- 13 Nov 2012 16:06
#14105382
Yesterday, a professor of mine claimed that in a way Heidegger was more "radical" than Marx in that he had a more fundamental critique of the West than Marx's "progressivist" view of class society and working class revolution.
I can certainly understand his point in the context of Heidegger's writings on technology and mass society, but I think it relies on a kind of caricatured Marx that folks like David Harvey have done a great job at "debunking."
Evidently folks like Henri Lefebvre attempted to fuse the two although I'm not too familiar with these works.
Thoughts?
I can certainly understand his point in the context of Heidegger's writings on technology and mass society, but I think it relies on a kind of caricatured Marx that folks like David Harvey have done a great job at "debunking."
Evidently folks like Henri Lefebvre attempted to fuse the two although I'm not too familiar with these works.
Thoughts?