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In the space of a few decades men have attained, in great measure, a goal which was long anticipated and desired. They have become, in Descartes' phrase, 'the masters and possessors of nature.' A scientific and technological revolution, which continues at an accelerating pace, has already largely accomplished the substitution of knowledge for physical labor as the principal force of production, and we live in the conditions which Marx, over a century ago, saw as the final outcome of capitalist production: 'The process of production has ceased to be a process of labor . It is man's productive powers in general, his understanding of nature and his ability to master it, which now appear as the basis of production and wealth.'[1]
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