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The book really reads like a collection of four essays.
I). From Hegel to Feuerbach: This chapter is an overview of the failure of Hegelian thought that German philosophy was so imbued with in the mid-19th century, which also serves as a kind of marker for the beginning of modern philosophy.
II). Idealism and Materialism: This chapter is Engels version of sociology and psychological anthropology. His expectation of the emergence of a pragmatic materialism parallels that of Feuerbach's. This chapter leads through the death of idealism to the birth of materialism.
III). Feuerbach's Philosophy of Religion and Ethics: As the first chapter gives us an overview of Hegel, so this third chapter outlines the successes and failures of Feuerbach's thought. We also see the emergent thrust that led to Marxism in its organic position at the time of its advent, not as the polemics of conservative, Christian historians of today have painted it.
IV). Dialectical Materialism: Finally, chapter four outlines Engels's sociological expectations in the context of the preceeding three chapters; from feudalism to the industrial modernity of his time. Not only does Engels scetch out how Christianity became the possession of the ruling class as a means of government, but how philosophy too became a tool of their hegemony. His expectation that science would eventually meld with the worker rather than commercial interests belies the naivete that saw the failure of modern Marxism. His conclusion that philosophy too would emerge victorious along with the worker is certianly puzzling in hindsight, and can still be seen in the tenacious frustrations of post-modernism over the failure of Marxism.
Feuerbach aside, this little book is an excellent read full of vitality.
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Marx departs from Hegel and his latter-day followers (whether revolutionary or conservative) in both method and in goals. As far as methodology is concerned, Marx is an empiricist of a certain normatively world-changing brand, which obviously leaves him open to critiques from "pure" empiricism as being either an outright determinist (an obviously abhorrent concept to the entire Humean tradition) or else being merely a moral philosopher in scientist's clothing.
As for goals, while some of Hegel's followers might share a certain revolutionary telos with Marx, they cannot truly be his comrades because for Marx the revolutionary method (historical materialism) is inseparable from the revolutionary goal (communism); that is, communism cannot by nature be an "ideal" . . . "to which reality will have to adjust itself" (as it is for the Hegelians). Instead, the ideal of communism must adjust itself to reality (thus becoming no longer an ideal), and that is precisely Marx's project as expressed in the 11th Thesis on Feuerbach: through his writings, to "adjust" the real world to his view of the way it's going to be (by writing about the world the way that it has been, and the way that it is now).
I disagree with the previous reviewer -- this is not an ideal intro to Marxism. Read the Communist Manifesto, then move on to the Eighteenth Brumaire, or this, or Capital, or the early works.
And by the way, get the International Publishers edition if you can find it.
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Philosophically, Feuerbach does a credible job of interpreting theism into a well structured pshycological description. He really does a far better job of this than the majority of his contemporaries and even most modern day thinkers. Although Camus observed as far back as the 1930s that god was really no longer an interesting discussion, and Nietzsche before him, for the purposes of Feuerbach's book one must realize that in the mid-19th century Hebrew monotheism was still a vital psychology. Feuerbach, a left Hegelian, offered a cutting edge analysis of how the logical mechanisms of organic cognition had been formulated into what his fellow Germans and other Europeans knew as Christianity, or religion.
His articulation of theism verses speculative theology is still a relevant schema, juxtaposing naive metaphysics with the complex logic of what Kant had called 'pure reason.' His anaysis of religion in this context, which he further contrasted with Spinozan pantheism as the precursor to atheism, is an excellent outline of the development of European thought as it emerged from antiquity into 19th-century scientific realism. In Feuerbach we see a cogent post-Hegelian synthesis of European philosophy, however obscure Feuerbach may be in modern times. Feuerbach's errors are aplenty here, as he casts much of his philosophy on the wager of pure sensation without delving much into cognition. This oversight is understandable however within the time frame he wrote in and does little to undercut the primary thrust of his message: the urgency and necessity of a post-religious, existential anthropology. His lack of focus on cognition leads him almost to an untenable level of idealism, but an idealism at least predicated on an organic anthrological perspective free of cartoonish metaphysics.
The object of his then 'new philosophy' was not an abstraction of humans as some Hegelian spirit, but "the real and whole being of man", warts, protein, myths and all; a type of reason that Feuerbach ironically called "reason saturated with the blood of man." Feuerbach was capable of articulating a humanism really more serious and pragmatic than many of the versions we hear of even in today's world. Feuerbach is definitely an inspiration.
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The book is, however, a very compelling read in its own right as well. Feuerbach takes us through literally the whole catalogue of Christian belief, and shows us how each item of belief is explained at least as well - or perhaps even better - as an anthropomorphism rather than as a supernatural manifestation. It must be said, though, that each single one of his arguments on their own do not lead to such a conviction. Just like you are not convinced that the dice are loaded by getting 6 once or twice, you will not be convinced if anthropomorphism fits the bill of Christianity in a few single instances. However - analogously with the dice - when you strike 6 nearly every time, you will be convinced that the dice are loaded.
If I have a criticism of Feuerbach, it is that after he has revealed the Essence of Christianity as being the worship of Man, he keeps the essence and only discards the accidental properties of Christianity, i.e. the supernaturalism. This was also what Max Stirner called him on. But my disagreement does not mean a disparagement of the value of the book. So I recommend it as a read.
The book is, however, a very compelling read in its own right as well. Feuerbach takes us through literally the whole catalogue of Christian belief, and shows us how each item of belief is explained at least as well - or perhaps even better - as an anthropomorphism rather than as a supernatural manifestation. It must be said, though, that each single one of his arguments on their own do not lead to such a conviction. Just like you are not convinced that the dice are loaded by getting 6 once or twice, you will not be convinced if anthropomorphism fits the bill of Christianity in a few single instances. However - analogously with the dice - when you strike 6 nearly every time, you will be convinced that the dice are loaded.
If I have a criticism of Feuerbach, it is that after he has revealed the Essence of Christianity as being the worship of Man, he keeps the essence and only discards the accidental properties of Christianity, i.e. the supernaturalism. This was also what Max Stirner called him on. But my disagreement does not mean a disparagement of the value of the book. So I recommend it as a read.
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Beyond this, I tried to understand his work. He had no concrete authority for some of his thoughts. I do not think you can just espouse a theory without providing hooks to help it stand up to argument. Really it is just a book of opinions written in gobbldy gook.
I do not recommend you buy this book or this author.
Jimmy
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While The Essence of Christianity is a fine read and a thorough critique of that faith, it is his Lectures that provide insights jarring even in the 21st century. While recognition for Ernest Becker is just building steam (he insightfully traced a great deal of human behavior to our evasion of death anxiety), Feuerbach remains a footnote in Marxian studies despite having developed a thesis similar to Beckerâs 120 years earlier.
Feuerbach found religion rooted in a few core drivesâ"including the fear of death. He also noted that many of our sacred cows came from the sanctification of those things that our lives and cultures depended upon (like the cow). In short, he defined theology as anthropology. The things we worship are the very things that support human life. Feuerbach is the Xenophanes of the 19th century.
Harveyâs book, grounded in careful scholarship, teases out the best of Feuerbach and considers his ideas in the context of our own time.