-
Karl Kautsky 👩🏫📜 Everything Philosophers 🧠👨🏿🏫
Help us educate with a LIKE, SUBSCRIBE,and DONATION. Thank you!
https://www.patreon.com/SeeHearSayLearn , http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmation=1 👩🏫📜 Everything Philosophers 🧠👨🏿🏫
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In this video series we're covering everything about philosphers and their contributions.
Here's a couple great resources and products you might find useful.
Audible Audiobooks on Philosophy
https://amzn.to/3jOXGu0
Books on Philosphy
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Karl Johann Kautsky (/ˈkaʊtski/; German: ; 16 October 1854 – 17 October 1938) wa...
published: 04 Aug 2020
-
Marc Mulholland - Karl Kautsky on the role of the proletariat
Speaker: Marc Mulholland
Communist University 2016 was co-sponsored by the Communist Party of Great Britain (http://cpgb.org.uk) and Labour Party Marxists (http://www.labourpartymarxists.org.uk). CU 2016 took place from August 6-13 in London.
The views in these videos do not necessarily represent the views of either organisation.
published: 20 Sep 2016
-
"Kautsky in the 21st Century" (9/05/20 panel)
On September 5th, 2020, the Platypus Affiliated Society hosted a panel titled "Kautsky in the 21st Century".
An edited transcript can be read in Platypus Review #136 here (platypus1917.org/2021/05/05/kautsky-in-the-21st-century/)
Panel description:
Known as the "pope of Marxism", Karl Kautsky was a leading figure of the 2nd International and the mass socialist parties of the 19th century. He became an incredibly controversial figure in Marxism after 1914 largely as a result of his opposition to the 1917 revolution. In recent years, he has resurfaced on the Left as an important intellectual, though his legacy remains in dispute. What can we learn from Karl Kautsky's Marxism today?
Panelists:
- Chris Cutrone (Platypus Affiliated Society, School of the Art Institute of Chicago)
- Ben Lewis...
published: 05 Sep 2020
-
66: Ben Lewis and Karl Kautsky on the Democratic Republic
Vandaag hebben we een uitgebreid interview met marxistisch historicus Ben Lewis over zijn recente werk Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. Hierin zijn een aantal centrale teksten van de zogenaamde paus van het marxisme voor het eerst vertaald uit het Duits in het Engels, die ingaan over een marxistische houding ten opzichte van het parlement en wat de democratische republiek eigenlijk betekent. Beide onderwerpen worden vaak verkeerd begrepen op marxistisch links, dus we staan er eens uitgebreid bij stil.
published: 10 May 2020
-
When Kautsky Met Marx
Transcript - https://anarchopac.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/when-kautsky-met-marx/
https://www.patreon.com/anarchopac
https://twitter.com/anarchopac
published: 21 Feb 2017
-
Saint Francis of Assisi by Karl Kautsky | Rida Vaquas (Cosmonaut)
Cosmonaut Magazine Audiobooks: https://www.youtube.com/c/CosmonautMagazine/videos
Cosmopod: https://cosmopod.libsyn.com
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKtUwr-Xan-CyMi9T-J0r-4Q
Saint Francis of Assisi by Karl Kautsky
https://cosmonaut.blog/2019/07/29/saint-francis-of-assisi-by-karl-kautsky/
Posted on 2019-07-29
Translation and introduction by Rida Vaquas.
"Karl Kautsky, to the extent his writings on religion are known at all in the English speaking world, is primarily known for writing “Foundations of Christianity”, in which he argues that the early Christian community was essentially “a proletarian organisation”, characterized by class hatred against the rich and a common consumption of goods, but changed its character as a result o...
published: 30 Nov 2019
-
Karl Kautsky as Architect of the October Revolution | Lars T. Lih (Jacobin)
↓↓↓ see text and related articles linked below ↓↓↓
Karl Kautsky as Architect of the October Revolution
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/06/karl-kautsky-vladimir-lenin-russian-revolution
June 29, 2019
by Lars T. Lih
#Jacobin #Kautsky
Lenin remained true to the tactical guidelines of Karl Kautsky after the latter had abandoned them.
