Description
Lucio Colletti directly challenges this picture of Hegel. He argues that Hegel was an essentially Christian philosopher, and that his dialectic was explicitly anti-materialist in both intention and effect. In contrast to earlier views, Colletti maintains that there is no contradiction between Hegel's method and his system, once it is accepted that his thought is an exercise in Absolute Idealism stemming from a long Christian humanist tradition. He claims, on the contrary, that intellectual inconsistency is rather to be found in the works of Engels, Lenin, Lukas, Kojeve and others, who have attempted to adapt Hegel to their own philosophical priorities.
Colletti places his argument in the context of a broad re-examination of the whole relationship between Marxism and the Enlightenment, giving novel emphasis to the relationship between Marxism and Kant. He concludes by re-asserting the importance in Marxism of empirical science against the claim of "infinite reason," while at the same time showing how Marx did transform key ideas in Hegelian thought to construct a consistently materialist dialectic.
"The highest standards of scholarship, precision and clarity." -Philosophical Quarterly
About the Author
Lucio Colletti (1924-2001) served on the editorial board of Societa, the cultural journal of the Italian Communist Party (PCI). After his split with PCI, he became a staunch left critic of its political and cultural orthodoxy. In his final years, he shifted to the right, joining the camp of Silvio Berlusconi and serving as parliamentary deputy as part of Forza Italia.
Reviews
The highest standards of scholarship, precision and clarity. * Philosophical Quarterly *
Marxism and Hegel is in many ways the most important single work of Marx interpretation written since Lukacs's History and Class Consciousness. It makes a reappraisal of dialectical materialism imperative. * Critique *
Colletti skilfully argues that Marx, implicitly using Kant, transformed Hegel on two crucial points: Hegel's 'dialectic of matter,' which sanctified idealism by negating matter, and Hegel's identification of development in reality with logical development, which nullified man's natural being. * Journal of Politics *
Book Information
ISBN 9780902308732
Author Lucio Colletti
Format Paperback
Page Count 292
Imprint Verso Books
Publisher Verso Books
Weight(grams) 364g
Dimensions(mm) 203mm * 127mm * 25mm