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Max Stirner on the Path of Doubt examines Stirner's incisive
criticism of his contemporaries during the period from the death of
Hegel, in 1831, to the 1848 German Revolution. Stirner's work,
mainly the Ego and His Own, considered each of the major figures
within that German school known as "The Young Hegelians." Lawrence
S. Stepelevich argues that for Stirner, they were but "pious
atheists," and their common revolutionary ideology concealed an
ancient religious ground - which Stirner set about to reveal. The
central doctrine of this school, that Mankind was its own Savior,
was initiated in 1835 by the theologian, David F. Strauss's in his
Life of Jesus , and it progressed with August von Cieszkowski's
mystical recasting of history, followed by Bruno Bauer's absolute
atheism and Ludwig Feuerbach's statement that "Man is God." This
soon found reflection in the "Sacred History of Mankind" declared
by Moses Hess. Within a decade, the result was the secular
reformulation of this theological ideology into the "Scientific
Socialism" of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels. Although linked to
it, Max Stirner was the most relentless and feared critic of this
school. His work, never out of print, but largely ignored by
academics, has inspired countless "individualists" set upon
rejecting any form of religious or political "causes," and finding
Stirner's assertion that he had "set his cause upon nothing" took
this as their own cause.
Max Stirner on the Path of Doubt examines Stirner's incisive
criticism of his contemporaries during the period from the death of
Hegel, in 1831, to the 1848 German Revolution. Stirner's work,
mainly the Ego and His Own, considered each of the major figures
within that German school known as "The Young Hegelians." Lawrence
S. Stepelevich argues that for Stirner, they were but "pious
atheists," and their common revolutionary ideology concealed an
ancient religious ground - which Stirner set about to reveal. The
central doctrine of this school, that Mankind was its own Savior,
was initiated in 1835 by the theologian, David F. Strauss's in his
Life of Jesus , and it progressed with August von Cieszkowski's
mystical recasting of history, followed by Bruno Bauer's absolute
atheism and Ludwig Feuerbach's statement that "Man is God." This
soon found reflection in the "Sacred History of Mankind" declared
by Moses Hess. Within a decade, the result was the secular
reformulation of this theological ideology into the "Scientific
Socialism" of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels. Although linked to
it, Max Stirner was the most relentless and feared critic of this
school. His work, never out of print, but largely ignored by
academics, has inspired countless "individualists" set upon
rejecting any form of religious or political "causes," and finding
Stirner's assertion that he had "set his cause upon nothing" took
this as their own cause.
The course of Western philosophy has been profoundly altered by the
philosophy of Hegel. The first of those who set about the
transforming and revisioning of the world according to Hegel's
dialectical theory were called "The Young Hegelians". Today, the
most recognised names among them are Karl Marx and Friedrich
Engels, but in their own age each of the Young Hegelians shared an
equal notoriety. Each in turn, from Strauss with his reduction of
the historical Jesus into a Messianic myth, to Stirner with his
uncompromising egoism, shocked every cultural convention of their
age. The aftershocks of their unrestrained criticism have forever
altered the topography of our own. "The Young Hegelians" retrieves
some of the central writings of that troubling generation.
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