Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Reference Conventions
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Introduction: Spinoza, Marx and the Politics of Liberation
- 1 Marxism and Spinozism
- 2 Pars Naturae
- 3 Enduring Social Relations
- 4 The Identity of Nature and History
- 5 With Respect to Contradiction
- 6 The Secondary Nature of the Consciousness of Self
- 7 Subjectivity and Alienation (or the Impotence of the Subject)
- 8 The Factory of Subjectivity
- 9 Pure and Impure Activity
- Conclusion: Metaphysics and Production
- Appendix: The Question of Alienation: Frédéric Lordon, Marx and Spinoza
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Marxism and Spinozism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2025
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Reference Conventions
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Introduction: Spinoza, Marx and the Politics of Liberation
- 1 Marxism and Spinozism
- 2 Pars Naturae
- 3 Enduring Social Relations
- 4 The Identity of Nature and History
- 5 With Respect to Contradiction
- 6 The Secondary Nature of the Consciousness of Self
- 7 Subjectivity and Alienation (or the Impotence of the Subject)
- 8 The Factory of Subjectivity
- 9 Pure and Impure Activity
- Conclusion: Metaphysics and Production
- Appendix: The Question of Alienation: Frédéric Lordon, Marx and Spinoza
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
It is necessary to arrive at a certain form of unity, a space, between two diverse philosophers: the entire question is to know if this is possible without falling into the confusion that purely and simply identifies two philosophers with the fiction of a common truth.
Pierre Macherey, Hegel or SpinozaMost know the role that Spinoza played in German philosophy at the turn of the nineteenth century in the famous ‘pantheism controversy’ (which continued into the debate over atheism). Most also know the importance that Hegel attributed to Spinoza's thought (‘Spinoza or no philosophy at all’ stated the philosopher of Berlin). The presence of Spinoza throughout the philosophy of Schelling, from beginning to end, is also relatively well known. However, it seems that far fewer know about the role played by the reference to Spinoza at the end of the remarkable sequence of German Idealism, and notably in the period following the death of Hegel in 1831. There was a significant return of Spinoza, which was at the same time a return to Spinoza, in the period opened up by Hegel's achievement of speculative idealism, and more precisely in the period of the decomposition of the Hegelian system, which began in earnest from 1838 with the divide between the ‘old’ and ‘young’ Hegelians, accentuated by the publication of Feuerbach's The Essence of Christianity in 1841 and by Marx's own works between 1843 and 1846. This is the moment when Spinoza becomes not only an explicit point of reference, but also an explicitly positive reference, most notably in the work of Heine and Moses Hess. After the publication in 1833 of Feuerbach's History of Modern Philosophy from Bacon to Spinoza, Hess published in 1937 his first book, the Holy History of Mankind, with no indication of the author's identity other than as ‘a disciple of Spinoza’. As a thinker of the unity of all life, and of ‘the one’ as life, Spinoza is for Hess the thinker of the unity of natural life and spiritual life: his doctrine contained, in larval form, the reconciliation of Schelling's philosophy of Nature and Hegel's philosophy of Spirit prior to their development. It thus prepared the way for the philosophy of the future, which would reunite in action the activity of the self and the absolute and its activity outside the self.
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- Marx with SpinozaProduction, Alienation, History, pp. 13 - 21Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2023