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KARL MARX

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I34 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, cowboy<br />

or critic. This fixation of social activity, this consolidation of what we<br />

ourselves produce into an objective power above us, growing out of<br />

our control, thwarting our expectations, bringing to naught our calculations,<br />

is one of the chief factors in historical development up till<br />

now. 40<br />

At least the means to the end was clear. The section finished with the<br />

words:<br />

If the proletarians are to assert themselves as individuals, they will have<br />

to abolish the very condition of their existence hitherto (which has,<br />

moreover, been that of all society up to the present), namely, labour.<br />

Thus they find themselves direcdy opposed to the form in which,<br />

hitherto, the individuals of which society consists have given themselves<br />

collective expression, that is, the State. In order therefore to assert<br />

themselves as individuals, they must overthrow the State 41<br />

The section of The German Ideology dealing with Bruno Bauer is very<br />

short: Marx had already dealt with Bauer's ideas at length in The Holy<br />

Family and restricted himself here to reiterating in a few pages the<br />

complete barrenness of 'critical criticism' and refuting Bauer's attacks on<br />

Feuerbach.<br />

The section on Stirner, on the other hand, is much longer than all the<br />

other parts of The German Ideology put together. When Stirner's book<br />

first appeared Engels considered that it contained several positive elements<br />

that could serve as a basis for communist ideas, but Marx soon disabused<br />

him of any such notion. 42 Marx's plans in December 1844 to write an<br />

article criticising Stirner had been upset by his expulsion from Paris and<br />

the banning of Vorwiirts. In The German Ideology he and Engels certainly<br />

spared no effort: their onslaught on 'Saint Max' as they called him equals<br />

in length and easily surpasses in tedium Stirner's own book. 43 There is<br />

the occasional flash of brilliance, but the (quite correct) portrayal of<br />

Stirner as the final product of the Young Hegelian school who carried to<br />

its logical extreme the subjective side of the Hegelian dialectic too often<br />

degenerates into pages of mere word-play and hair-splitting. The central<br />

criticism made by Marx and Engels is that Stirner's fundamental opposition<br />

of egoism to altruism is itself a superficial view:<br />

Communist theoreticians, the only ones who have time to devote to<br />

the study of history, are distinguished precisely because they alone have<br />

discovered that throughout history the 'general interest' is created by<br />

individuals who are defined as 'private persons'. They know that this<br />

contradiction is only a seeming one because one side of it, the so-called<br />

'general', is constandy being produced by the other side, private

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