Leninism: Political Economy as Pseudoscience
Leninism provides an in-depth analysis of the economic and political doctrines of Lenin, creator of the Communist Party that came into power in Russia in 1917. Based upon the author's comprehensive reading of Lenin's Collected Works (some 10 million words in Russian), the study dissects Lenin's political economy, and shows it to be pseudoscience, based on simple, arbitrary, and unrealistic assumptions. According to Dovring, Lenin was a politician, not a scientist, and his aim was power, not truth. The work begins by providing a brief sketch of Lenin's life and an overview of his career as a writer. Four substantive chapters analyze Lenin's treatment of the peasant problem, science, the proletariat, and democracy. Closing chapters deal with Lenin's personality, which is shown to be pathological in its inability to make concessions to intellectual argument, and the prevalence of pseudoscience in his doctrines. Lenin's doctrines became the groundwork of the Soviet system, and he is responsible for creating its absurdities. The subsequent collapse of the Soviet system, therefore, must be seen in this light.
"1143948083"
Leninism: Political Economy as Pseudoscience
Leninism provides an in-depth analysis of the economic and political doctrines of Lenin, creator of the Communist Party that came into power in Russia in 1917. Based upon the author's comprehensive reading of Lenin's Collected Works (some 10 million words in Russian), the study dissects Lenin's political economy, and shows it to be pseudoscience, based on simple, arbitrary, and unrealistic assumptions. According to Dovring, Lenin was a politician, not a scientist, and his aim was power, not truth. The work begins by providing a brief sketch of Lenin's life and an overview of his career as a writer. Four substantive chapters analyze Lenin's treatment of the peasant problem, science, the proletariat, and democracy. Closing chapters deal with Lenin's personality, which is shown to be pathological in its inability to make concessions to intellectual argument, and the prevalence of pseudoscience in his doctrines. Lenin's doctrines became the groundwork of the Soviet system, and he is responsible for creating its absurdities. The subsequent collapse of the Soviet system, therefore, must be seen in this light.
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Leninism: Political Economy as Pseudoscience

Leninism: Political Economy as Pseudoscience

by Bloomsbury Academic
Leninism: Political Economy as Pseudoscience

Leninism: Political Economy as Pseudoscience

by Bloomsbury Academic

Hardcover

$75.00 
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Overview

Leninism provides an in-depth analysis of the economic and political doctrines of Lenin, creator of the Communist Party that came into power in Russia in 1917. Based upon the author's comprehensive reading of Lenin's Collected Works (some 10 million words in Russian), the study dissects Lenin's political economy, and shows it to be pseudoscience, based on simple, arbitrary, and unrealistic assumptions. According to Dovring, Lenin was a politician, not a scientist, and his aim was power, not truth. The work begins by providing a brief sketch of Lenin's life and an overview of his career as a writer. Four substantive chapters analyze Lenin's treatment of the peasant problem, science, the proletariat, and democracy. Closing chapters deal with Lenin's personality, which is shown to be pathological in its inability to make concessions to intellectual argument, and the prevalence of pseudoscience in his doctrines. Lenin's doctrines became the groundwork of the Soviet system, and he is responsible for creating its absurdities. The subsequent collapse of the Soviet system, therefore, must be seen in this light.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275954642
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/14/1996
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.44(d)
Lexile: 1320L (what's this?)

About the Author

FOLKE DOVRING was Professor Emeritus of Agricultural Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He was the author of 14 books, including Productivity and Value (Praeger, 1987), Progress for Food or Food for Progress? (Praeger, 1988), Farming for Fuel (Praeger, 1988), and Inequality (Praeger, 1991).

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Sketch of a Life
Writing Career
Peasants
Claim to Science
Class Struggle
Democracy
Pathological Personality
Pseudoscience
After thought
References
Index

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