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The Ego & His Own
As liberalism is completed in self-criticizing,
"critical"1 liberalism -- in which the critic remains
a liberal and does not go beyond the principle of liberalism,
Man -- this may distinctively be named after Man and called the
"humane."
The laborer is counted as the most
material and egoistical man. He does nothing at all for humanity,
does everything for himself, for his welfare.
The commonalty, because it proclaimed
the freedom of Man only as to his birth, had to leave
him in the claws of the un-human man (the egoist) for the rest
of life. Hence under the regime of political liberalism egoism
has an immense field for free utilization.
The laborer will utilize
society for his egoistic ends as the commoner does the
State. You have only an egoistic end after all, your welfare,
is the humane liberal's reproach to the Socialist; take up a purely
human interest, then I will be your companion. "But
to this there belongs a consciousness stronger, more comprehensive,
than a laborer-consciousness". "The laborer
makes nothing, therefore he has nothing; but he makes nothing
because his labor is always a labor that remains individual, calculated
strictly for
his own want, a labor day by day."2 In opposition to this
one might, e. g., consider the fact that Gutenberg's
labor did not remain individual, but begot innumerable children,
and still lives today; it was calculated for the want of humanity,
and was an eternal, imperishable labor.
The humane consciousness despises
the commoner-consciousness as well as the laborer-consciousness:
for the commoner is "indignant" only at vagabonds (at
all who have "no definite occupation") and their "immorality";
the laborer is "disgusted" by the idler ("lazy-bones")
and his "immoral," because parasitic and unsocial, principles.
To this the humane liberal retorts: The unsettledness of many
is only your product, Philistine! But that you, proletarian, demand
the grind of all, and want to make drudgery
general, is a part, still clinging to you, of your pack-mule life
up to this time. Certainly you want to lighten drudgery itself
by all having to drudge equally hard, yet only for this
reason, that all may gain leisure to an equal extent.
But what are they to do with their leisure? What does your "society"
do, that this leisure may be passed humanly? It must
leave the gained leisure to egoistic preference again, and the
very gain that your society furthers falls to the egoist,
as the gain of the commonalty, the masterlessness of man,
could not be filled with a human element by the State, and therefore
was left to arbitrary choice.
It is assuredly necessary that man
be masterless: but
therefore the egoist is not to become master over man again either,
but man over the egoist. Man must assuredly find leisure: but,
if the egoist makes use of it, it will be lost for man; therefore
you ought to have given leisure a human significance. But you
laborers undertake even your labor from an egoistic impulse, because
you want to eat, drink, live; how should you be less egoists in
leisure? You labor only because having your time to yourselves
(idling) goes well after work done, and what you are to while
away your leisure time with is left to chance.
But, if every door is to be bolted
against egoism, it would be necessary to strive after completely
"disinterested" action, total disinterestedness.
This alone is human, because only Man is disinterested, the egoist
always interested.
If we let disinterestedness pass
unchallenged for a while, then we ask, do you mean not to take
an interest in anything, not to be enthusiastic for anything,
not for liberty, humanity, etc.? "Oh, yes, but that is not
an egoistic interest, not interestedness, but a human,
i.e. a -- theoretical interest, to wit, an interest
not for an individual or individuals ('all'), but for the idea,
for Man!"
And you do not notice that you too
are enthusiastic only for your idea, your idea
of liberty?
And, further, do you not notice
that your disinterestedness is again, like religious disinterestedness,
a heavenly interestedness? Certainly benefit to the individual
leaves you cold, and abstractly you could cry fiat libertas,
pereat mundus. You do not take
thought for the coming day either, and take no serious care for
the individual's wants anyhow, not for your own comfort nor for
that of the rest; but you make nothing of all this, because you
are a -- dreamer.
Do you suppose the humane liberal
will be so liberal as to aver that everything possible to man
is human? On the contrary! He does not, indeed, share
the Philistine's moral prejudice about the strumpet, but "that
this woman turns her body into a money-getting machine"3
makes her despicable to him as "human being." His judgment
is, the strumpet is not a human being; or, so far as a woman is
a strumpet, so far is she unhuman, dehumanized. Further: The Jew,
the Christian, the privileged person, the theologian, etc., is
not a human being; so far as you are a Jew, etc., you are not
a human being. Again the imperious postulate: Cast from you everything
peculiar, criticize it away! Be not a Jew, not a Christian, but
be a human being, nothing but a human being. Assert your humanity
against every restrictive specification; make yourself, by means
of it, a human being, and free from those limits; make yourself
a "free man" -- i.e. recognize humanity as
your all-determining essence.
