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Neve: Karl Marx

Decent Essays

Neve: Karl Marx was a European writer who lived from 1818-1883. Marx grew up in a relatively wealthy household in Trier, Prussia, which is now southwestern Germany on the French border. Karl Marx was a family man. He had four daughters, three sons and a wife. However, one of his children he fathered with a middle aged servant and did not acknowledge the child’s existence. Also, two of his daughters, Laura and Eleanor, committed suicide as a direct result of Marx’s interference with their lives. He attended Berlin University and considered a career as a university professor in philosophy, but never followed through. Although Marx started out as an author of romantic poetry, he is best known for his novels, The Communist Manifesto, and Das Kapital. …show more content…

He only spoke of people in categories: the bourgeois (middle class) and the proletarian (working class) and believed that individual men were only clones that identity with vast numbers of others because of the same relation to the economic system. Marx believed that people’s thoughts and ideas were determined by their economic position in society. To Marx, everything was a reflection of economics. A quote that reflects this is, “In bourgeois society capital is independent and has individuality, while the living person is dependant and has no individuality”. Marx was deeply affected by Hegelianism. Hegelianism is the idea that all reality is capable of being expressed in rational categories. The goal of Hegelianism is to reduce reality to a more synthetic unity within the system of absolute …show more content…

He claimed to support the underdog, but in a twisted fashion. Marx wrote with rage and hatred, but most of it was fake. The rage was probably an attempt to assume generosity of spirit or love of mankind that he didn’t possess but felt he ought to.
Neve: Karl Marx aimed to lure readers in with violence. He believed that the only way to change anything was by the forceful overthrow of all existing social conditions. He also strongly believed that Communism reflected the views of everyone perfectly. There would be no need for political parties, or even individuals with power. Since Communism reflected everyone’s ideas so perfectly, if you were against it, you must be, by definition, against trying to benefit society.
Lindy: Religion was an unnecessary social institution that provided a little comfort, but in the end served only to stupefy people in the end to Marx. This is reflected in this quote from Karl Marx, “Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.”. Marx believed injustice, poor economic conditions, desperation, and panic cause humanity to cling to religion and Marx’s goal was for the world to no longer need this

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