The analysis of capitalism allows a researcher to learn a great deal about the different ideologies from countless sources based on experiences though time in many different countries. Two great theorists Karl Marx and Max Weber both have a scope on capitalism and what perpetuates it through which their own experiences and ideas appear. The ideology of capitalism between these two caries within it certain similarities, but while Marx strongly opposed capitalism and expected a revolution, Weber establishes a different look into structure and saw a better system where to perpetuate bureaucracy and capitalism are the pillar of efficiency.
Karl Mark, although unpublished in his lifetime has come to provide key insights into the critique of capitalism where alienation is the main focus. The concept of superstructure is his basis for a capitalist society. Marx's writings and his ideologies dominated a particular era. He believed everything that people say, imagine and conceive, included in such things as politics, laws, morality and religion were all crucial to the superstructure. The superstructure that Marx writes of is broken into two distinct social classes: the proletariat and the bourgeois. Those who own the means of production and controlling power, or the bourgeois, work together to rule the institutions in society that govern civil life and the economy, and by doing so, perpetuate capitalism.
According to Marx, wealth is created by the proletariat which are known as the working class, the creators of commodity and ruled by the bourgeois ideology. Although this class creates the wealth, they are not appropriated the wealth, but rather the bourgeois class who maintains ownership and is in charge of ...