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Li Da (philosopher)

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175: 73: 327: 32: 800:) where he taught at the Institute of Law and Commerce at Beiping University for 5 years as the departmental head of the Department of Economics. This was to be one of Li's most productive periods, where he published numerous books (all on Marxist theory, economics, sociology, etc.) in addition to teaching. One of his most well known texts, 738:
Communist parties across the world, including in China, had debates in the early 1920s about whether it was appropriate to form alliances with bourgeois parties (temporarily); Li was involved in these debates and advocated extreme caution, because although this tactic was rooted in Marxist theory, it
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over this subject and while Chen was in favor of the alliance, Li was not. Li would later recall that, upon hearing his view, Chen banged the table, smashed teacups and threatened his expulsion from the Party. Li decided to leave the party over this disagreement in the late 1923. He did not rejoin
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was held, with Li (along with Li Hanjun) representing Shanghai. Li was elected to the Provisional Central Executive Bureau and appointed head of the Party's Propaganda Department. Li would later state that at this time in his life, his two major tasks were "first, propaganda and second, organizing
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A summation of lectures Li had given in the previous 3 years, it elucidates the materialist conception of historical and scientific socialism, as well as uncovering the development of Marxism in China. Renewed conflicts between the
719:. He was now fully immersed in translation, editing, and publishing, while also writing articles for workers, exposing them to socialism. He also became a headmaster for a school for girls established by the Party in Shanghai. 215:, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Knowledge. 1041: 669:
as he was in Japan at the time. He began writing articles of a socialist bent that were both introductory (explaining the goals of socialism), historical (on European socialism before the war) and contemporary (on
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and others and founded what was later called the "Shanghai Committee for the Establishment of the Chinese Communist Party". In addition to making contacts with other regions of China, it also founded the first
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Although he had officially left the Party, he continued to research, publish articles, and cultivate Marxist theory along with referring students to the local Party officials in
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By this time, Li had established himself as indispensable in spreading Marxist ideas throughout China. He chaired the Second Congress of the CCP in July 1922, and in late 1922
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After the People's Republic of China was established in 1949, Li rejoined the Chinese Communist Party. He was heavily criticized and beaten at the beginning of the
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journal ("The Communist") and made Li its editor. The journal, becoming one of the ideological rallying points of the early Party, was later described by
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Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
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In 1930, Li was invited to teach at the Shanghai Institute of Law and Politics; in 1931 was made departmental head of the Sociology Department of
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was risky and prevented the independence of the Party. In China, propositions were put forth to have the CCP ally with the
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and was compelled to return home; in 1917 he again went to Japan to study, taking courses in mining and metallurgy at
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing Chinese Knowledge article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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the workers." Also later in 1921, Li was made the director of the Party's first publishing house, the
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where he barely escaped the execution of revolutionary teachers; he soon was in hiding in
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He abandoned his studies of science and focused on Marxist theory under the direction of
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government-sponsored student in Japan having passed provincial examinations. He caught
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to help overthrow the warlords who reigned during this time. Li had a meeting with
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was published during this period; it cemented Li's ideological position as an
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to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
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Delegates to the 2nd National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party
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Delegates to the 1st National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party
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Heads of the Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party
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and they had three children. Their eldest daughter, Li Xintian (
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invited him to become principal of the Self-Study University in
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People persecuted to death during the Cultural Revolution
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caused Li to flee first to his native Lingling, then to
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era including boycotting and Japanese product burning.
