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KARL MARX

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TRIER, BONN AND BERLIN 2 5<br />

Although in the years immediately following Hegel's death his school<br />

was united and supreme in the German universities, by the late 1830s it<br />

had already begun to split into two wings on the subject of religion.<br />

Whereas the conservative wing of the school held to the slogan that<br />

'the real is the rational' and saw nothing irrational in the traditional<br />

representation of religion, the radical wing opposed the conservatives'<br />

complacency with a dissatisfaction that meant it wanted to destroy the<br />

dogmas enshrined in religious representations that were now said to be<br />

outdated. These representations all had to be judged by a progressive<br />

reason, not one which, as Hegel had said, only 'paints grey with grey'<br />

and thus merely recognised what already existed. For the Master had also<br />

said that an age comprehended in thought was already in advance of its<br />

time, and the radicals drew the conclusion that the comprehension of<br />

religion already modified even its content, while its form became a pure<br />

myth. This debate started with the publication of David Strauss's Life of<br />

Jesus in 1835. Having failed to extract a picture of the historical Jesus<br />

from the gospel narratives, Strauss presented these narratives as mere<br />

expressions of the messianic idea present in primitive Christian communities,<br />

myths that were never intended to be taken as real historical narratives.<br />

It was quite natural that Young Hegelian discussion should at first<br />

be theological: most members of the Hegelian school were interested in<br />

religion above all; and the attitude of the Prussian Government made<br />

politics an extremely dangerous subject for debate. Yet granted the Establishment<br />

of the Church in Germany and the close connection between<br />

religion and politics, it was inevitable that a movement of religious criticism<br />

would swiftly become secularised into one of political opposition. It<br />

was as a member of this rapidly changing movement, which had its centre<br />

in the Berlin Doctors' Club, that Karl Marx first began to work out his<br />

views on philosophy and society.<br />

According to one of the members of the Doctors' Club, 'in this circle<br />

of aspiring young men, most of whom had already finished their studies,<br />

there reigned supreme the idealism, the thirst for knowledge and the<br />

liberal spirit, that still completely inspired the youth of that time. In these<br />

reunions the poems and essays that we had composed were read aloud<br />

and assessed, but the greatest part of our attention was devoted to the<br />

Hegelian philosophy..Of Marx's more intimate friends in the club,<br />

Adolph Rutenberg had recently been dismissed as a teacher of geography<br />

and now earned his living as a journalist; Karl Koppen was a history<br />

teacher who later became an acknowledged expert on the origins of<br />

Buddhism. Koppen published in 1840 Frederick the Great and his Opponents:<br />

dedicated to Marx, the book was a eulogy of Frederick and the principles<br />

of the Enlightenment. 100 The leading light in the club was Bruno Bauer,

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