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(1973) The legacy of Hegel, Dordrecht, Springer.

Hegel and Marx

Jean-Yves Galvez

pp. 98-104

I should probably have entitled this "Marx and Hegel," since I do not wish to attempt a study of the influence of Hegel through Marx, but rather of the position taken by Marx with regard to Hegel. What follows, then, is first of all a study of something in Marx himself. True, one says a good deal about Hegel also in asserting that there is no Marx without Hegel, without the problematic of Hegel. And I should recall in passing that this assertion — no Marx without or outside of Hegel — is completely denied by those who insist on a radical break in the course of Marx's intellectual career. According to this school of thought, there was a time when Marx was effectively dominated by Hegelian problematics; and then there was in Marx's mature years, beginning more or less with The German Ideology, a time at which he escaped definitively from those problematics, from the 'siren" who, he told us, earlier haunted him, and whose charms he could not rid himself of.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-2434-1_8

Full citation:

Galvez, J.-Y. (1973)., Hegel and Marx, in J. J. O'malley, K. W. . Algozin, H. P. Kainz & L. C. Rice (eds.), The legacy of Hegel, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 98-104.

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