I say: You are indeed more than
a Jew, more than a Christian, etc., but you are also more than
a human being. Those are all ideas, but you are corporeal. Do
you suppose, then, that you can ever become a "human being
as such?" Do you suppose our posterity will find no prejudices
and limits to clear away, for
which our powers were not sufficient? Or do you perhaps think
that in your fortieth or fiftieth year you have come so far that
the following days have nothing more to dissipate in you, and
that you are a human being? The men of the future will yet fight
their way to many a liberty that we do not even miss. What do
you need that later liberty for? If you meant to esteem yourself
as nothing before you had become a human being, you would have
to wait till the "last judgment," till the day when
man, or humanity, shall have attained perfection. But, as you
will surely die before that, what becomes of your prize of victory?
Rather, therefore, invert the case,
and say to yourself, I am a human being! I do not need
to begin by producing the human being in myself, for he belongs
to me already, like all my qualities.
But, asks the critic, how can one
be a Jew and a man at once? In the first place, I answer, one
cannot be either a Jew or a man at all, if "one" and
Jew or man are to mean the same; "one" always reaches
beyond those specifications, and -- let Isaacs be ever so Jewish
-- a Jew, nothing but a Jew, he cannot be, just because he is
this Jew. In the second place, as a Jew one assuredly
cannot be a man, if being a man means being nothing special. But
in the third place -- and this is the point -- I can, as a Jew,
be entirely what I -- can be. From Samuel or Moses, and
others, you hardly expect that they should have raised themselves
above Judaism, although you must say that they were not yet "men."
They simply were what they could be. Is it otherwise with the
Jews of today? Because you have discovered the idea of humanity,
does it follow from this that every Jew can become a convert to it? If he
can, he does not fail to, and, if he fails to, he -- cannot. What
does your demand concern him? What the call to be a man,
which you address to him?
As a universal principle, in the
"human society" which the humane liberal promises, nothing
"special" which one or another has is to find recognition,
nothing which bears the character of "private" is to
have value. In this way the circle of liberalism, which has its
good principle in man and human liberty, its bad in the, egoist
and everything private, its God in the former, its devil in the
latter, rounds itself off completely; and, if the special or private
person lost his value in the State (no personal prerogative),
if in the "laborers' or ragamuffins' society" special
(private) property is no longer recognized, so in "human
society" everything special or private will be left out of
account; and, when "pure criticism" shall have accomplished
its arduous task, then it will be known just what we must look
upon as private, and what, "penetrated with a sense of our
nothingness," we must -- let stand.
Because State and Society do not
suffice for humane liberalism, it negates both, and at the same
time retains them. So at one time the cry is that the task of
the day is "not a political, but a social, one," and
then again the "free State" is promised for the future.
In truth, "human society" is both -- the most general
State and the most general society. Only against the limited State
is it asserted that it makes too much stir about spiritual private
interests (e. g. people's religious belief), and against limited society that it makes too much of
material private interests. Both are to leave private interests
to private people, and, as human society, concern themselves solely
about general human interests.
The politicians, thinking to abolish
personal will, self-will or arbitrariness, did not observe
that through property4 our self-will5 gained
a secure place of refuge.
The Socialists, taking away property
too, do not notice that this secures itself a continued existence
in self-ownership. Is it only money and goods, then,
that are a property. or is every opinion something of mine, something
of my own?
So every opinion must be
abolished or made impersonal. The person is entitled to no opinion,
but, as self-will was transferred to the State, property to society,
so opinion too must be transferred to something general,
"Man," and thereby become a general human opinion.
If opinion persists, then I have
my God (why, God exists only as "my God," he is an opinion
or my "faith"), and consequently my faith,
my religion, my thoughts, my ideals. Therefore a general human
faith must come into existence, the "fanaticism of liberty."
For this would be a faith that agreed with the "essence of
man," and, because only "man" is reasonable (you
and I might be very unreasonable!), a reasonable faith.
As self-will and property become
powerless, so must
self-ownership or egoism in general.
In this supreme development of "free
man" egoism, self-ownership, is combated on principle, and
such subordinate ends as the social "welfare" of the
Socialists, etc., vanish before the lofty "idea of humanity."
Everything that is not a "general human" entity is something
separate, satisfies only some or one; or, if it satisfies all,
it does this to them only as individuals, not as men, and is therefore
called "egoistic."
To the Socialists welfare
is still the supreme aim, as free rivalry was the approved
thing to the political liberals; now welfare is free too, and
we are free to achieve welfare, just as he who wanted to enter
into rivalry (competition) was free to do so.
But to take part in the rivalry
you need only to be commoners; to take part in the welfare,
only to be laborers. Neither reaches the point of being
synonymous with "man." It is "truly well"
with man only when he is also "intellectually free!"
For man is mind: therefore all powers that are alien to him, the
mind -- all superhuman, heavenly, unhuman powers -- must be overthrown
and the name "man" must be above every name.
So in this end of the modern age
(age of the moderns) there returns again, as the main point, what
had been the main point at its beginning: "intellectual liberty."
