Marx

//mɑɹks//

"Marx" in a Sentence (14 examples)

Karl Marx says, "The history of all hitherto existing societies is the history of class struggles."

Karl Marx said: "Workers of the world, unite!"

Let's begin with capitalism, a word that has gone largely out of fashion. The approved reference now is to the market system. This shift minimizes — indeed, deletes — the role of wealth in the economic and social system. And it sheds the adverse connotation going back to Marx. Instead of the owners of capital or their attendants in control, we have the admirably impersonal role of market forces. It would be hard to think of a change in terminology more in the interest of those to whom money accords power.

Karl Marx came to Kabylia.

Karl Marx, a German philosopher and economist, said: Religion is the opium of the people.

Karl Marx said: Religious suffering is, at one and the same time, the expression of real suffering and a protest against real suffering.

Karl Marx was an atheist who was baptised and raised a Christian, but because of the racial aspect of antisemitism, he continues to be central to many antisemitic conspiracy theories.

Karl Marx killed my dad.

Karl Marx was born and raised Christian, never connecting to Judaism at any point in his entire life.

Marx is a German philosopher and economist.

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The family tree boasts an astonishing array of celebrated historical figures from the prophet Isaiah to Sir Isaiah Berlin, from Felix Mendelssohn to Karl Marx and Moses Montefiore. The list also includes Yehudi Menuhin, Helena Rubinstein, the Rothschilds and even Rosenstein himself.

This is one of the developments Karl Marx failed to predict. Had he foreseen it he might have expired in guffaws, rolling in the aisle of the British Museum Library amid the notes for Das Kapital, that bearded Santa Claus of the revolution who slipped the unwanted gift of communism down the world's chimneys.

He discovered that far from focusing on the writings of Marx and Engels for their reading, the Bolsheviks and their children preferred expressly anti-revolutionary works by western authors such as Dickens, Defoe, Shakespeare, Hugo, Balzac, Flaubert, Goethe, Kipling and Wilde.

In his experience, Christ had led him to Marx, and the Gospels, with their message of social justice, had led him to communism.

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