Marx and BBC Poll (fwd)

Beth Goldstein bg28 at is7.nyu.edu
Mon Oct 4 13:15:37 PDT 1999


thought lbo-ers might find this of interest

Beth Goldstein

---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Mon, 4 Oct 1999 08:59:45 -0600 (MDT) From: Martha Gimenez <gimenez at csf.colorado.edu> Reply-To: M-Fem at csf.colorado.edu To: A place for marxist-feminists to hang out <M-Fem at csf.colorado.edu> Subject: Marx and BBC Poll (fwd)

Thought you'd like to know.


:)

Martha

---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Sun, 3 Oct 1999 20:35:56 +0100 From: Kevin Anderson <tk0kxa1 at corn.cso.niu.edu> To: PROGRESSIVE SOCIOLOGISTS NETWORK <psn at csf.colorado.edu> Subject: Marx and BBC Poll

This was forwarded to me by a colleague -- Kevin Anderson

#7 BBC October 1, 1999 Marx the millennium's 'greatest thinker'

Revolutionary writer Karl Marx has topped a BBC News Online poll to find the greatest thinker of the millennium.

The nineteenth century writer won September's vote with a clear margin, pushing Albert Einstein, who had led for most of the month, into second place.

The top 10 included philosophers Immanuel Kant and Rene Descartes as well as twentieth century scientist Stephen Hawking.

The vote was the ninth of BBC News Online's monthly Your Millennium series.

In October you can vote for the greatest explorer of the last thousand years.

Karl Marx is probably the most influential socialist thinker to emerge in the nineteenth century and one of the founders of communism.

Although dictatorships throughout the twentieth century have distorted his original ideas, his work as a philosopher, social scientist, historian and a revolutionary is respected by academics today.

Karl Heinrich Marx (1818-1883) was born into a middle-class family in Germany, but he became a revolutionary in Paris, Brussels and London.

He met the like-minded Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) in France. Together they wrote The Communist Manifesto, which outlined the theory of the class struggle. Marx was exiled from Paris and Brussels for his revolutionary activities and settled in London where he lived until his death.

Amongst Marx's other influential works are the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts, which remained unpublished until the 1930s, and the monumental

work Das Kapital.

BBC News Online readers from across the world took part in the millennium poll.

Dag Thoresen from Norway, said: "Karl Marx has inspired thousands of liberation struggles. He was the father of modern political thinking."

And Jyotsna Kapur from the USA said: "Marx analysed best the working of capitalism. Given that that is the system that characterises the world at the end of the twentieth century his work is as relevant to understanding the world we live in as it was for understanding the nineteenth century."



More information about the lbo-talk mailing list