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KARL MARX

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4° TRIER, BONN AND BERLIN<br />

41<br />

and in particular the philosophy of Fichte and Schelling: immanence,<br />

development and contradiction. 'The great merit of Hegel's philosophy',<br />

wrote Engels, 'was that for the first time the totality of the natural,<br />

historical and spiritual aspects of the world were conceived and represented<br />

as a process of constant transformation and development and an<br />

effort was made to show the organic character of this process.' 95 Hegel<br />

started from the belief that, as he said of the French Revolution, 'man's<br />

existence has its centre in his head, i.e. in Reason, under whose inspiration<br />

he builds up the world of reality'. In his greatest work, the Phiinomenologie,<br />

Hegel traced the development of mind or spirit, reintroducing historical<br />

movement into philosophy and asserting that the human mind can attain<br />

absolute knowledge. He analysed the development of human consciousness,<br />

from its immediate perception of the here and now to the stage of<br />

self-consciousness, the understanding that allows man to analyse the world<br />

and order his own actions accordingly. Following this was the stage of<br />

reason itself - understanding the real, after which spirit - by means<br />

of religion and art - attained absolute knowledge, the level at which man<br />

recognised in the world the stages of his own reason. These stages Hegel<br />

called 'alienations', in so far as they were creations of the human mind<br />

yet thought of as independent and superior to the human mind. This<br />

absolute knowledge is at the same time a sort of recapitulation of the<br />

human spirit, for each successive stage retains elements of the previous<br />

ones at the same time as it goes beyond them. This movement that<br />

suppresses and yet conserves Hegel called Aufhebung, a word that has this<br />

double sense in German. Hegel also talked of 'the power of the negative',<br />

thinking that there was always a tension between any present state of<br />

affairs and what it was becoming. For any present state of affairs was in<br />

the process of being negated, changed into something else. This process<br />

was what Hegel meant by dialectic. 94<br />

Faced with the manifest attraction of this philosophy, Marx began to<br />

clarify his ideas by writing - a procedure he had adopted before and<br />

would adopt many times later. He produced a twenty-four-page dialogue<br />

entitled 'Cleanthes, or the Starting Point and Necessary Progress of<br />

Philosophy'. For this purpose he acquainted himself with natural science,<br />

history and a study of the works of Schelling. This dialogue ended with<br />

Marx's conversion to Hegelianism: 'My last sentence was the beginning<br />

of Hegel's system and this work which had caused one endless<br />

headache ... this my dearest child, reared by moonlight, like a false siren<br />

delivers me into the arms of the enemy.' 95 Thus Marx had gone through<br />

the same evolution as classical German philosophy itself, from Kant and<br />

Fichte through Schelling to Hegel.<br />

This process of giving up his romantic idealism and delivering himself

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