Pre-Marx socialists  

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While Marxism had a significant impact on socialist thought, pre-Marxist thinkers (before Karl Marx wrote on the subject) have advocated socialism in forms both similar and in stark contrast to Marx and Engels' conception of socialism, advocating some form of collective ownership over large-scale production, worker-management within the workplace, or in some cases, a form of planned economy.

Early socialist philosophers and political theorists:

  1. Gerrard Winstanley, who founded the Diggers movement in the United Kingdom
  2. Charles Fourier, French philosopher who propounded principles very similar to Karl Marx
  3. Louis Blanqui, French socialist and writer
  4. Marcus Thrane, Norwegian socialist
  5. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Genevan philosopher, writer, and composer whose works influenced the French Revolution
  6. Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, French politician writer.

Ricardian socialist economists:

  1. Thomas Hodgskin, English Ricardian socialist and free-market anarchist
  2. Charles Hall
  3. John Francis Bray
  4. John Gray
  5. William Thompson
  6. Percy Ravenstone
  7. Werner Sombart, German economist and sociologist of the Historical school of economics
  8. James Mill
  9. John Stuart Mill, classical political economist who came to advocate worker-cooperative socialism

Utopian socialist thinkers:

  1. Claude Henri de Saint-Simon
  2. Wilhelm Weitling
  3. Robert Owen
  4. Edward Bellamy
  5. Charles Fourier
  6. Étienne Cabet

See also

References




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Pre-Marx socialists" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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