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dc.contributor.advisorMacdonald, Iain
dc.contributor.authorTheurillat-Cloutier, Arnaud
dc.date.accessioned2015-05-25T19:22:18Z
dc.date.availableNO_RESTRICTIONfr
dc.date.available2015-05-25T19:22:18Z
dc.date.issued2015-04-30
dc.date.submitted2014-09
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1866/12029
dc.subjectObjectivationfr
dc.subjectAliénationfr
dc.subjectCapitalismefr
dc.subjectSujet-Objetfr
dc.subjectOntologie socialefr
dc.subjectMarxfr
dc.subjectHegelfr
dc.subjectFeuerbachfr
dc.subjectAlienationfr
dc.subjectCapitalismfr
dc.subjectSubject-Objectfr
dc.subjectSocial ontologyfr
dc.subject.otherPhilosophy / Philosophie (UMI : 0422)fr
dc.titleLe Capital, époque de la domination abstraite ; comparaison du rapport entre l’objectivation et l’aliénation dans les Manuscrits de 1844 et Le Capital de Marxfr
dc.typeThèse ou mémoire / Thesis or Dissertation
etd.degree.disciplinePhilosophiefr
etd.degree.grantorUniversité de Montréalfr
etd.degree.levelMaîtrise / Master'sfr
etd.degree.nameM.A.fr
dcterms.abstractKarl Marx (1818-1883) a consacré son œuvre à l’explicitation d’une philosophie sociale du capitalisme et de son dépassement. Ce mémoire cherche à rendre compte de la spécificité de la domination capitaliste au travers du prisme des concepts d’objectivation et d’aliénation. Après avoir éclairé leurs sources chez Hegel et Feuerbach, nous défendons l’idée qu’il faut lire de façon plurielle le concept d’objectivation dans les Manuscrits de 1844, afin de saisir la constitution de l’objectivité par les médiations sociales et historiques. Des Manuscrits de 1844 au Capital, l’aliénation est alors comprise comme la domination d’une abstraction réelle, médiation sociale à laquelle les êtres humains ont remis la régulation de leurs rapports sociaux.fr
dcterms.abstractKarl Marx (1818-1883) devoted his work to an explicitation of a social philosophy of capitalism and its overthrow. This master’s thesis aims to specify the capitalist domination by analyzing the concepts of objectivation and alienation. After an initial clarification of these concepts drawing from Hegel and Feuerbach, we defend the necessity to adopt a plural reading of the concept of objectivation in the Manuscripts from 1844 in order to fully understand the constitution of objectivity through social and historical mediations. From this last work to The Capital, alienation can be understood as the domination of a real abstraction, a social mediation to which humans had given the power to regulate their social interactions.fr
dcterms.languagefrafr


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