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Ricardo Cueva Fernández
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Área de Filosofía del Derecho
Spain
Biography
Vol 20 No 1 (2015): SIEU 2014 TERCER SEMINARIO INTERNACIONAL 26-27 JUNIO 2014 (PRIMERA PARTE), THIRD SIEU INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP, 26-27th JUNE 2014, A CORUNNA UNIVERSITY, SPAIN, pages 91-123
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15304/t.20.1.2679
Submitted: 15-07-2015 Accepted: 15-07-2015 Published: 15-07-2015
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Abstract

Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill supported Abraham Lincoln against what they called the “Slave Power”. Both thinkers fought for the abolition of slavery, and backed the Union in the American Civil War (1861-1865). Marx spread out his opinions on the war and the future social and political changes in several newspapers, while Mill was active trying to persuade the English public realm to prevent England from joining the South. Both shared an historical vision of the future in which human progress was attached to the United States. However, the aims of both thinkers differed in other grounds. Mill was interested in the moral regeneration of American society whereas Marx focused in instilling the revolutionary desire for emancipation among the working classes, starting in the United States.

DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.15304/t.20.1.2679

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