"Lih’s rehabilitation of Kautsky is where so-called ‘neo-Kautskyism’ becomes visible—a defense of the revolutionary Kautsky as the source of Lenin’s thought, which feeds back into a defense of the democratic Lenin. This sets the basic agenda for neokauts, even if Lih seems to be approaching this as a matter of historical interest." - Lexi's Primer on #Neokautskyism
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKtUwr-Xan-CyMi9T...
published: 22 Oct 2019
7:13
Karl Kautsky 👩🏫📜 Everything Philosophers 🧠👨🏿🏫
Help us educate with a LIKE, SUBSCRIBE,and DONATION. Thank you!
https://www.patreon.com/SeeHearSayLearn , http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmat...
Help us educate with a LIKE, SUBSCRIBE,and DONATION. Thank you!
https://www.patreon.com/SeeHearSayLearn , http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmation=1 👩🏫📜 Everything Philosophers 🧠👨🏿🏫
YOUTUBE SUBSCRIBE http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmation=1
In this video series we're covering everything about philosphers and their contributions.
Here's a couple great resources and products you might find useful.
Audible Audiobooks on Philosophy
https://amzn.to/3jOXGu0
Books on Philosphy
https://amzn.to/2X6LpXT
Philosophy Books for Kids
https://amzn.to/3jW01n1
Explore the world with this Digital Microscope
https://amzn.to/2ElwNgK
Explore the sky with this Telescope
https://amzn.to/2P14AxW
Karl Johann Kautsky (/ˈkaʊtski/; German: ; 16 October 1854 – 17 October 1938) was a Czech-Austrian philosopher, journalist, and Marxist theoretician. Kautsky was recognized as among the most authoritative promulgators of Orthodox Marxism after the death of Friedrich Engels in 1895 until the outbreak of World War I in 1914.
Link to Amazon.com
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The links above takes you directly to Amazon.com and in return they help fund what we do here and to further education for all those excited enough to want to learn. We thank you for clicking through our links.
THANK YOU for WATCHING, SUBSCRIBING, LIKING, COMMENTING, SHARING and DONATING!!!
It means a lot to my family!
Please visit www.seehearsaylearn.com
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Thank you so much!
This video series couldn't do what it does without the help of Wikipedia and its community along with so many other people to thank and we look forward to refining our product.
https://wn.com/Karl_Kautsky_👩🏫📜_Everything_Philosophers_🧠👨🏿🏫
Help us educate with a LIKE, SUBSCRIBE,and DONATION. Thank you!
https://www.patreon.com/SeeHearSayLearn , http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmation=1 👩🏫📜 Everything Philosophers 🧠👨🏿🏫
YOUTUBE SUBSCRIBE http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmation=1
In this video series we're covering everything about philosphers and their contributions.
Here's a couple great resources and products you might find useful.
Audible Audiobooks on Philosophy
https://amzn.to/3jOXGu0
Books on Philosphy
https://amzn.to/2X6LpXT
Philosophy Books for Kids
https://amzn.to/3jW01n1
Explore the world with this Digital Microscope
https://amzn.to/2ElwNgK
Explore the sky with this Telescope
https://amzn.to/2P14AxW
Karl Johann Kautsky (/ˈkaʊtski/; German: ; 16 October 1854 – 17 October 1938) was a Czech-Austrian philosopher, journalist, and Marxist theoretician. Kautsky was recognized as among the most authoritative promulgators of Orthodox Marxism after the death of Friedrich Engels in 1895 until the outbreak of World War I in 1914.
Link to Amazon.com
http://amzn.to/2hFyI1h
The links above takes you directly to Amazon.com and in return they help fund what we do here and to further education for all those excited enough to want to learn. We thank you for clicking through our links.
THANK YOU for WATCHING, SUBSCRIBING, LIKING, COMMENTING, SHARING and DONATING!!!
It means a lot to my family!
Please visit www.seehearsaylearn.com
FACEBOOK FOLLOW
https://www.facebook.com/seehearsaylearn
TWITTER FOLLOW
https://www.twitter.com/seehearsaylearn
YOUTUBE SUBSCRIBE
http://www.youtube.com/c/SeeHearSayLearn?sub_confirmation=1
PLEASE DONATE via VENMO for MORE EDUCATIONAL CONTENT and ENDEAVORS
https://venmo.com/SeeHearSayLearn
or donate via PAYPAL
www.paypal.me/KevMoCreative
Thank you so much!
