The state is an extremely multifaceted phenomenon. The reasons of its
origin are explained by many objective factors: biological,
psychological, economic, social, religious, national and others. Their
general scientific comprehension is hardly possible within the framework
of one universal theory, though in the history of human thought such
attempts were made, and quite successfully (Plato, Aristotle,
Montesquieu, Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Plekhanov, Berdyaev). The
history of civilization knows dozens, hundreds of legal theories. For
centuries, the deep minds of mankind have been fighting over the
unravelling of the phenomenon of law, the discovery of its essence.
Legal theories of the past were the conquest of human culture, the
desire of scientific thought to penetrate into the very core of human
relations. The class and economic conditionality of law is the most
important fundamental position of Marxist theory. The main content of
this theory is the idea that the right is the product of class society;
the expression and consolidation of the will of the economically
dominant class.