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Tables of Contents for Hegel, Marx And The Concept Of Need
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgements
vii
 
List of Figures
ix
 
List of Abbreviations
xi
 
Introduction
1
8
The concept of need
9
14
Human needs and nonhuman animal needs
9
4
Needs and wants
13
1
Needs and ends
14
3
Humans and basic needs
17
2
Conclusion
19
4
Hegel, Marx, dialectic and form
23
22
Hegel and speculative dialectics
24
8
Categories and method in Marx
32
2
Marx's misplaced criticisms
34
6
Conclusion
40
5
Needs in Hegel's System of Ethical Life
45
23
Needs in the first level of ethical life
46
7
Needs in the second level of ethical life
53
3
Ethical life and needs
56
3
Universal government and the system of needs
59
2
Hegel's stages of need
61
7
Needs in Hegel's Philosophy of Right
68
31
Abstract right
69
2
Morality
71
3
Ethical life
74
16
Implications of Hegel's need theory
90
9
Hegel's aesthetic need
99
24
The need for a philosophy of art
100
1
The need to produce and contemplate art
101
4
The aim of art
105
2
Art, nature and spirit
107
2
Beauty or ideal of art
109
2
Symbolic, classical and romantic forms of art
111
2
The individual arts
113
3
Conclusion
116
7
Marx and the need-form
123
20
Natural needs
124
3
Necessary needs
127
1
Natural and necessary needs in the Grundrisse
128
2
Natural and necessary needs in Capital
130
3
Luxury needs
133
1
Social need and true social need
134
3
The need-form and the circuit of needs
137
6
Marx and higher needs
143
22
Human and nonhuman animal need
143
1
Egoistic need
144
1
Self-realisation
145
1
Labour
146
1
Necessity and freedom
147
2
Higher need-forms
149
5
Radical needs
154
5
Conclusion
159
6
Hegel, Marx and the need-form
165
11
Dialectic and form
165
3
Freedom from necessity
168
3
Modern need theory
171
5
Political implications of the need-form
176
17
Soviet communism
177
5
Liberals and communitarians
182
2
Social democracy
184
2
Hegelian-Marxism
186
7
Bibliography
193
10
Index
203