This video series couldn't do what it does without the help of Wikipedia and its community along with so many other people to thank and we look forward to refining our product.
- published: 04 Aug 2020
- views: 1523
1:08:50
Marc Mulholland - Karl Kautsky on the role of the proletariat
Speaker: Marc Mulholland
Communist University 2016 was co-sponsored by the Communist Party of Great Britain (http://cpgb.org.uk) and Labour Party Marxists (htt...
Speaker: Marc Mulholland
Communist University 2016 was co-sponsored by the Communist Party of Great Britain (http://cpgb.org.uk) and Labour Party Marxists (http://www.labourpartymarxists.org.uk). CU 2016 took place from August 6-13 in London.
The views in these videos do not necessarily represent the views of either organisation.
https://wn.com/Marc_Mulholland_Karl_Kautsky_On_The_Role_Of_The_Proletariat
Speaker: Marc Mulholland
Communist University 2016 was co-sponsored by the Communist Party of Great Britain (http://cpgb.org.uk) and Labour Party Marxists (http://www.labourpartymarxists.org.uk). CU 2016 took place from August 6-13 in London.
The views in these videos do not necessarily represent the views of either organisation.
- published: 20 Sep 2016
- views: 2465
2:11:15
"Kautsky in the 21st Century" (9/05/20 panel)
On September 5th, 2020, the Platypus Affiliated Society hosted a panel titled "Kautsky in the 21st Century".
An edited transcript can be read in Platypus Revie...
On September 5th, 2020, the Platypus Affiliated Society hosted a panel titled "Kautsky in the 21st Century".
An edited transcript can be read in Platypus Review #136 here (platypus1917.org/2021/05/05/kautsky-in-the-21st-century/)
Panel description:
Known as the "pope of Marxism", Karl Kautsky was a leading figure of the 2nd International and the mass socialist parties of the 19th century. He became an incredibly controversial figure in Marxism after 1914 largely as a result of his opposition to the 1917 revolution. In recent years, he has resurfaced on the Left as an important intellectual, though his legacy remains in dispute. What can we learn from Karl Kautsky's Marxism today?
Panelists:
- Chris Cutrone (Platypus Affiliated Society, School of the Art Institute of Chicago)
- Ben Lewis (Communist Party of Great Britain)
- Adam Sacks (University of Hong Kong, contributor to Jacobin magazine)
- Jason Wright (Bolshevik Tendency)
_____________________________________
Curious to learn more about Platypus? E-mail
[email protected] to be connected with a chapter in your area.
The Platypus Affiliated Society organizes reading groups, public fora, research, and journalism focused on problems and tasks inherited from the "Old" (1920s-30s), "New" (1960s-70s) and post-political (1980s-90s) Left, for the possibilities of emancipatory politics today.
http://www.platypus1917.org
https://wn.com/Kautsky_In_The_21St_Century_(9_05_20_Panel)
On September 5th, 2020, the Platypus Affiliated Society hosted a panel titled "Kautsky in the 21st Century".
An edited transcript can be read in Platypus Review #136 here (platypus1917.org/2021/05/05/kautsky-in-the-21st-century/)
Panel description:
Known as the "pope of Marxism", Karl Kautsky was a leading figure of the 2nd International and the mass socialist parties of the 19th century. He became an incredibly controversial figure in Marxism after 1914 largely as a result of his opposition to the 1917 revolution. In recent years, he has resurfaced on the Left as an important intellectual, though his legacy remains in dispute. What can we learn from Karl Kautsky's Marxism today?
Panelists:
- Chris Cutrone (Platypus Affiliated Society, School of the Art Institute of Chicago)
- Ben Lewis (Communist Party of Great Britain)
- Adam Sacks (University of Hong Kong, contributor to Jacobin magazine)
- Jason Wright (Bolshevik Tendency)
_____________________________________
Curious to learn more about Platypus? E-mail
[email protected] to be connected with a chapter in your area.
