez-faire communism)
and
C. ( Socialism )

Marx saw capitalism as an unjust, exploitative social order that must be overthrown. Marx rejected the acquisitive, individualistic and exploitative aspects of classical economic theory and formulated a new theory of collectivism, which included working class interests. Marxism is a comprehensive system of thought that includes theories on philosophy, history, economics and politics and Marx’s own claim was that it was necessary, through the study of political economy, to discover the laws of social development and thus acquire a theoretical weapon to make political action more potent.

The modern socialist movement had its origin largely in the working class movement of the late-19th century. In this period, the term "socialism" was first used in connection with European social critics who condemned capitalism and private property. For Karl Marx, who helped establish and define the modern socialist movement, socialism implied the abolition of money, markets, capital, and labor as a commodity.

Both Marx and Engels consistently criticized the ideology and program of their contemporary proponents of what is still called socialism. Marx's famous Critique of the Gotha Program was a landmark in their campaign to replace socialist programs with communist ones. Nevertheless, all of the major socialist and communist leaders since Marx and Engels, including Lenin, were unable to break free of the socialist ideas that the two founders of communism fought against so hard. Now is the time to discard what is commonly called socialism, since history has demonstrated this ideology and this social order to be a failure. And in discarding the familiar but failed socialism, it will be necessary to discard most of Lenin and to reclaim most of Marx and Engels.

2007-02-14 19:49:37 · answer #2 · answered by Kate 6 · 0 0

Well, Karl Marx promoted socialism, so I am pretty sure the answer is c or e. See what the Vladimir guy is up to. If he goes for socialism too, then the answer is c. If he promoted Laisse-faire communism, then the answer is e.

2007-02-14 19:40:01 · answer #3 · answered by Kohaku 2 · 0 0

c. pretty darn sure

2007-02-14 19:37:29 · answer #4 · answered by mstone375 1 · 0 0

C

2007-02-14 19:38:14 · answer #5 · answered by Twisty 2 · 0 0

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