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1198Hegel, Marx and Religion

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  • Maurizio Canfora
    May 29, 2003
      Paul Trejo wrote:

      >>
      For Karl Marx, God does not create man but rather man creates God. Hegel
      has already stated that such a view is "foolish and perverted," (LECTURES ON
      THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION, 1827) and I quoted that [...]

      «Human Reason, human spiritual consciousness or consciousness of its own
      Essence, *is*
      Reason generally, *is* the Divine within humanity. Spirit, insofar as it is
      called Divine Spirit, is not a spirit beyond the stars or beyond the world,
      for God is Present, is Omnipresent, and strictly *as* Spirit is God present
      in Spirit. Religion is a begetting of the Divine Spirit, not an invention of
      human beings." (Hegel, LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION, 1827, trans.
      Hodgson, 1989, U. of California Press, vol. 1, p. 130)»
      <<

      I believe that Hegel is here referring explicitly to the Enlightenment
      treatment of religion, as a mere superstition and as a "devilish" invention
      by corrupt priests. However, it would be incorrect, in my opinion, to
      analyse Feuerbach's (and Marx') treatment of religion as a side-effect of
      Enlightenment.

      Feuerbach and Marx came (biographically, historically and philosophically
      speaking) AFTER Hegel, therefore their analysis of religion could not do
      without Hegel's insight. I believe that their treatment of religion may be
      considered as a side-effect of Hegelianism. This might sound provocative to
      Paul -- but here I am not discussing the rather sterile and abstract issue
      whether Hegel would have approved of Marx: what I am trying to say is that
      Hegel's very analysis of religion made Feuerbach's atheism possible.

      Both Feuerbach and Marx do not consider religion as an "invention". They
      would actually agree with Hegel's affirmation that «*Human* Reason, *human*
      spiritual consciousness or consciousness of its own Essence, is Reason
      generally, is the Divine within humanity» [emphasis added]. What Hegel is
      actually stating here is the notion that there is a dialectical unity
      between *human* reason and *divinity*, that divinity *is* (or becomes) the
      *human* reason and vice-versa.

      Apart from being the pivotal message from Christianity -- for this very
      reason considered by Hegel the highest form of Religion -- this is also the
      core of Hegel's philosophy:
      humanity is God, the God that is «not a spirit beyond the stars or beyond
      the world, for God is Present, is Omnipresent, and strictly *as* Spirit is
      God present in Spirit».

      When Hegel mention the "Spirit" he is not dealing with a ghost which would
      be "beyond the stars" or in a haunted house. Recently Beat Greuter cited a
      wonderful passage from the Phenomenology, where it is clear that this
      "Spirit", this "we" which is an "I" is deeply human.

      It is bearing in mind this discovery from Christianity, that it is possible
      to abandon the viewpoint of Religion to reach the highness of Philosophy.
      Philosophy -- which contains and develops this truth from Christianity (that
      Man is God) -- is the truth of Religion.

      ** ** **

      It is in this sense that I mean that Feuerbach's later philosophy develops
      (probably without understanding it) an already present feature in Hegel's
      philosophy of religion. Far from naively considering religion as a simple
      invention by priests, Feuerbach too considers it as the «begetting of the
      Divine Spirit». What he also thinks, consistently with Hegel, is that this
      Divine Spirit is nothing else but Human Reason. Subsequently, he goes on
      analysing the reason why humanity needs to project its major "divine"
      attribute (Reason) in the varying and fallacious images of different
      personal Gods.

      But without Hegel, without the very content of the passage from the
      philosophy of religion that Paul quoted, no Feuerbach (and no Marx) could
      have approached the subject.

      All the best,
      Maurizio
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