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KARL MARX

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

In a letter of explanation to Leske he wrote: 'It seemed to me very<br />

important that a work polemicising against German philosophy and current<br />

German socialism should precede my positive construction. This is<br />

necessary in order to prepare the public for the point of view of my<br />

Economics which is diametrically opposed to the previous German intellectual<br />

approach.' 24 The Holy Family had not accomplished this: it was written<br />

before Marx had developed his systematically materialist approach to<br />

history. Further, Bauer had published a reply to the Holy Family in which<br />

Marx and Engels were labelled as 'Feuerbachian dogmatists'; 25 and in<br />

November 1844 another Young Hegelian, Max Stirner, had published The<br />

Ego and its Own, an anarcho-existentialist work of extraordinary power<br />

and fascination which branded all the forces that oppressed mankind,<br />

whether religion or liberalism or socialism, as illusions from which men<br />

should free themselves by refusing any form of self-sacrifice and indulging<br />

in conscious egoism. 26 And Marx and Engels had naturally been the object<br />

of strong criticism from Stirner as communist disciples of Feuerbach. The<br />

German Ideology was thus conceived primarily as a work to make clear the<br />

disagreements between Marx and Engels and Feuerbach, and also to deal<br />

finally with the latest - and last - manifestations of Young Hegelian<br />

idealism, Bauer's 'pure criticism' and Stirner's egoism.<br />

The book was begun at the end of September 1845 with a lengthy<br />

criticism of Feuerbach - 'the only one who has at least made some<br />

progress' 27 - into which critiques of Bauer and Stirner were to be inserted.<br />

By April 1846 these critiques had grown to the size of a large book in its<br />

own right which was prepared for publication and taken to Germany by<br />

Weydemeyer who had been staying with the Marx family for the first few<br />

months of 1846. The section on Feuerbach, however, remained unfinished<br />

and, in fact, contained very little on Feuerbach himself. The second<br />

volume dealt with current socialist trends in Germany. It reached only a<br />

hundred or so pages and work on the manuscript was abandoned in<br />

August 1846."<br />

By far the most important part of The German Ideology is the unfinished<br />

section on Feuerbach. Marx and Engels began by making fun of the<br />

philosophical pretensions of the Young Hegelians which they described<br />

as 'the putrescence of Absolute Spirit' and characterised as follows:<br />

In the general chaos mighty empires have arisen only to meet with<br />

immediate doom, heroes have emerged momentarily only to be hurled<br />

back into obscurity by bolder and stronger rivals. It was a revolution<br />

beside which the French Revolution was child's play, a world struggle<br />

beside which the struggles of the Diadochi appear insignificant. Principles<br />

ousted one another, heroes of the mind overthrew each other<br />

with unheard-of rapidity, and in the three years 1842-45 more of the

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