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via Japanese sources, making him one of the earliest
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Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party
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Their second daughter was Li Xinyi ( 610: 1030: 893:Li Da and Marxist Philosophy in China 872: 391:December 1949 – January 1953 1290:Academic staff of Guangxi University 921:Little, Daniel (29 September 2010). 858:), who helped introduce and develop 351:November 1952 – August 1966 168: 95:adding citations to reliable sources 66: 25: 946: 710:In 1921, the first Congress of the 631:taking place, Li began learning of 13: 1300:Academic staff of Jinan University 14: 1361: 1335:Second Sino-Japanese War refugees 838:), died of an illness during the 41:This article has multiple issues. 1305:National Wuhan University alumni 1260:20th-century Chinese translators 682:Chinese Communist Party founding 316: 173: 71: 30: 890:Knight, Nick (6 October 1998). 82:needs additional citations for 49:or discuss these issues on the 1330:Presidents of Hunan University 1325:Presidents of Wuhan University 940: 914: 563: 554: 546: 243:You may also add the template 1: 1011:President of Hunan University 988:President of Wuhan University 949:"著名心理学家李心天逝世,系中国共产党早期领导人李达之子" 865: 811: 586: 379:President of Hunan University 339:President of Wuhan University 947:Yue, Huairang (3 May 2019). 7: 1270:Chinese publishers (people) 571:and founding member of the 569:Chinese Marxist philosopher 10: 1366: 288: 245:{{Translated|zh|李达 (哲学家)}} 207:Machine translation, like 15: 1065: 1017: 1008: 1002: 994: 985: 977: 972: 854: 844: 834: 823: 717:People's Publishing House 625:Tokyo Imperial University 615:In 1913 he enrolled as a 532: 524: 515:Beijing Normal University 510: 499: 489: 479: 455: 424: 419: 415: 405: 395: 384: 377: 367: 355: 344: 337: 333: 324: 315: 308: 188:the corresponding article 840:Second Sino-Japanese War 686:Li was a founder of the 106:"Li Da" philosopher 16:Not to be confused with 1320:Philosophers from Hunan 712:Chinese Communist Party 701:Chinese Communist Party 688:Chinese Communist Party 665:He did not witness the 605:First Sino-Japanese War 573:Chinese Communist Party 484:Chinese Communist Party 254:For more guidance, see 1345:Translators to Chinese 848:). Their only son was 802:Elements of Sociology, 752:Work outside the Party 927:Understanding Society 690:. During his time at 583:throughout his life. 256:Knowledge:Translation 227:copyright attribution 1310:People from Yongzhou 1285:Educators from Hunan 973:Educational offices 923:"Sociology in China" 769:and CCP such as the 707:as a "bright flag". 91:improve this article 818:Cultural Revolution 667:May Fourth Movement 656:Motoyuki Takabatake 611:Academic background 551:traditional Chinese 528:Philosopher, writer 519:University of Tokyo 1350:Writers from Hunan 860:medical psychology 828:Li was married to 629:Russian Revolution 543:simplified Chinese 235:interlanguage link 1237: 1236: 1025: 1024: 1018:Succeeded by 995:Succeeded by 771:Shanghai massacre 762:Modern Sociology. 591:Li was born to a 536: 535: 285: 284: 277: 267: 266: 200: 196: 167: 166: 159: 141: 64: 1357: 1145: 1113: 1051: 1044: 1037: 1028: 1027: 1003:Preceded by 978:Preceded by 970: 969: 964: 963: 961: 959: 944: 938: 937: 935: 933: 918: 912: 911: 887: 857: 856: 847: 846: 837: 836: 806:Orthodox Marxist 798:Names of Beijing 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Retrieved 952: 942: 930:. Retrieved 926: 916: 892: 827: 815: 801: 790:Feng Yuxiang 783: 761: 755: 748:until 1949. 737: 721: 709: 685: 664: 660:Karl Kautsky 645: 621:tuberculosis 617:study abroad 614: 590: 562: 538: 537: 461:(1966-08-24) 407:Succeeded by 386: 369:Succeeded by 346: 298: 291:Chinese name 286: 271: 231:edit summary 222: 195:(March 2023) 193: 185: 153: 144: 134: 127: 120: 113: 101: 89:Please help 84:verification 81: 57: 50: 44: 43:Please help 40: 1255:1966 deaths 1250:1890 births 1214:Liu Yunshan 1204:Wang Renzhi 1159:Xi Zhongxun 1140: [ 1108: [ 1085:Peng Shuzhi 741:Guomin Dang 627:. With the 397:Preceded by 357:Preceded by 295:family name 1244:Categories 1194:Deng Liqun 1184:Hu Yaobang 1127:Shen Zemin 1105:Luo Qiyuan 1015:1949–1953 1005:Yi Dingxin 997:Zhuang Guo 992:1952–1966 866:References 862:in China. 850:Li Xintian 830:Wang Huiwu 812:Later life 767:Kuomintang 745:Chen Duxiu 724:Mao Zedong 705:Mao Zedong 696:Chen Duxiu 672:Chen Duxiu 641:Duan Qirui 595:family in 587:Early life 525:Occupation 505:Li Xintian 494:Wang Huiwu 431:1890-10-02 401:Yi Dingxin 373:Zhuang Guo 190:in Chinese 117:newspapers 46:improve it 1229:Li Shulei 1219:Liu Qibao 1199:Zhu Houze 1174:Geng Biao 1164:Lu Dingyi 1154:Lu Dingyi 1117:Cai Hesen 1100:Qu Qiubai 1095:Cai Hesen 1090:Qu Qiubai 1075:Cai Hesen 953:The Paper 511:Education 387:In office 347:In office 249:talk page 52:talk page 1122:Li Lisan 779:Shanghai 728:Changsha 692:Shanghai 676:Shanghai 597:Lingling 500:Children 442:Yongzhou 438:Lingling 289:In this 225:provide 147:May 2013 1169:Tao Zhu 1020:Zhu Fan 896:. USA: 794:Beijing 775:Wuchang 411:Zhu Fan 247:to the 229:in the 192:. 131:scholar 958:11 May 932:22 May 904:  824:Family 796:; see 658:, and 561:: 559:pinyin 553:: 545:: 490:Spouse 293:, the 133:  126:  119:  112:  104:  1144:] 1112:] 1070:Li Da 758:Hunan 601:Hunan 564:Lǐ Dá 539:Li Da 474:China 470:Hubei 466:Wuhan 450:China 446:Hunan 310:Li Da 209:DeepL 138:JSTOR 124:books 960:2019 934:2024 902:ISBN 456:Died 425:Born 223:must 221:You 110:news 855:李心天 845:李心怡 835:李心田 678:). 599:in 297:is 211:or 93:by 1246:: 1142:zh 1110:zh 951:. 925:. 900:. 874:^ 654:, 557:; 555:李達 549:; 547:李达 472:, 468:, 448:, 444:, 440:, 318:李达 300:Li 55:. 1050:e 1043:t 1036:v 962:. 936:. 910:. 852:( 541:( 433:) 429:( 303:. 278:) 272:( 258:. 251:. 160:) 154:( 149:) 145:( 135:· 128:· 121:· 114:· 87:. 62:) 58:( 20:.

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Li Da (general)
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President of Wuhan University
Zhou Gengsheng

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