Marx Very Lot
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Marx Very Lot

Philosophy research?
I'm doing religious studies (philosophy and ethics) at A-level. I need to do some wider reading and research, and so far the sites I've found haven't been very helpful. Does anyone know any websites that have lots of imformation on philosophers? I want it to be user friendly and explaining things fully.
Specifically I need philosophy information rather than ethics, especially the following:
Plato
Aristotle
Kant
Jung
Anselm
Leibnitz
Russel (Vs Coppelstone debate if possible)
Aquinas
Hume
Marx
or anyone else mentioned on this site (i need more extensive notes than on the site)
If you have a site with useful information on ANY of the above, then please share.
Thanks in advance
Good Luck.
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Marx $96 Marx |
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Marx for Beginners $22.48 A cartoon book about Marx? Are you sure it's Karl, not Groucho? How can you summarize the work of Karl Marx in cartoons? It took Rius to do it. He's put it all in: the origins of Marxist philosophy, history, economics; of capital, labor, the class struggle, socialism. And there's a biography of"Charlie" Marx besides.Like the companion volumes in the series, Marx for Beginners is accurate, understandable, and very, very funny. |
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Marx Brothers: Silver Screen Collection $47.93 The Marx Brothers Silver Screen Collection marks the first reappearance on DVD of the comedy quartet's original five movies for Paramount, released between 1929 and 1933, since the old Image Entertainment discs were discontinued in 2000. This is a handsome volume, not only in its packaging but its mastering and the overall treatment of the movies themselves. The original Image DVDs were straight conversions of the laserdisc versions of the five films, which varied greatly in quality. Of the five, The Cocoanuts, made in 1929, was the most improved on laserdisc, while Animal Crackers, made in 1930, which had been suppressed by legal complications for decades, was the poorest of the lot in condition -- none of those discs ever really challenged the limits of DVD resolution. That's all changed on this set. The Cocoanuts has been improved in this edition, so that it looks rather newer than it did on television in the1960s and early '70s, but there is one sequence -- starting at approximately 49 minutes in -- that looks scratched and grainy, like a badly preserved 1929 movie; luckily, the audio is consistent throughout, including the performance of "The Monkey Doodle-Do." The image improves dramatically at 61 minutes in and pretty much stays that way, with some beautiful clarity (within the context of this film) achieved in Basil Ruysdael's "Shirt Song" sequence at 80 minutes in, and Chico Marx's spot at the piano at just under 90 minutes in. The movie gets 18 chapters, which is reasonably generous, and is presented in full-screen apart from the window-boxed opening credits. Animal Crackers (1930) comes complete with an original trailer that runs about two and a half minutes and looks as dark and grainy as the movie used to. And then there's the actual movie, which now looks and sounds amazing -- purely, simply amazing. The opening credits are still letterboxed, but damn if you can't hear every instrument in the main title sequence's big band music and in the whole rest of the score as well, like it's coming off of an audiophile CD. As for the image, the art deco set design for Mrs. Rittenhouse's estate now glows, and George Folsey's photography has a luster that hasn't been seen in connection with this movie in at least 50 years. Most of the blemishes and flaws in the film elements that marred the laserdisc have been fixed, and as a result, this could easily be the first real chance that any of us have had to see Animal Crackers properly since the 1930s. The presentation isn't flawless -- there are some shifts in density and other minor defects, and some scratches in Chico Marx's piano segment, but this is still worlds beyond what MCA-Universal was able to offer us on this movie even as late as 1992. This title, like the others in the package, comes with English and Spanish audio tracks and English, Spanish, and French subtitles.Monkey Business (1931) always looked pretty good, and here it looks very good all the way through, a |
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Marx Brothers - Silver Screen Collection $50.98 The Marx Brothers Silver Screen Collection marks the first reappearance on DVD of the comedy quartet's original five movies for Paramount, released between 1929 and 1933, since the old Image Entertainment discs were discontinued in 2000. This is a handsome volume, not only in its packaging but its mastering and the overall treatment of the movies themselves. The original Image DVDs were straight conversions of the laserdisc versions of the five films, which varied greatly in quality. Of the five, The Cocoanuts, made in 1929, was the most improved on laserdisc, while Animal Crackers, made in 1930, which had been suppressed by legal complications for decades, was the poorest of the lot in condition -- none of those discs ever really challenged the limits of DVD resolution. That's all changed on this set. The Cocoanuts has been improved in this edition, so that it looks rather newer than it did on television in the1960s and early '70s, but there is one sequence -- starting at approximately 49 minutes in -- that looks scratched and grainy, like a badly preserved 1929 movie; luckily, the audio is consistent throughout, including the performance of The Monkey Doodle-Do. The image improves dramatically at 61 minutes in and pretty much stays that way, with some beautiful clarity (within the context of this film) achieved in Basil Ruysdael's Shirt Song sequence at 80 minutes in, and Chico Marx's spot at the piano at just under 90 minutes in. The movie gets 18 chapters, which is reasonably generous, and is presented in full-screen apart from the window-boxed opening credits. Animal Crackers (1930) comes complete with an original trailer that runs about two and a half minutes and looks as dark and grainy as the movie used to. And then there's the actual movie, which now looks and sounds amazing -- purely, simply amazing. The opening credits are still letterboxed, but damn if you can't hear every instrument in the main title sequence's big band music and in the whole rest of the score as well, like it's coming off of an audiophile CD. As for the image, the art deco set design for Mrs. Rittenhouse's estate now glows, and George Folsey's photography has a luster that hasn't been seen in connection with this movie in at least 50 years. Most of the blemishes and flaws in the film elements that marred the laserdisc have been fixed, and as a result, this could easily be the first real chance that any of us have had to see Animal Crackers properly since the 1930s. The presentation isn't flawless -- there are some shifts in density and other minor defects, and some scratches in Chico Marx's piano segment, but this is still worlds beyond what MCA-Universal was able to offer us on this movie even as late as 1992. This title, like the others in the package, comes with English and Spanish audio tracks and English, Spanish, and French subtitles.Monkey Business (1931) always looked pretty good, and here it looks very good all the way through, and it sounds even better |
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Marx's Capital $15.68 This expert guide to the political economy of Marx's Capital has always been the very best available... It is thoroughly recommended. David Harvey, author of `Limits to Capital'For almost thirty years, this book has provided an invaluable introduction to |
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Marx: A Very Short Introduction $1 No Synopsis Available |
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Angelika Kirchschlager Sings Joseph Marx $15.24 The music of Austrian composer Joseph Marx (1882-1964) largely fell out of public favor very early in his career, after the First World War, but he continued to compose in the same lushly late-Romantic idiom throughout his long life. A significant part of |
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Playlist: The Very Best of Sir Mix-A-Lot [Clean] $6.63 For most intents and purposes, {^Playlist} is the first {$Sir Mix-A-Lot} compilation ever released, as the 2000 collection {^Beepers, Benzos & Booty} never got wide circulation, and while it's missing a fair share of his charting singles, it's nevertheles |
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Marx's Ghost $14.15 Marx's Ghost |
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Marx's 'capital' $101.85 Marx's 'capital' |
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Marx and Education $97.07 Marx and Education |
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Stefan Marx $29.83 Stefan Marx |
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Marx Brothers - Harpo Marx, Chico Marx, Groucho Marx $19.99 Marx Brothers - Harpo Marx, Chico Marx, Groucho Marx - Premium Poster |
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