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His perspective has added much depth to my own personal perspective. If you are a free-thinker, this book has value.
P.S. You may wish to check to see if the library has this one before you buy.
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The education of Max Stirner, as outlined on pages xxxiii-xxxiv, included philosophy at the University of Berlin, University of Erlangen, University of Konigsberg, completion of formal studies at the University of Berlin, but after taking oral exams, was only awarded a conditional status and spent an unpaid probationary year teaching, "followed by a period of private study and irregular work." He was a teacher "at a respectable private girls' school in Berlin" from 1839 to 1844, when his book was published.
Compared to the brilliant writings of Nietzsche, the contents of this book seem to me more like the fate of philosophy that has fallen into the hands of a Lutheran. Of a fellow philosopher who sought to liberate our thinking, this book says, "But from this it also appears how thoroughly theological is the liberation that Feuerbach is labouring to give us." (p. 33). I can relate to that kind of thinking, but Max Stirner doesn't accomplish much for himself until he gets to the second part of the book: I Ownness (pp.141-154) II The owner (pp. 155-319) III The unique one (pp. 320-324).
Isaiah Berlin, in his book KARL MARX, notices how closely Marx and Max Stirner associated with the same people, though Marx thought of them as "three sordid peddlers of inferior metaphysical wares" (Berlin, p. 105) and wrote of Max Stirner, "Under the title of St Max he is pursued through seven hundred pages of heavy-handed mockery and insult." (Berlin, p. 106). The idea of a man being master of himself is called a "doctrine, which had a great influence on Nietzsche and probably on Bakunin (perhaps because it anticipated Marx's own economic theory of alienation too precisely), is treated as a pathological phenomenon, the agonised cry of a persecuted neurotic, belonging to the province of medicine rather than that of political theory." (Berlin, p. 106). At least Berlin isn't talking about religion.
Max Stirner is listed in the index of THE SOCIOLOGY OF PHILOSOPHIES by Randall Collins and occupies such an interesting place in Figure 14.2. Young Hegelians and Religious/Political Radicals, 1835-1900: DIE FREIEN and the Nihilists (Collins, p. 766) that I expected this book to fill me on on the details about a lot of people. Martin Luther is mentioned by Max Stirner about six times in the text of THE EGO AND ITS OWN, but the mystery of his importance is not as clear as the confusion leading up to his appearance near the end, with a paragraph before, about "There are crazy people who imagine that they are God the Father, God the Son, or the man in the moon, and so too the world swarms with fools who seem to themselves to be sinners; but, as the former are not the man in the moon, so the latter are ~ not sinners." (Stirner, p. 317). Sometimes Nietzsche wrote in that same style.
In many cases Stirner is abrasive and objectively unsympathetic to his audience (moreso than Rand ever thought of being). Stirner wasn't nearly as lucid as Nietzsche, though his themes were conducive to the latter's thought. As far as Marx is concerned, Stirner dictated what would later become Marxism and went 12 steps further and renounced it. Stirner is a staunch advocator of liberal anarchism, renouncing property via individualism a la Rand.
Though it is marketed as a political tract, the work transcends the boundaries of mere politics and becomes a universal thesis in the vein of Machiavelli's
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