Casey was born in Bury, Lancashire, England, and became interested in dialectical materialism as presented by Joseph Dietzgen in his book The Positive Outcome of Philosophy, of which the English translation was published in 1906.[1] Although he originally trained as a plumber, after losing his leg in accident, he retrained as a watchmaker, and he supported himself by working as watchmaker for over fifty years. However he was also active as a tutor with the Manchester Labour College.[2]
His article "Beginning with the Beginner" was first published in the magazine of the Plebs League and was adopted at their conference held in April 1920. It was produced as a pamphlet in which form it sold 50,000 copies.[2]
Method in thinking : a series of popular lectures (1933) Manchester: South-East Lancashire Labour College
A plain talk on questions affecting the working man: an address to the Blankside Ward of Weldun Labour Party (1943) Prestwich: Cornes
Six Talks on Morality (1943) Rawtenstall, Lancashire: F.A. Casey
Nature of morality (1943) Rawtenstall, Lancashire: F.A. Casey
How People Think (1949) Rawtenstall, Lancashire: F.A. Casey
Dietzgen's logic : a plain introduction to Josef Dietzgen's "The positive outcome of philosophy": written for the plain man (1949) Rawtenstall, Lancashire: F.A. Casey
^Macintyre, Stuart (1986). A Proletarian Science : Marxism in Britain, 1917-1933 (1st pbk. ed. with corrections. ed.). London: Lawrence and Wishart. pp. 134–5. ISBN0853156670.
^ abPutnam, Tim (1979). "Economics for Workers in the 1920s: Beginning with the Beginner". Capital and Class. Spring 1979 (3): 114–116.
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