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The German Ideology, Volume I: Feuerbach: Unknown

The German Ideology, Volume I: Feuerbach
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  1. Volume I: Critique of Modern German Philosophy According to Its Representatives Feuerbach, B. Bauer and Stirner
    1. Preface
    2. I: Feuerbach. Opposition of the Materialist and Idealist Outlook
      1. A. Idealism and Materialism
        1. The Illusions of German Ideology
          1. Ideology in General, German Ideology in Particular
        2. First Premises of Materialist Method
          1. 3. Production and Intercourse. Division of Labour and Forms of Property – Tribal, Ancient, Feudal
          2. 4. The Essence of the Materialist Conception of History. Social Being and Social Consciousness
        3. History: Fundamental Conditions
        4. Private Property and Communism
        5. History as a Continuous Process
          1. 5. Development of the Productive Forces as a Material Premise of Communism
      2. B. The Illusion of the Epoch
        1. Civil Society and the Conception of History
          1. Conclusions from the Materialist Conception of History
            1. 7. Summary of the Materialist Conception of History
            2. 8. The Inconsistency of the Idealist Conception of History in General, and of German Post-Hegelian Philosophy in Particular
        2. Feuerbach: Philosophic, and Real, Liberation
          1. 1. Preconditions of the Real Liberation of Man
          2. 2. Feuerbach’s Contemplative and Inconsistent Materialism
        3. Ruling Class and Ruling Ideas
      3. C. The Real Basis of Ideology
        1. Division of Labour: Town and Country
          1. 2. The Division of Material and Mental Labour. Separation of Town and Country, The Guild System
          2. Further Division of Labour
        2. The Rise of Manufacturing
          1. 4. Most Extensive Division of Labour. Large-Scale Industry
        3. The Relation of State and Law to Property
          1. Notes, written by Marx, intended for further elaboration 12. FORMS OF SOCIAL CONSCIOUSNESS
      4. D. Proletarians and Communism
        1. Individuals, Class, and Community
        2. Forms of Intercourse
          1. Contradiction between individuals and their conditions of life as contradiction between productive forces and the form of intercourse
          2. 5. The Contradiction Between the Productive Forces and the Form of Intercourse as the Basis for Social Revolution
        3. Conquest
        4. Contradictions of Big Industry: Revolution
          1. 9. Contradiction Between the Productive Forces and the Form of Intercourse
          2. 10. The Necessity, Preconditions and Consequences of the Abolition of Private Property
          3. The Necessity of the Communist Revolution
  2. Notes

[←5 ] 

[This paragraph appears as a marginal note in the manuscript – Ed.] And out of this very contradiction between the interest of the individual and that of the community the latter takes an independent form as the State, divorced from the real interests of individual and community, and at the same time as an illusory communal life, always based, however, on the real ties existing in every family and tribal conglomeration – such as flesh and blood, language, division of labour on a larger scale, and other interests – and especially, as we shall enlarge upon later, on the classes, already determined by the division of labour, which in every such mass of men separate out, and of which one dominates all the others. It follows from this that all struggles within the State, the struggle between democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy, the struggle for the franchise, etc., etc., are merely the illusory forms in which the real struggles of the different classes are fought out among one another (of this the German theoreticians have not the faintest inkling, although they have received a sufficient introduction to the subject in the Deutsch-Französische Jahrbücher and Die heilige Familie). Further, it follows that every class which is struggling for mastery, even when its domination, as is the case with the proletariat, postulates the abolition of the old form of society in its entirety and of domination itself, must first conquer for itself political power in order to represent its interest in turn as the general interest, which in the first moment it is forced to do. Just because individuals seek only their particular interest, which for them does not coincide with their communal interest (in fact the general is the illusory form of communal life), the latter will be imposed on them as an interest “alien” to them, and “independent” of them as in its turn a particular, peculiar “general” interest; or they themselves must remain within this discord, as in democracy. On the other hand, too, the practical struggle of these particular interests, which constantly really run counter to the communal and illusory communal interests, makes practical intervention and control necessary through the illusory “general” interest in the form of the State.

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