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This book describes the formation of civilized society from the perspective of the analysis of the role played by language and media and hence explains the formation and evolution of the capitalist society from the perspective of language and media. It argues that linguistic presentations given by using language serve as a basis for humans to define the private property right, to engage in market exchange, to establish wage labor system, to exploit science and technology in production, and to organize socialized production. It clarifies the reason for the distinction between the rich and the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book describes the formation of civilized society from the perspective of the analysis of the role played by language and media and hence explains the formation and evolution of the capitalist society from the perspective of language and media. It argues that linguistic presentations given by using language serve as a basis for humans to define the private property right, to engage in market exchange, to establish wage labor system, to exploit science and technology in production, and to organize socialized production. It clarifies the reason for the distinction between the rich and the poor in the capitalist society in a special way against Marx's theory of surplus value and asserts that the wage labor system is a cooperative system. It also discusses the relations of social classes and the relations between democracy and dictatorship as well as the origin of the state from the perspective of language and media different from Marx's view in these respects. This view may help humans deepen their understanding of capitalism.
Autorenporträt
Xing Yu is a political scientist who taught at two universities in China in the 1980s and 1990s. He obtained a bachelor of arts degree from Sichuan Foreign Languages Institute in Chongqing, China in 1982, and a master of law degree from Fudan University in Shanghai, China in 1985. He now works as a freelance writer and translator in British Columbia, Canada.