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The Question of Man-Citizen Cooperation in the Declaration of Rights of 1789 from a Marxian Perspective
Author(s) -
Melis Aktaş
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
kaygı uludağ üniversitesi fen-edebiyat fakültesi felsefe dergisi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1303-4251
DOI - 10.20981/kuufefd.37121
Subject(s) - declaration , perspective (graphical) , political science , human rights , environmental ethics , law and economics , sociology , law , philosophy , computer science , artificial intelligence
The Declaration of Rights of 1789 has been always regarded as a gain of “rights” in the domains of freedom, equality and right of property in the history of man. While we find within it “Man” and “Citizen” as the keywords we usually ignore what these are actually standing for. In fact this division of “Man” and “Citizen” is nothing but an affirmation of capitalism offering people to lead two separate lives in two distinct realms. This in turn gives us the possibility to come across the abstract “Man” covering up its being the bourgeois himself in reality along with the legal term “Citizen” infused with morality, introduced as if in a justification of his demand for the rights. And just there we find Marx who in his way puts an end to the dissimulation in question. So this work aims, in the line of Marx, an uncovering of the identities of the “Man” and “Citizen” in the declaration.

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