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KARL MARX

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io6 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

labour and the development of nature for man, he has the observable and<br />

irrefutable proof of his self-creation and the process of his origin.' 166<br />

Thus for socialist man the question of an alien being beyond man and<br />

nature whose existence would imply their unreality had become impossible.<br />

For him the mutual interdependence of man and nature was what<br />

was essential and anything else seemed unreal. 'Atheism, as a denial of<br />

this unreality, has no longer any meaning, for atheism is a denial of God<br />

and tries to assert through this negation the existence of man; but socialism<br />

as such no longer needs this mediation; it starts from the theoretical<br />

and practical sense-perception of man and nature as the true reality.' 167<br />

This perception, once established, no longer required the abolition of<br />

private property, no longer needed communism. Marx finished with a<br />

very Hegelian remark on the transitoriness of the communist phase:<br />

Communism represents the positive in the form of the negation of the<br />

negation and thus a phase in human emancipation and rehabilitation,<br />

both real and necessary at this juncture of human development. Communism<br />

is the necessary form and dynamic principle of the immediate<br />

future, but communism is not as such the goal of human development,<br />

the form of human society. 168<br />

Here communism seems to be viewed as merely a stage in the dialectical<br />

evolution, a stage that at a given moment would have served its purpose<br />

and be superseded. The picture, in the first part of the manuscript, of<br />

'true communism' as 'the solution of the riddle of history' 169 was much<br />

more static and unhistorical.<br />

In the third and final section of the Manuscripts, Marx tried to come<br />

to grips definitively with the thought of the Master. He began by discussing<br />

the various attitudes of the young Hegelians to Hegel and singled<br />

out Feuerbach as the only constructive thinker; he then used Hegel to<br />

show up the weaknesses in Feuerbach's approach. Finally he settled down<br />

to a long analysis of Hegel's fundamental error, evident generally in the<br />

Phenomenology and particularly in the last chapter. Marx's style is here<br />

often obscure, involved and extremely repetitive, as he was constantly<br />

working over and reformulating his attitude to Hegel. In his doctoral<br />

thesis he had rejected the idea that Hegel was guilty of 'accommodation'<br />

and demanded that apparent contradictions be resolved by appeal to<br />

Hegel's 'essential consciousness'. 170 In his Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of<br />

Right, he showed by reference to particular examples that Hegel's principles<br />

inevitably involved accommodation. But it was not until he transferred<br />

his attention from Hegel's Philosophy of Right to his Phenomenology<br />

that he was able to formulate a general criticism of Hegel's dialectic. Here<br />

it was clear that Marx, although still at home with Hegel's concepts and

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