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The Holy Family: England and Materialist Philosophy

The Holy Family
England and Materialist Philosophy
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table of contents
  1. Foreword
  2. I: "Critical Criticism in the Form of a Master-Bookbinder", or Critical Criticism as Herr Reichardt
  3. II: "Critical Criticism" As a 'Mill-Owner', Or Critical Criticism As Herr Jules Faucher
  4. III: "The Thoroughness of Critical Criticism", Or Critical Criticism As Herr J. (Jungnitz?)
  5. IV: "Critical Criticism" As the Tranquility of Knowledge, Or "Critical Criticism" As Herr Edgar
    1. 1. Flora Tristian's "Union Ouvrière"
    2. 2. Bèraud on Prostitutes
    3. 3. Love
    4. 4. Proudhon
  6. V: "Critical Criticism" as a Mystery-Monger, Or "Critical Criticism" as Herr Szeliga
    1. 1. "The Mystery of Degeneracy in Civilisation" and "The Mystery of Richtlessness in the State"
    2. 2. The Mystery of Speculative Construction
    3. 3. "The Mystery of Educated Society"
    4. 4. "The Mystery of Probity and Piety"
    5. 5. "Mystery, a Mockery"
    6. 6. Turtle-Dove (Rigolette)
    7. 7. The World System of the Mysteries of Paris
  7. VI. Absolute Critical Criticism, Or Critical Criticism As Herr Bruno
    1. 1. Absolute Criticism's First Campaign
      1. a. "Spirit" and "Mass"
      2. b. The Jewish Question No. 1: The Setting of the Questions
      3. c. Hinrichs No. 1: Mysterious Hints on Politics, Socialism, and Philosophy
    2. 2. Absolute Criticism's Second Campaign
      1. a. Hinrich's No. 2: "Criticism" and "Feuerbach". Condemnation of Philosophy
      2. b. The Jewish Question No. 2: Critical Discoveries on Socialism, Jurisprudence, and Politics (Nationality)
    3. 3. Absolute Criticism's Third Campaign
      1. a. Absolute Criticism's Self-Apology: Its "Political" Past
      2. b. The Jewish Question No. 3
      3. c. Critical Battle Against the French Revolution
      4. d. Critical Battle Against French Materialism
      5. e. Final Defeat of Socialism
      6. f. The Speculative Cycle of Absolute Criticism and the Philosophy of Self-Consciousness
  8. VII: Critical Criticism's Correspondence
    1. 1. The Critical Mass
    2. 2. The "Un-Critical Mass" and "Critical Criticism"
      1. a. The "Obdurate Mass" and the "Unsatisfied Mass"
      2. b. The "Soft-Hearted" Mass "Pining for Redemption"
      3. c. Grace Bestowed on the Mass
    3. 3. The Un-Critically Critical Mass Or "Criticism" and The "Berlin Couleur"
  9. VIII: The Earthly Course and Transfiguration Of "Critical Criticism"
    1. 1. Critical Transformation of a Butcher into a Dog, Or Chourineur
    2. 2. Revelation of the Mystery of Critical Religion, Or Fleur De Marie
      1. a. The Speculative "Marguerite"
      2. b. Fleur de Marie
    3. 3. Revelation of the Mysteries of Law
      1. a. The maître d'école, or the New Penal Theory
      2. b. Reward and Punishment: Double Punishment (with a Table)
      3. c. Abolition of Degeneracy Within Civilisation and of Rightlessness in the State
    4. 4. The Revealed Mystery of the "Standpoint"
    5. 5. Revelation of the Mystery of the Utilisation of Human Impulses
    6. 6. Revelation of the Mystery of the Emancipation of Women
    7. 7. Revelation of Political Economic Mysteries
      1. a. Theoretical Revelation of Political Economic Mysteries
      2. b. "The Bank for the Poor"
      3. c. Model Farm at Bouqueval
    8. 8. Rudolph, "The Revealed Mystery of All Mysteries"
  10. IX: The Critical Last Judgement
  11. England and Materialist Philosophy
  12. Notes

England and Materialist Philosophy


Source: Labour Monthly, August 1923, pp. 105-113, “Further Selection from the Literary Remains of Karl Marx,” translated and annotated by Max Beer;
Original German: Aus dem literarischen nachlass von Marx und Engels, Vol. II, pp. 225-240;
Transcribed: by Ted Crawford.

In 1844, Marx wrote “The Holy Family,” a collection of essays directed against his friend Dr. Bruno Bauer, a university lecturer and Liberal theologian (one of the pioneers of higher criticism); the latter edited the Krilische Literaturzeitung, in which he gave a superficial view of French materialism, at the same time adversely criticising French Socialism. Marx, on the other hand, gave an analysis of the rôle of Descartes and Bayle, showing how French materialism arose from the physics of Descartes and the theory of knowledge of John Locke; further, how the deductions from the latter were made the basis of Utopian Socialism. The essay of Marx on those problems is too long and in some parts too concentrated to be reproduced here, but we give the salient points as a specimen of his philosophic mastery. It must be remembered that Marx wrote this essay at a time when his own views of Communism were still in the process of formation.


French materialism of the eighteenth century exhibits two currents, one having its origin in Descartes, the other in Locke. The latter exercised a dominating influence on the French mind and led directly to socialism. The former, the mechanical materialism, dominated French science. Both currents crossed in their courses.... Descartes, in his physics, endowed matter with creative power and conceived mechanical motion as its manifestation of life. He completely severed his physics from his metaphysics. Within his physics, matter is the only substance, the only reason of its existence and cognition. The French mechanical materialism adopted the physics of Descartes and rejected his metaphysics. His disciples were anti-metaphysicians by profession, namely, physicians. This school begins with the physician Leroy, reaches its culmination with the physician Cabanis, while the physician Lamettrie was its centre.... But the man who destroyed the credit of the metaphysics of the seventeenth century was Pierre Bayle. The negative refutation of theology and metaphysics, however, sharpened the desire for a positive, anti-metaphysical system. And it was Locke who supplied it. His Essay Concerning Human Understanding came in the nick of time for the other side of the Channel. It was enthusiastically acclaimed as a long-expected guest.

