
Capital
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Of central importance then and later was his book Das Kapital, or, as it is known to English readers, simply Capital. Volume One of Capital was published in Paris in 1867 and is available as a separate Wordsworth eBook. This was the only volume published during Marx's lifetime and the only to have come directly from his pen. Volume Two, which is contained in this eBook, was published in 1884, and was based on notes Marx left, but written by his friend and collaborator, Friedrich Engels (1820-1895).
Readers from the nineteenth century to the present have been captivated by the unmistakable power and urgency of this classic of world literature. Marx's critique of the capitalist system is rife with big themes: his theory of 'surplus value', his discussion of the exploitation of the working class, and his forecast of class conflict on a grand scale. Marx wrote with purpose. As he famously put it, 'Philosophers have previously tried to explain the world, our task is to change it.'
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Introduction
- Further Reading
- Typesetter's note
- Capital Volume 2
- Preface
- Translator's Note
- Part 1: The Metamorphoses of Capital and Their Cycles
- Chapter 1: The Circulation of Money-Capital
- Section 1. First Stage. M-C. [2]
- Section 2. Second Stage. Functions of Productive Capital.
- Section 3. Third Stage. C'-M'.
- Section 4. The Rotation as a Whole.
- Chapter 2: The Rotation of Productive Capital
- Section 1. Simple Reproduction.
- Section 2. Accumulation and Reproduction on an Enlarged Scale.
- Section 3. Accumulation of Money.
- Section 4. Reserve Funds.
- Chapter 3: The Circulation of Commodity-Capital
- Chapter 4: The Three Diagrams of the Process of Circulation
- Chapter 5: The Time of Circulation [1]
- Chapter 6: The Expenses of Circulation
- Section 1. Genuine Expenses of Circulation.
- Section 2. Expenses of Storage.
- Section 3. Expenses of Transportation.
- Part 2: The Turn-Over of Capital
- Chapter 7: The Period and Number of Turn-Overs
- Chapter 8: Fixed Capital and Circulating Capital
- Section 1. Distinctions of Form.
- Section 2. Composition, Reproduction, Repair, and Accumulation of Fixed Capital.
- Chapter 9: The Total Turn-Over of Advanced Capital. Cycles of Turn-Over.
- Chapter 10: Theories of Fixed and Circulating Capital. The Physiocrats and Adam Smith.
- Chapter 11: Theories of Fixed and Circulating Capital: Ricardo
- Chapter 12: The Working Period
- Chapter 13: The Time of Production
- Chapter 14: The Time of Circulation
- Chapter 15: Influence of the Time of Circulation on the Magnitude of an Advance of Capital
- Section 1. The Working Period Equal to the Period of Circulation.
- Section 2. The Working Period Greater Than the Period of Circulation.
- Section 3. The Working Period Smaller Than the Circulation Period.
- Section 4. Conclusions.
- Section 5. The Effect of a Change of Prices.
- Chapter 16: The Turn-Over of the Variable Capital
- Section 1. The Annual Rate of Surplus-Value.
- Section 2. The Turn-Over of the Individual Variable Capital.
- Section 3. The Turn-Over of the Variable Capital, Considered from the Point of View of Society.
- Chapter 17: The Circulation of Surplus-Value
- Section 1. Simple Reproduction.
- Section 2. Accumulation and Reproduction on an Enlarged Scale.
- Part 3: The Reproduction and Circulation of the Aggregate Social Capital
- Chapter 18: Introduction [1]
- Section 1. The Object of the Analysis.
- Section 2. The Role of Money-Capital.
- Chapter 19: Former Discussions of the Subject [1]
- Section 1. The Physiocrats.
- Section 2. Adam Smith.
- Section 3. The Economists after Smith. [6]
- Chapter 20: Simple Reproduction
- Section 1. The Formulation of the Question.
- Section 2. The Two Departments of Social Production. [3]
- Section 3. The Transactions between the Two Departments. [4]
- Section 4. Transactions within Department II. Necessities of Life and Articles of Luxury.
- Section 5. The Promotion of the Transactions by the Circulation of Money.
- Section 6. The Constant Capital of Department I. [7]
- Section 7. Variable Capital and Surplus-Value in Both Departments.
- Section 8. The Constant Capital in Both Departments.
- Section 9. A Retrospect on Adam Smith, Storch, and Ramsay.
- Section 10. Capital and Revenue: Variable Capital and Wages. [8]
- Section 11. Reproduction of the Fixed Capital.
- Section 12. The Reproduction of the Money Supply.
- Section 13. Destutt de Tracy's Theory of Reproduction.
- Chapter 21: Accumulation and Reproduction on an Enlarged Scale [1]
- Section 1. Accumulation in Department I.
- Section 2. Accumulation in Department II.
- Section 3. Diagrammatic Presentation of Accumulation.
- Section 4. Concluding Remarks.
- Notes to Volume 2
- Volume 2, Preface
- Volume 2, Part 1, Chapter 1
- Volume 2, Part 1, Chapter 2
- Volume 2, Part 1, Chapter 4
- Volume 2, Part 1, Chapter 5
- Volume 2, Part 1, Chapter 6
- Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 8
- Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 10
- Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 11
- Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 15
- Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 16
- Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 17
- Volume 2, Part 3, Chapter 18
- Volume 2, Part 3, Chapter 19
- Volume 2, Part 3, Chapter 20
- Volume 2, Part 3, Chapter 21
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