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Rudolf Hilferding
註釋The Austro-Marxist school of thought, which flourished in Vienna from the end of the nineteenth century to 1934, has recently attracted renewed attention both as a general framework for a Marxist sociology and as a body of substantial research into major problems of structure and change in the advanced capitalist societies. Among its eminent members were Max Adler, Otto Bauer, Karl Renneer, and Rudolf Hilferding. This study presents the first general assessment in the English language of Rudolf Hilferding's life and work. Hilferding was born in 1877 and died in the Gestapo prison La Sante in Paris in 1941. He is remembered as the author of Finance Capital (1910), as the theorist of "organized capitalism," as the chief ideologist of Weimar Social Democracy and as the theorist of the totalitarian state economy.