The Platypus Affiliated Society organizes reading groups, public fora, research, and journalism focused on problems and tasks inherited from the "Old" (1920s-30s), "New" (1960s-70s) and post-political (1980s-90s) Left, for the possibilities of emancipatory politics today.
http://www.platypus1917.org
- published: 05 Sep 2020
- views: 2937
1:03:18
66: Ben Lewis and Karl Kautsky on the Democratic Republic
Vandaag hebben we een uitgebreid interview met marxistisch historicus Ben Lewis over zijn recente werk Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. Hierin zijn ...
Vandaag hebben we een uitgebreid interview met marxistisch historicus Ben Lewis over zijn recente werk Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. Hierin zijn een aantal centrale teksten van de zogenaamde paus van het marxisme voor het eerst vertaald uit het Duits in het Engels, die ingaan over een marxistische houding ten opzichte van het parlement en wat de democratische republiek eigenlijk betekent. Beide onderwerpen worden vaak verkeerd begrepen op marxistisch links, dus we staan er eens uitgebreid bij stil.
https://wn.com/66_Ben_Lewis_And_Karl_Kautsky_On_The_Democratic_Republic
Vandaag hebben we een uitgebreid interview met marxistisch historicus Ben Lewis over zijn recente werk Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. Hierin zijn een aantal centrale teksten van de zogenaamde paus van het marxisme voor het eerst vertaald uit het Duits in het Engels, die ingaan over een marxistische houding ten opzichte van het parlement en wat de democratische republiek eigenlijk betekent. Beide onderwerpen worden vaak verkeerd begrepen op marxistisch links, dus we staan er eens uitgebreid bij stil.
- published: 10 May 2020
- views: 336
1:50
When Kautsky Met Marx
Transcript - https://anarchopac.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/when-kautsky-met-marx/
https://www.patreon.com/anarchopac
https://twitter.com/anarchopac
Transcript - https://anarchopac.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/when-kautsky-met-marx/
https://www.patreon.com/anarchopac
https://twitter.com/anarchopac
https://wn.com/When_Kautsky_Met_Marx
Transcript - https://anarchopac.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/when-kautsky-met-marx/
https://www.patreon.com/anarchopac
https://twitter.com/anarchopac
- published: 21 Feb 2017
- views: 9081
30:25
Saint Francis of Assisi by Karl Kautsky | Rida Vaquas (Cosmonaut)
Cosmonaut Magazine Audiobooks: https://www.youtube.com/c/CosmonautMagazine/videos
Cosmopod: https://cosmopod.libsyn.com
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https...
Cosmonaut Magazine Audiobooks: https://www.youtube.com/c/CosmonautMagazine/videos
Cosmopod: https://cosmopod.libsyn.com
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKtUwr-Xan-CyMi9T-J0r-4Q
Saint Francis of Assisi by Karl Kautsky
https://cosmonaut.blog/2019/07/29/saint-francis-of-assisi-by-karl-kautsky/
Posted on 2019-07-29
Translation and introduction by Rida Vaquas.
"Karl Kautsky, to the extent his writings on religion are known at all in the English speaking world, is primarily known for writing “Foundations of Christianity”, in which he argues that the early Christian community was essentially “a proletarian organisation”, characterized by class hatred against the rich and a common consumption of goods, but changed its character as a result of its contempt for labour. This was the culmination of many years of interest in Christianity, Kautsky had previously edited a four volume book “Forerunners of Modern Socialism” that featured many heretical Christian sects, the first volume appearing in 1895. He was far from alone in the Social Democratic movement from having a sustained interest in Christianity. In the same year as the following article appeared, Vorwärts advertised a book by Emil Rosenow, “Against the Rule of Priests: Cultural Images from the Religious Struggles of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century”, including chapters on asceticism, the monastic orders and the friars. As a journalist, Franz Mehring wrote several articles about the history of the Jesuits, and Calvin and Luther. The topic of Francis of Assisi was taken up once more in 1908, this time in the revisionist journal Sozialistische Monatshefte, by sculptor and writer Emmy von Egidy.
Most of these publications are underpinned by a form of Protestant secularism: in which the medieval church is represented as a dominant institution within society rather than a “central system of practices, meanings and values”, a medium through which all social life was conducted. Rosa Luxemburg wrote that the Counter-Reformation was a part of what “shattered the beginnings of a new human culture”, which brought those in German lands back under the yoke of an oppressive church. Radical religious movements are recurrently praised insofar as they are a struggle against the papacy, identified as exploiter and ruler analogous to modern states. Only a minority of socialist thinkers put forward a dissenting perspective, one being the Catholic pastor Wilhelm Hohoff, who argued in his 1881 book “Protestantism and Socialism” that the Reformation had, in fact, paved the way for capitalism.
