As China's feudal society developed its commodity economy and so carried within itself the embryo of capitalism, China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even if there had been no influence of foreign imperialism. Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management - 第 108 頁Frank B. Tipton 著 - 2008 - 432 頁有限的預覽 - 關於此書
| Dick Wilson - 1977 - 352 頁
...readers see how much Chinese history was part of world history. This was the sentence which he added: As China's feudal society developed its commodity economy and so carried within itself the embryo cf capitalism, China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even if there... | |
| Paul A. Cohen - 1984 - 268 頁
..."As China's feudal society had developed a commodity economy, and so carried within itself the seeds of capitalism, China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even without the impact of foreign capitalism." The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party,... | |
| Olivier Zunz - 1985 - 350 頁
...(shong-p'in ching-chi), and so carried within itself the seeds of capitalism (tzu-pen-chu-i meng-ya), China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even without the impact of foreign capitalism." 114 Throughout the mid-1950s an enormous number of scholarly... | |
| William J. Crotty - 2005 - 326 頁
...their nation was so backward. As Mao was to write, 'China would of herself have developed slowly into capitalist society even if there had been no influence of foreign capitalism'. For their part, Kuomintang writers such as Sa Mengwu, who believed that Sun Yatsen had advocated the... | |
| Robert Gardella, Jane Kate Leonard, Andrea Lee McElderry - 1998 - 196 頁
...debate. The theoretical basis of the controversy may safely be attributed to Mao Zedong in 1939—that "[As] China's feudal society developed its commodity...there had been no influence of foreign capitalism." That China could change is grounded less in economic history than in political theory, as Lu Zhenyu... | |
| Timothy Brook, Gregory Blue - 2002 - 308 頁
...economy, and so carried within itself the seeds of capitalism." From this was drawn the conclusion that "China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even without the impact of foreign capitalism." 101 The sprouts discussion of the 1950s was thus pursued... | |
| Paul A. Cohen - 2003 - 242 頁
...'-As China's feudal society had developed a commodity economy, and so carried within itself the seeds of capitalism, China would, of herself, have developed slowly into a capitalist society even without the impact of foreign capitalism." The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party,... | |
| William J. Crotty - 2005 - 326 頁
...their nation was so backward. As Mao was to write, 'China would of herself have developed slowly into capitalist society even if there had been no influence of foreign capitalism'. For their part, Kuomintang writers such as Sa Mengwu, who believed that Sun Yatsen had advocated the... | |
| David Clark - 2006 - 757 頁
...'As China's feudal society had developed a commodity economy and so carried within itself the seeds of capitalism, China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even without the impact of foreign capitalism'. In this view, colonialism and imperialism were held responsible... | |
| Nick Knight - 2007 - 310 頁
...feudal society had developed a commodity economy, and so carried within itself the seeds (nrcngya) of capitalism, China would of herself have developed slowly into a capitalist society even without the impact of foreign capitalism."72 However, during the Yan'an period, Mao regarded the universalizing... | |
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