Page:Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, A - Karl Marx.djvu/10

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of money, which do not appear in Capital, make "Zur Kritik" a work practically complete in itself.

The recent silver agitation in this country shows how timely and useful this work still is, though written nearly half a century ago. That a great part of the workingmen employed in the cities were not carried away by the Democratic-Populist agitation in 1896 and 1900 is probably due in a greater measure than is commonly realized to the direct and indirect influence of Marx, whose economic teachings guided the socialists in their counter agitation. And since the conditions which once gave rise to a demand for an inflated currency have by no means disappeared beyond a possibility of return, this book has a wide field before it, outside of the library of the college and of the student of economics, which the author's name and prestige with the working class insures for it.

There is another reason, if any need be given why this book should have been translated into English. Marx's preface to the present work contains the classic formulation of his historico-philosophic theory known as the Materialistic Interpretation of History. This theory, which until recently was entertained almost exclusively by socialist writers and was hardly heard of outside of socialist circles in English speaking countries, is at last receiving not only due recognition but sympathetic appreciation at the hands of men of science.[1] It is rather a significant coincidence that the work


  1. Cf. Seligman, "The Economic Interpretation of History." MacMillan, 1902.