The present article is not free from the critical assumptions that social progress was a struggle against the medieval church, and that the medieval church itself was a monolithic institution of the ruling class. However, it is unusual in its focus on what Kautsky sees as a communist movement that remained within the Church, even if it ultimately assesses the Franciscans as becoming assimilated into a ruling class institution. This brief introduction is not the place to put forward an alternative perspective on the history of the monastic and mendicant orders, but it is useful to shed a light on what Kautsky understood as communistic about them.
For Kautsky, the intransigence of a proletarian communist movement ultimately derives from its commitment to labour, “the common duty of work, the communism of production and the means of production”, an ideal which poses a challenge to exploitation in a way that a communism based on consumption cannot. This may seem counterintuitive in an era where we have titles such as “Fully Automated Luxury Communism” and “abolish work” is a common radical slogan. Yet it is precisely the commitment to labour for which Kautsky praises the early Franciscans, and it is their turn away from labour which Kautsky sees as exemplifying their assimilation into the institutions of exploitation.
A rejoinder that could be posed is that Kautsky was writing at a time in which there were not the technological means to do away with work, in his words, “enjoyment without labour is not yet possible” and surely now, a modern day Karl Kautsky, having watched some TED talks about the state of artificial intelligence technologies, would propose a post-work society as a communist project. But this misses something crucial. Kautsky grasped the human and social dimension of labour, the dimension which is obscured by work in a capitalist society, where work’s ends are profoundly anti-human. In Marx’s famous schema, one does not become a fisherman, hunter, cattle-rearer or critic by working in communism. Nonetheless, one does still fish, hunt, rear cattle and criticise. What then is radical about labour? [...]"
#Cosmonaut #CosmonautMagazine #Kautsky
https://wn.com/Saint_Francis_Of_Assisi_By_Karl_Kautsky_|_Rida_Vaquas_(Cosmonaut)
Cosmonaut Magazine Audiobooks: https://www.youtube.com/c/CosmonautMagazine/videos
Cosmopod: https://cosmopod.libsyn.com
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKtUwr-Xan-CyMi9T-J0r-4Q
Saint Francis of Assisi by Karl Kautsky
https://cosmonaut.blog/2019/07/29/saint-francis-of-assisi-by-karl-kautsky/
Posted on 2019-07-29
Translation and introduction by Rida Vaquas.
"Karl Kautsky, to the extent his writings on religion are known at all in the English speaking world, is primarily known for writing “Foundations of Christianity”, in which he argues that the early Christian community was essentially “a proletarian organisation”, characterized by class hatred against the rich and a common consumption of goods, but changed its character as a result of its contempt for labour. This was the culmination of many years of interest in Christianity, Kautsky had previously edited a four volume book “Forerunners of Modern Socialism” that featured many heretical Christian sects, the first volume appearing in 1895. He was far from alone in the Social Democratic movement from having a sustained interest in Christianity. In the same year as the following article appeared, Vorwärts advertised a book by Emil Rosenow, “Against the Rule of Priests: Cultural Images from the Religious Struggles of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century”, including chapters on asceticism, the monastic orders and the friars. As a journalist, Franz Mehring wrote several articles about the history of the Jesuits, and Calvin and Luther. The topic of Francis of Assisi was taken up once more in 1908, this time in the revisionist journal Sozialistische Monatshefte, by sculptor and writer Emmy von Egidy.
Most of these publications are underpinned by a form of Protestant secularism: in which the medieval church is represented as a dominant institution within society rather than a “central system of practices, meanings and values”, a medium through which all social life was conducted. Rosa Luxemburg wrote that the Counter-Reformation was a part of what “shattered the beginnings of a new human culture”, which brought those in German lands back under the yoke of an oppressive church. Radical religious movements are recurrently praised insofar as they are a struggle against the papacy, identified as exploiter and ruler analogous to modern states. Only a minority of socialist thinkers put forward a dissenting perspective, one being the Catholic pastor Wilhelm Hohoff, who argued in his 1881 book “Protestantism and Socialism” that the Reformation had, in fact, paved the way for capitalism.
