Raoul Victor: Difference between revisions

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Raoul Victor is a French Marxist author who writes about free software, market relations and the possibility of radical social change. He was born in Venezuela and lives in Paris.
Raoul Victor is a French Marxist author who writes about free software, market relations and the possibility of radical social change. He was born in Venezuela and lives in Paris. http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/




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'''Free Software and Marxism'''
'''Free Software and Marxism'''


http://dorax.club.fr/MarxismFS.htm
http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/MarxismFS.rtf


The author examines three questions: 1) To which extent is Marxism confirmed by the reality of free-software? 2) To which extent is Marxism questioned by this reality? 3) Which relation between class struggle and free-software?  
The author examines three questions: 1) To which extent is Marxism confirmed by the reality of free-software? 2) To which extent is Marxism questioned by this reality? 3) Which relation between class struggle and free-software?  
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'''Free Software and social movements '''
'''Free Software and social movements '''


http://dorax.club.fr/FS_social.rtf
http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/FS_social.rtf






[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Individuals]]

Revision as of 10:36, 19 October 2013

Raoul Victor is a French Marxist author who writes about free software, market relations and the possibility of radical social change. He was born in Venezuela and lives in Paris. http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/


- Raoul Victor, on Free software, the sharing culture, and Marxism


The Visibility of the Revolutionary Project and New Technologies

URL = http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/Visibility.rtf

Raoul is the pen name of a French socialist activist. His thesis is that the widespread emergence of sharing practices makes possible a visioning of what a non-capitalist future would look like, something hitherto impossible, and on of the key sources for the failure of radical social change efforts. This is a key text from within the Marxist tradition.


Free Software and Market Relations

http://www.oekonux.org/texts/marketrelations.html

This essay defends the idea that free sofware is a germ of what the future society may look like, and is translated from a debate within a French Marxist group.


Free Software and Marxism

http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/MarxismFS.rtf

The author examines three questions: 1) To which extent is Marxism confirmed by the reality of free-software? 2) To which extent is Marxism questioned by this reality? 3) Which relation between class struggle and free-software?


Free Software and social movements

http://raoulv.perso.neuf.fr/FS_social.rtf