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Karl Marx was influenced by many experiences throughout his life. These influences shaped him into the man who would be the driving force behind one of the most unforgettable moments in history. Much of Marx’s
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. Just one of the ideas proposed within Hegel’s theory was that every thesis produces an antithesis, which balance out and thus produce a new thesis. Engels was a paradox in some ways: He was wholeheartedly in favor of a proletarian revolution, but he was member of a wealthy German family, and thus enjoyed many bourgeois luxuries and pastimes. The problem with Hegel’s theory is that God powered it, and Marx’s generation was drifting more and more toward atheism, especially in the realm of politics. It contained the necessary ideas to convert Hegel’s God-powered universe into the real world, as it was perceived by Marx’s generation. character came from his experiences as a child. When he was young, he displayed a lofty Christian idealism, paving his way into philosophical study.
The largest influence in Marx’s life, however, was his longtime friend, Friedrich Engels. His father, since he was a lawyer, a constitutionalist, a democrat, and a Jew, drew much of the Prussian authorities’ unwarranted suspicion.
Feuerbach’s The Essence of Christianity brought Hegel’s theory into the real world. Thus, Hegel’s ideas were suitable to be revised later in Marx’s life to fit his own philosophy. He was very intrigued by the dialectic the most relevant part of which was the Universal World Theory.
Karl Marx was also an educated man; in 1836, he enrolled at the University of Berlin.
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