The present article is not free from the critical assumptions that social progress was a struggle against the medieval church, and that the medieval church itself was a monolithic institution of the ruling class. However, it is unusual in its focus on what Kautsky sees as a communist movement that remained within the Church, even if it ultimately assesses the Franciscans as becoming assimilated into a ruling class institution. This brief introduction is not the place to put forward an alternative perspective on the history of the monastic and mendicant orders, but it is useful to shed a light on what Kautsky understood as communistic about them.
For Kautsky, the intransigence of a proletarian communist movement ultimately derives from its commitment to labour, “the common duty of work, the communism of production and the means of production”, an ideal which poses a challenge to exploitation in a way that a communism based on consumption cannot. This may seem counterintuitive in an era where we have titles such as “Fully Automated Luxury Communism” and “abolish work” is a common radical slogan. Yet it is precisely the commitment to labour for which Kautsky praises the early Franciscans, and it is their turn away from labour which Kautsky sees as exemplifying their assimilation into the institutions of exploitation.
A rejoinder that could be posed is that Kautsky was writing at a time in which there were not the technological means to do away with work, in his words, “enjoyment without labour is not yet possible” and surely now, a modern day Karl Kautsky, having watched some TED talks about the state of artificial intelligence technologies, would propose a post-work society as a communist project. But this misses something crucial. Kautsky grasped the human and social dimension of labour, the dimension which is obscured by work in a capitalist society, where work’s ends are profoundly anti-human. In Marx’s famous schema, one does not become a fisherman, hunter, cattle-rearer or critic by working in communism. Nonetheless, one does still fish, hunt, rear cattle and criticise. What then is radical about labour? [...]"
#Cosmonaut #CosmonautMagazine #Kautsky
- published: 30 Nov 2019
- views: 360
40:57
Karl Kautsky as Architect of the October Revolution | Lars T. Lih (Jacobin)
↓↓↓ see text and related articles linked below ↓↓↓
Karl Kautsky as Architect of the October Revolution
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/06/karl-kautsky-vladimir-le...
↓↓↓ see text and related articles linked below ↓↓↓
Karl Kautsky as Architect of the October Revolution
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/06/karl-kautsky-vladimir-lenin-russian-revolution
June 29, 2019
by Lars T. Lih
#Jacobin #Kautsky
Lenin remained true to the tactical guidelines of Karl Kautsky after the latter had abandoned them.
"Lih’s rehabilitation of Kautsky is where so-called ‘neo-Kautskyism’ becomes visible—a defense of the revolutionary Kautsky as the source of Lenin’s thought, which feeds back into a defense of the democratic Lenin. This sets the basic agenda for neokauts, even if Lih seems to be approaching this as a matter of historical interest." - Lexi's Primer on #Neokautskyism
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKtUwr-Xan-CyMi9T-J0r-4Q
Also check out From Alpha to Omega's reading series on Revolutionary Strategy
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL67cOz_iD03-yG4SyHX-Tf2-ysBnehC2K
https://wn.com/Karl_Kautsky_As_Architect_Of_The_October_Revolution_|_Lars_T._Lih_(Jacobin)
↓↓↓ see text and related articles linked below ↓↓↓
Karl Kautsky as Architect of the October Revolution
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/06/karl-kautsky-vladimir-lenin-russian-revolution
June 29, 2019
by Lars T. Lih
#Jacobin #Kautsky
Lenin remained true to the tactical guidelines of Karl Kautsky after the latter had abandoned them.
"Lih’s rehabilitation of Kautsky is where so-called ‘neo-Kautskyism’ becomes visible—a defense of the revolutionary Kautsky as the source of Lenin’s thought, which feeds back into a defense of the democratic Lenin. This sets the basic agenda for neokauts, even if Lih seems to be approaching this as a matter of historical interest." - Lexi's Primer on #Neokautskyism
Karl Kautsky's Dank Audio Stash
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKtUwr-Xan-CyMi9T-J0r-4Q
Also check out From Alpha to Omega's reading series on Revolutionary Strategy
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL67cOz_iD03-yG4SyHX-Tf2-ysBnehC2K
- published: 22 Oct 2019
- views: 242