Rest of this chapter, it pointed out that the class has been created by capitalism, and, the bourgeoisie has been said to use the proletariat in low wages for the concept of private property. In this chapter we continue to state that revolution will occur and society will be reorganized, but capitalism is to be repeated in the history of the country. This article points out that only communism can achieve class equality in Europe. The next three chapters, "proletarian down and the communist", "socialist and communist literature", and "the relationship between the Communists and the various opposition" is about what the Communist Party and they have what I am talking more specifically. Something.
Thanks to industrialization, the population-rich area, the population of the densely populated areas, the gap between the working class and nobility is the ideal environment. John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx are two philosophers who analyze the harmful situation of industrialization and its impact. Everyone has their own perspective and a very unique viewpoint is the best way to improve society. Although Muller and Marx differ in many matters, their main failure in the industrialized society is fairly obvious; in fact, the lower class "proletariat" is constantly being used by the upper class and "bourgeoisie." Britain's John Stuart Mill is an economist at the philosopher, has created a criticism that many of the well-organized clear through the 19th century. It would be very frustrating to evaluate Mill's work and try to classify his philosophical tendencies. This may explain why most of Muller's earlier works have particularly practical tones.
By the middle of the 19th century, bureaucratic administrative forms of developed industrialized countries were firmly established. Thinkers such as John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx began to theoretically discuss the economic function and power structure of bureaucracy in modern life. Max Weber was the first recognized feature of the bureaucracy as a necessary feature of the modern era and by the end of the 19th century bureaucratic form began to spread from government to other large scale institutions. Even in the 20th century, the trend of bureaucracy continued to expand and the public sector employed more than 5% of the workforce in many Western countries. In the capitalist system, see the medieval works of "Organizers" and "Men in Gray Flannel Sets" in the organization as informal bureaucracy began to appear in the form of corporate power level.