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Historical Materialism: Marx's Theory of History

The base and superstructure model — Marx's argument that economics determines politics, law, religion, and culture.

The Architecture of Society

Marx's theory of history — historical materialism — begins with a simple but radical claim: the economic structure of society (the 'base') determines everything else (the 'superstructure'). The base consists of the forces of production (technology, raw materials, labor) and the relations of production (who owns what). The superstructure includes politics, law, religion, philosophy, art, and morality.

In this view, feudal economics produced feudal politics and feudal religion. Capitalist economics produces liberal democracy, individual rights, and consumer culture — not because these ideas are timelessly true, but because they serve the interests of the capitalist class. As Marx put it: 'The ruling ideas of each age have ever been the ideas of its ruling class.'

Historical Materialism: Marx's Theory of History | Model…