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KARL MARX

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75<br />

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

whole organization of our society, lost to himself, sold, subjected to<br />

domination by inhuman conditions and elements - in a word, man who<br />

is no longer a real species-being. The fantasy, dream and postulate of<br />

Christianity, the sovereignty of man - but of man as an alien being<br />

separate from actual man, is present in democracy as a tangible reality<br />

and is its secular motto. 47<br />

Having shown that religion was more than compatible with civil rights,<br />

Marx now contested Bauer's refusal to acknowledge the Jewish claim to<br />

human rights, the rights of man. Bauer had said that neither the Jew nor<br />

the Christian could claim universal human rights because their particular<br />

and exclusive religions necessarily invalidated any such claims. Marx<br />

refuted Bauer's view by referring to the French and American Constitutions.<br />

Firstly, he discussed the distinction between the rights of the<br />

citizen and the rights of man. The rights of the citizen were of a political<br />

order; they were expressed in man's participation in the universality of<br />

the state and, as had been shown, by no means presupposed the abolition<br />

of religion. These rights reflected the social essence of man - though in<br />

a totally abstract form - and the reclaiming of this essence would give<br />

rise to human emancipation. Not so the rights of man in general: being<br />

expressions of the division of bourgeois society they had nothing social<br />

about them. As exemplified in the French Constitutions of 1791 and 1793<br />

and in the Constitutions of New Hampshire and Pennsylvania, the rights<br />

of man did not deny the right to practise religion; on the contrary, they<br />

expressly recognised it, and Marx quoted chapter and verse to prove it.<br />

Marx then asked: Why are these rights called the rights of man}<br />

Because they were the rights of man regarded as a member of civil society.<br />

And why was the member of civil society identified with man? Because<br />

the rights of man were egoistic and anti-social. This was the case with<br />

all the constitutions in question, even the most radical; none succeeded<br />

in subordinating 'man' to the 'citizen'. All the rights of man that they<br />

proclaimed had the same character. Liberty, for example, 'the right to do<br />

and perform what does not harm others', was, according to Marx, 'not<br />

based on the union of man with man but on the separation of man from<br />

man. It is the right to this separation, the right of the limited individual<br />

who is limited to himself.' 48 Property, the right to dispose of one's<br />

possessions as one wills without regard to others, was 'the right of<br />

selfishness... it leads man to see in other men not the realisation, but<br />

the limitation of his own freedom'. 49 Equality was no more than the equal<br />

right to the liberty described above, and security was the guarantee of<br />

egoism.<br />

Thus none of the so-called rights of man went beyond the egoistic<br />

man separated from the community as a member of civil society. Summa-

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