PHIL 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 46: The German Ideology, Julien Offray De La Mettrie, Bruno Bauer
Document Summary
Karl (karl) marx (1818-1882) is of jewish origin, but his father converted to protestantism before his birth. He spent his childhood and youth in trier (germany), receiving a fairly secularized education, steeped in kantian racialism and political liberalism. He made his studies of jurisprudence in bonn and berlin. After his studies, he became editor of the. Rheinische zeitung in cologne, where he was familiar with the socio-political and economic reality of the "industrial revolution". These experiences were decisive in finding out the abysmal difference between the hegelian ideal of the absolute spirit and the subhuman situation of the. He began to sharply criticize hegel, especially his conception of the state, in his first work kritik des hegelschen staatsrechts (critique of the hegelian concept of the state) in 1842. In 1843, marx moved to paris, where he published the deutsch-franz sische jahrb - cher (german-french. In 1844 another critique of hegel"s philosophy appeared in the kritik der.