Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

The Communist Ideal in Hegel and Marx

Posted By: nebulae
The Communist Ideal in Hegel and Marx

David MacGregor, "The Communist Ideal in Hegel and Marx"
English | ISBN: 0802056164 | 1984 | Djvu | 319 pages | 3 MB

Review
Excellent comparison of Hegel and Marx

This publication, THE COMMUNIST IDEAL IN HEGEL AND MARX (University of Toronto, 1984, 295 pages) is a real surprise.

I say, 'surprise,' since the title of this book runs directly contrary to my reading of Hegel, but Professor MacGregor rightly insists that our debates about Hegel's politics be founded strictly upon our encounter with Hegel's texts.

1. Professor MacGregor may surprise many with his opening words,

"This study is an attempt to rescue Hegel's thought from the interpretation imposed on it by Marx." (D. MacGregor, CIHM, p. 11)

2. Professor MacGregor cites sources to irrevocably vindicate my own long-standing claim that Feuerbach's reading of Hegel is misleading,

"Unfortunately, even tragically, the ingenious transformative critique of Hegel pioneered by Feuerbach was simply wrong." (D. MacGregor, ibid, p. 21)

3. Professor MacGregor provides a rich body of quotations to contrast Marx's dualist portrait of class conflict between bourgeoisie and proletariat with Hegel's trinitarian portrait of class conflict between agribusiness, manufacture and civil service, citing Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT, paragraphs 202-208. He writes:

"Hegel delineates three major class groupings in civil society: the *business* class of capitalists and workers, the *agricultural* class of nobles and peasants, and the *universal* class of civil servants." (D. MacGregor, ibid, p. 30)

This line of thought opens up a fruitful new domain of debate, until now unknown to all but the most academic.

4. Prof. David MacGregor's THE COMMUNIST IDEAL IN HEGEL AND MARX is extremely valuable because it is an extraordinary 20th century thesis that provides within 259 pages of text no less than 500 quotations by Hegel himself. Some quotations are footnoted with more citations, totaling more than 800 Hegel quotations and citations in all.

By focusing so strongly upon Hegel's texts, Professor MacGregor has established a new standard for Hegel/Marx studies. It seems to me that the appropriate way to revive G.W.F. Hegel, the sleeping giant, is to begin with the rigorous textual approach that Professor David MacGregor has provided in this important new study.

As one may imagine, my criticisms of his book are far from complete. For the present I will content myself with pointing out the positive aspects of his fine book. By focusing so strongly upon Hegel's texts, and by distancing himself from Feuerbach and Marx at the outset, Preofessor MacGregor has assured us that his revelation of Hegel's ideas will be fresh; different from nearly every other modern work.
Download