Materialism is the born son of Britain. Even one of his great schoolmen, Duns Scotus, asked himself ‘whether matter cannot think.’ In performing this wonder, Duns had recourse to God’s omnipotence, that is, he made theology itself preach materialism. He was, moreover, Nominalist. Nominalism is one of the main elements of the English materialists, as it is indeed the first expression of materialism in Christian Europe.

The real progenitor of English materialism is Francis Bacon. Natural science is to him the true science, and sensuous physics the foremost part of science. Anaxagoras with his ‘homoimeries’ and Democritus with his atoms are often his authorities. According to Bacon the senses arc unerring and the source of all knowledge. Science is experimental and consists in the application of a rational method to sensuous data. Observation, experiment, induction, analysis, are the main conditions of a rational method. Of the qualities inherent in matter the foremost is motion, not only as mechanical and mathematical motion, but more as impulse, vital force, tension, or as Jacob Boehme said, pain of matter. The primitive forms of the latter are living, individualising, inherent, and essential forces, which produce specific variations.

With Bacon as its pioneer, materialism contains in a naïve manner the germs of universal development. Matter is still smiling upon us in its poetic-sensuous charm. The aphoristic doctrine, on the other hand, teems with theological inconsistencies.

In its further development, materialism becomes one-sided. Hobbes is the systematiser of Baconian materialism. Sensuousness loses its bloom and is turned into the abstract sensuousness of geometry. The physical motion is sacrificed to the mechanical and mathematical one. Geometry is proclaimed the cardinal science.... Materialism is rationalised, and it develops also the ruthless logicality of reason. Hobbes, starting from Bacon, argues that if all knowledge is supplied by the senses, then.... only the corporeal is perceptible and knowable, therefore we can know nothing of the existence of God. Only my own existence is certain.... Hobbes systematised Bacon, but did not establish the main principle, the origin of the ideas and knowledge of the sensuous world.

It was Locke who accomplished that work in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding.

If Hobbes removed the theistic prejudices from Baconian naterialism, Collins, Toland, Coward, Hartley, Priestley, & c., broke down the last theological barrier of Locke’s sensualism. Theism is, for those materialists, merely a comfortable, lackadaisical way to get rid of religion....

The direct French disciple and interpreter of Locke was Condillac, who pitted Locke’s sensualism against the metaphysics of the seventeenth century. He published a refutation of the system of Descartes, Spinoza, Leibnitz, and Malebranche. In his Essai sur l’origine des connaissances humaines he follows up the ideas of Locke and argues that not only the mind, but also the senses, not only the capacity for forming ideas, but also the capacity for sensuous perception, are a matter of experience and habit. On education and external circumstances depends the whole development of man.

The difference between French and English materialism is the difference between the two nationalities. The French endowed English materialism with esprit and eloquence, with flesh and blood, with temperament and grace.

In Helvetius, who likewise starts from Locke, materialism receives its proper French character. He envisages it in relation to social life. The sensuous qualities and self-love, enjoyment, and the well-understood personal interest are made into the foundations of morality. The natural equality of the human intelligence, the harmony between the progress of reason and the progress of manufactures, the natural goodness of man, the omnipotence of education, are the main points of his system....

It needs no special ingenuity to discover in the doctrines of materialism (concerning the natural goodness and the equal mental endowments of man, the omnipotence of experience, habit, and education, the influence of external circumstances on man, the great importance of manufactures, the legitimacy of enjoyment) the necessary connection with Communism and Socialism. If man receives from the external world and from his experience in the external world all his feelings, ideas, & c., then it is evidently our business to reorganise the empirical world in such a manner that man should only experience the really humane and acquire the habit of it. If the well-understood personal interest is the principle of all morality, then we must arrange society in such a manner as to make private interest fit in with social interest. If man is subject to the same laws as Nature: if man is not free in a materialistic sense, that is, he is not free to do this or to avoid that, but that he is only free to assert his true individuality, then there is no sense in punishing the criminal, but we must rather destroy the antisocial breeding-places of vice and to allow to everybody social scope for his activities. If man is formed by circumstances, then we must humanise the circumstances. If man is social by nature, then man develops his true nature in society only, and we must not measure the power of his nature by the power of a single individual, by the power of society.

These and similar views we find even literally in the works of the older French materialists. It is not the proper place here to sit in judgment upon them. Characteristic of the social-critical tendency of materialism is Mandeville’s apology of vice. Mandeville, one of the earlier followers of Locke, demonstrates that in the present-day society vice is indispensable and useful. This was by no means an apology for present-day society.

Fourier starts directly from the doctrines of French materialism. The Babouvistes were raw, uncivilised materialists,[1] but also the more advanced Communism is based on French materialism. The latter, in the French garb, returned to its native country. Godwin and Bentham established their systems on the ethical philosophy of Helvetius, and Owen took it from Bentham and based upon it English Communism. Etienne Corbet, banished to England, brought those ideas back to France and became here the most commonplace representative of Communism. But also the more advanced of French Communists, such as Dezamy, Gay, & c., developed, like Robert Owen, the materialist doctrine into real humanism and the logical basis of Communism.


1. This severe view was probably evinced before Marx had read Buonarotti. He generalised individual opinions of some Babouvistes against the arts and enjoyments of life. – M.B.


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