Marx believed the proletariat would triumph over the bourgeoisie. The proletariat is the social class composed of people who do not own or control the means of production; who own only the ability to sell their own labor to such owners and who are generally employed by such owners.
Karl Marx
No. Karl Marx was an atheist.
Communism would create a society with no social classes.
Karl Marx referred to the owners of capital as the bourgeoisie, who controlled the means of production and exploited the labor of the proletariat, the working class. Marx critiqued the capitalist system for perpetuating inequality and alienation between these two social classes.
According to Karl Marx, the engine of social change is class struggle. Marx believed that conflicts between different economic classes, particularly between the bourgeoisie (owners of the means of production) and the proletariat (working class), would lead to revolutionary change and the eventual establishment of a classless society.
They would unite to overthrow the political and social order
Karl Marx classified the capitalist societies into four major classes. These classes include the bourgeoisies, proletariat, landlords, and the petty bourgeoisie and middle class.
Karl Marx believed that the economic system, specifically the mode of production, defined the social structure of society. He argued that the division of labor and the ownership of the means of production created classes and determined social relationships.
Capitalism.
Karl Marx saw sociology as the scientific study of society and social relations shaped by the economy and the distribution of resources. He believed that sociology should analyze how power dynamics, social classes, and economic systems influence social structures and relationships.
Karl Marx was the philosopher who believed that history was a struggle between classes, specifically between the bourgeoisie (capitalist class) and the proletariat (working class). He developed the theory of historical materialism, stating that economic forces shape society and drive the conflict between different social classes.
The father of conflict theory in sociology is considered to be Karl Marx. Marx's work focused on how conflicts between different social classes, particularly the bourgeoisie (owners) and the proletariat (workers), shape society and lead to social change.