Capitalism: laws governing the capitalist system, 51, 148; distinctive feature of production under, 54; system built on ruins of farming, 62, 63; made possible by appearance of labor-power as a commodity, 71; essentials of, 154, 155; breakdown of, 163, 216, 230, 231, 232; imperialism may prolong its existence, 241; beginning of the end, 244; Bernstein's criticism of the "law of capitalistic accumulation," 171, 172.
Carlyle (Thomas), 277.
Circulation: 63, 154.
Clark (John B.): 45.
Classes: division of society into, 27; based on economic interest, 27; how the economically controlling class becomes politically predominant, 29; class struggle, 30, 181, 233; Weisengruen's objection to theory of, 46; source of wealth of our non-producing classes, 59, 74; disappearance of middle class, 181, 201, 212; peasants a bulwark of capitalism, 183, 184, 185; bourgeois character unfit for Socialist co-operation, 185, 186, 187; influence of corporations on fortunes of capitalist class, 195; growth of working class, 195; "new" middle class and its influence on the process of the centralization, 205; conditions for a social class, 209.
Class-Stupidity, 261.
Consumption: 55, 64.
Crises: 235-239; crisis of 1857, 249.
Critics (Marx-): their claim and characteristics, 10-16, their "philosophic" objection to Marx, 31; lack of definiteness, 34; confusion of "economic conditions" with "technical development," 35; confusion of "economic materialism" with "individual materialism," 36; confusion of "conditions" with "interests," 37; "refuting Marx by Marx," 39; "contradiction" found by Slominski, 40; an American Marx-critic, 41-43; pleas for all sorts of "standpoints" and "factors," 45; fashion to treat "economics" and "philosophy" separately, 49; failure to distinguish between individual and social element, 145; 228.
Commodities: analysis of the single commodity, 54, 55, 94; factory product a typical capitalistic commodity, 62;