**John Bellamy Foster, //Marx's Ecology: Materialism and Nature//** {{:foster-mxecol.jpg?150|Marx's Ecology}} Paperback, 200 pages\\ [[https://monthlyreview.org/product/marxs_ecology/|Monthly Review Press]], 2000\\ ISBN: 9781583670125 Marx, it is often assumed, cared only about industrial growth and the development of economic forces. John Bellamy Foster examines Marx’s neglected writings on capitalist agriculture and soil ecology, philosophical naturalism, and evolutionary theory. He shows that Marx, known as a powerful critic of capitalist society, was also deeply concerned with the changing human relationship to nature. //Marx’s Ecology// covers many other thinkers, including Epicurus, Charles Darwin, Thomas Malthus, Ludwig Feuerbach, P. J. Proudhon, and William Paley. By reconstructing a materialist conception of nature and society, Marx’s Ecology challenges the spiritualism prevalent in the modern Green movement, pointing toward a method that offers more lasting and sustainable solutions to the ecological crisis. **Table of Contents** Introduction Materialism Ecology The Crisis of Socio-Ecology 1. The Materialist Conception of Nature\\ Materialism and the Very Early Marx\\ Epicurus and the Revolution of Science and Reason 2. The Really Earthly Question\\ Feuerbach\\ The Alienation of Nature and Humanity\\ Association versus Political Economy 3. Parson Naturalists\\ Natural Theology\\ Natural Theology and Political Economy\\ The First Essay\\ The Second Essay\\ Thomas Chalmers and the Bridgewater Treatises 4. The Materialist Conception of History\\ The Critique of Malthus and the Origins of Historical Materialism\\ The New Materialism\\ Historical Geology and Historical Geography\\ Critique of the True Socialists\\ The Mechanistic “Prometheanism” of Proudhon\\ The View of the Communist Manifesto 5. The Metabolism of Nature and Society\\ Overpopulation and the Conditions of Reproduction of Human Beings\\ James Anderson and the Origins of Differential Fertility\\ Liebig, Marx, and the Second Agricultural Revolution 6. The Basis in Natural History for Our View\\ The Origin of Species\\ Darwin, Huxley, and the Defeat of Teleology\\ Marx and Engels: Labor and Human Evolution\\ The Plight of the Materialists\\ The Revolution in Ethnological Time: Morgan and Marx\\ A Young Darwinian and Karl Marx\\ 7. Epilogue\\ Dialectical Naturalism\\ Marxism and Ecology after Engels\\ Caudwell’s Dialectics\\ The Dialectical Ecologist\\ The Principle of Conservation