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LUDWIG ANDREAS See also: German philosopher, See also: fourth son of the eminent jurist (see below), was See also: born at See also: Landshut in See also: Bavaria on the 28th of See also: July 1804
.
He matriculated at See also: Heidelberg with the intention of pursuing an ecclesiastical career
.
Through the influence of Prof
.
See also: Daub he was led to an See also: interest in the then predominant philosophy of Hegel and, in spite of his See also: father's opposition, went to Berlin to study under. the master himself
.
After two years' discipleship the Hegelian influence began to slacken
.
" See also: Theology," he wrote to a friend, " I can bring myself to study no more
.
I long to take nature to my See also: heart, that nature before whose See also: depth the faint-hearted theologian shrinks back; and with nature See also: man, man in his entire quality." These words are a See also: key to
See also: Feuerbach's development
.
He completed his See also: education at See also: Erlangen with the study of natural science
.
His first See also: book, published anonymously, Gedanken fiber See also: Tod and Unsterblichkeit (1830, 3rd ed
.
1876), contains an attack upon See also: personal immortality and an advocacy of the Spinozistic immortality of reabsorption in nature
.
These principles, combined with his embarrassed manner of public speaking, debarred him from See also: academic See also: advancement
.
After some years of struggling, during which he published his Geschichte der neueren Philosophie (2 vols., 1833—1837, 2nd ed
.
1844), and Abalard and Heloise (1834, 3rd ed . 1877), he married in 1837 and lived a rural existence at Bruckberg near See also: Nuremberg, supported by his wife's share in a small See also: porcelain factory
.
In two See also: works of this See also: period, See also: Pierre See also: Bayle (1838) and Philosophie and Christentum (1839), which See also: deal largely with theology, he held that he had proved " that See also: Christianity has in fact long vanished not only from the reason but from the See also: life of mankind, that it is nothing more than a fixed idea " in flagrant contra-diction to the distinctive features of contemporary See also: civilization
.
This attack is followed up in his most important See also: work, Das Wesen See also: des Christentums (1841), which was translated into See also: English (The Essence of See also: Religion, by See also: George See also: Eliot, 1853, 2nd ed
.
1881), French and See also: Russian
.
Its aim may be described shortly as an effort to humanize theology
.
He See also: lays it down that man, so far as he is rational, is to himself his own See also: object of thought
.
Religion is consciousness of the infinite
.
Religion therefore is " nothing else than the consciousness of the infinity of the consciousness; or, in the consciousness of the infinite, the conscious subject has for his object the infinity of his own nature." Thus See also: God is nothing else than man: he is, so to speak, the outward See also: projection of man's inward nature
.
In See also: part r of his book he develops what he calls the " true or anthropological essence of religion." •Treating of God in his various aspects " as a being of the understanding," " as a moral being or See also: law," " as love " and so on, Feuerbach shows that in every aspect God corresponds to some feature or need of human nature
.
" If man is to find contentment in God, he must find himself in God." In part 2 he discusses the " false or theological essence of religion," i.e. the view which regards God as having a See also: separate existence over against man
.
Hence arise various mistaken beliefs, such as the belief in See also: revelation which not only injures the moral
sence, but also " poisons, See also: nay destroys, the divinest feeling in man, the sense of truth," and the belief in sacraments such as the See also: Lord's Supper, a piece of religious materialism of which " the necessary consequences are superstition and immorality." In spite of many admirable qualities both of See also: style and See also: matter the Essence of Christianity has never made much impression upon See also: British thought
.
To treat the actual forms of religion as expressions of our various human needs is a fruitful idea which deserves See also: fuller development than it has yet received; but Feuerbach's treatment of it is fatally vitiated by his See also: subjectivism
.
Feuerbach denied that he was rightly called an atheist, but the denial is merely verbal: what he calls " See also: theism " is atheism in the ordinary sense
.
Feuerbach labours under the same difficulty as See also: Fichte; both thinkers strive in vain to reconcile the religious consciousness with subjectivism
.
During the troubles of 1848-1849 Feuerbach's attack upon orthodoxy made him something of a See also: hero with the revolutionary party; but he never threw himself into the See also: political See also: movement, and indeed had not the qualities of a popular See also: leader
.
During the period of the See also: diet of See also: Frankfort he had given public lectures on religion at Heidelberg
.
When the diet closed he withdrew to Bruckberg and occupied himself partly with scientific study, partly with the composition of his Theogonie (1857)
.
In 186o he was compelled by the failure of the porcelain factory to leave Bruckberg, and he would have suffered the extremity of want but for the assistance of See also: friends supplemented by a public subscription
.
His last book, Gottheit, Freiheit and Unsterblichkeit, appeared in 1866 (end ed., 1890)
.
After a long period of decay he died on the 13th of See also: September 1872
.
Feuerbach's influence has been greatest upon the See also: anti-Christian theologians such as D
.
F
.
Strauss, the author of the Leben Jesu, and See also: Bruno See also: Bauer, who like Feuerbach himself had passed over from Hegelianism to a See also: form of See also: naturalism
.
But many of his ideas were taken up by those who, like See also: Arnold See also: Ruge, had entered into the struggle between See also: church and
See also: state in See also: Germany, and those who, like F
.
Engels and Karl See also: Marx, were leaders in the revolt of labour against the power of capital
.
His work was too deliberately unsystematic ("keine Philosophic ist meine Philosophie ") ever to make him a power in philosophy
.
He expressed in an eager, disjointed, but condensed and laboured fashion, certain deep-lying convictions—that philosophy must come back from unsubstantial See also: metaphysics to the solid facts of human nature and natural science, that the human See also: body was no less important than the human spirit (" Der Mensch ist was er isst ") and that Christianity was utterly out of harmony with the age
.
His convictions gained See also: weight from the simplicity, uprightness and See also: diligence of his character; but they need a more effective See also: justification than he was able to give them
.
His works appeared in to vols
.
(See also: Leipzig, 1846-1866) ; his See also: correspondence has been edited with an indifferent biography by Karl See also: Grun (1874)
.
See A
.
See also: Levy, La Philosophic de Feuerbach (1904); M
.
See also: Meyer, L
.
Feuerbach's Moralphilosophie (Berlin, 1899) ; E. v
.
Hartmann, Geschichte d
.
See also: Meta physik (Leipzig, 1899-1900), ii
.
437-.144; F
.
Engels, L
.
Feuerbach and d
.
Ausgang d. class. deutsch
.
Philos
.
(2nd ed., 1895)
.
(H
.
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