THE YOUNG KARL MARX
German Philosophy, Modern
Politics, and Human Flourishing
David Leopold, 2007
Pages 339
Acknowledgements
page xi
A
note on language, references, and translation xiii
1 Introduction
1
The ‘discovery’
of the early writings 1
Their
contested status 5
Additional
obstacles 8
Human
nature and the modern state 10
Doubts and
ambitions 12
Organisation
and argument 15
2 German
philosophy 17
The 1843
Kritik 19
Traumgeschichte
and modernity 22
Heine (and
Paris) 26
Traumgeschichte
and Hegel’s Rechtsphilosophie 32
Hegel’s
metaphysics 34
What is
dead: Marx’s critical response 47
What Hegel’s
insight is not 56
The
lineaments of the modern social world 62
What is
living: Hegel’s empirical insight 69
The failure
of Hegelian mediation 74
The
continuing relevance of the Kritik 82
A (brief )
digest 96
3 Modern
politics 100
Introduction
to Bauer 101
Bauer and
Judaism 109
Bauer and
real freedom 115
Bauer and
emancipation 120
Reconstructing
Bauer’s concerns 129
The
preconditions of the modern state 134
Christianity
and the modern state: the positive analogy 139
Christianity
and the modern state: the negative analogy 145
Marx and
rights 150
Antisemitism
and Jewish self-hatred 163
A (brief )
digest 180
4 Human
flourishing 183
The
structure of human emancipation 184
Feuerbach’s
critique of religion and philosophy 186
Feuerbach
and politics 203
Feuerbach
and Marx 218
Marx and
human nature 223
A z¯oon
politikon 234
Human
flourishing 241
Institutional
fragments 245
The end of
politics 254
Marx and
Rousseau 262
Marx and
Saint-Simon 271
A (brief )
digest 277
5 Epilogue
279
Definitional
preliminaries 280
Marx’s
(qualified) approval of utopianism 282
Marx’s
(qualified) disapproval of utopianism 288
The
necessity of blueprints 293
A last word
295
Bibliographical
note 298
Index 310
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