To the Communist in particular the
humane liberal says: If society prescribes to you your activity,
then this is indeed free from the influence of the individual,
i.e. the egoist, but it still does not on that account
need to be a purely human activity, nor you to be a
complete organ of humanity. What kind of activity society demands
of you remains accidental, you know; it might give you
a place in building a temple or something of that sort, or, even
if not that, you might yet on your own impulse be active for something
foolish, therefore unhuman; yes, more yet, you really labor only
to nourish yourself, in general to live, for dear life's sake,
not for the glorification of humanity. Consequently free activity
is not attained till you make yourself free from all stupidities,
from everything non-human, i.e., egoistic (pertaining
only to the individual, not to the Man in the individual), dissipate
all untrue thoughts that obscure man or the idea of humanity:
in short, when you are not merely unhampered in your activity,
but the substance too of your activity is only what is human,
and you live and work only for humanity. But this is not the case
so long as the aim of your effort is only your welfare
and that of all; what you do for the society of ragamuffins is
not yet anything done for "human society."
Laboring does not alone make you
a man, because it is something formal and its object accidental;
the question is who you that labor are. As far as laboring goes,
you might do it from an egoistic (material) impulse, merely to
procure nourishment and the like; it must be a labor furthering
humanity, calculated for the good of humanity, serving historical
(i.e. human) evolution -- in short, a human
labor. This implies two things: one, that it be useful to humanity;
next, that it be the work of a "man." The first alone
may be the case with every labor, as even the labors of nature,
e. g. of animals, are utilized by humanity for
the furthering of science, etc.; the second requires that he who
labors should know the human object of his labor; and, as he can
have this consciousness only when he knows himself as man,
the crucial condition is -- self-consciousness.
Unquestionably much is already
attained when you cease to be a "fragment-laborer,"6
yet therewith you only get a view of the whole of your labor,
and acquire a consciousness about it, which is still far removed
from a self-consciousness, a consciousness about your true "self"
or "essence," Man. The laborer has still remaining the
desire for a "higher consciousness," which, because
the activity of labor is unable to quiet it, he satisfies in a
leisure hour. Hence leisure stands by the side of his labor, and
he sees himself compelled to proclaim labor and idling human in
one breath, yes, to attribute the true elevation to the idler,
the leisure-enjoyer. He labors only to get rid of labor; he wants
to make labor free, only that he may be free from labor.
In fine, his work has no satisfying
substance, because it is only imposed by society, only a stint,
a task, a calling; and, conversely, his society does not satisfy,
because it gives only work.
His labor ought to satisfy him as
a man; instead of that, it satisfies society; society ought to
treat him as a man, and it treats him as -- a rag-tag laborer,
or a laboring ragamuffin.
Labor and society are of use to
him not as he needs them as a man, but only as he needs them as
an
"egoist."
Such is the attitude of criticism
toward labor. It points to "mind," wages the war "of
mind with the masses,"7 and pronounces communistic labor
unintellectual mass-labor. Averse to labor as they are, the masses
love to make labor easy for themselves. In literature, which is
today furnished in mass, this aversion to labor begets the universally-known
superficiality, which puts from it "the toil of
research."8
Therefore humane liberalism says:
You want labor; all right, we want it likewise, but we want it
in the fullest measure. We want it, not that we may gain spare
time, but that we may find all satisfaction in it itself. We want
labor because it is our self-development.
But then the labor too must be adapted
to that end! Man is honored only by human, self-conscious labor,
only by the labor that has for its end no "egoistic"
purpose, but Man, and is Man's self-revelation; so that the saying
should be laboro, ergo sum, I labor, therefore I am a
man. The humane liberal wants that labor of the mind
which works up all material; he wants the mind, that
leaves no thing quiet or in its existing condition, that acquiesces
in nothing, analyzes everything, criticises anew every result
that has been gained. This restless mind is the true laborer,
it obliterates prejudices, shatters limits and narrownesses, and
raises man above everything that would like to dominate over him,
while the Communist labors only for himself, and not even freely,
but from necessity, --
in short, represents a man condemned to hard labor.
The laborer of such a type is not
"egoistic," because he does not labor for individuals,
neither for himself nor for other individuals, not for private
men therefore, but for humanity and its progress: he does not
ease individual pains, does not care for individual wants, but
removes limits within which humanity is pressed, dispels prejudices
which dominate an entire time, vanquishes hindrances that obstruct
the path of all, clears away errors in which men entangle themselves,
discovers truths which are found through him for all and for all
time; in short -- he lives and labors for humanity.
Now, in the first place, the discoverer
of a great truth doubtless knows that it can be useful to the
rest of men, and, as a jealous withholding furnishes him no enjoyment,
he communicates it; but, even though he has the consciousness
that his communication is highly valuable to the rest, yet he
has in no wise sought and found his truth for the sake of the
rest, but for his own sake, because he himself desired it, because
darkness and fancies left him no rest till he had procured for
himself light and enlightenment to the best of his powers.
He labors, therefore, for his own
sake and for the satisfaction of his want. That along with this
he was also useful to others, yes, to posterity, does not take
from his labor the egoistic character.
In the next place, if he did labor
only on his own account, like the rest, why should his act be
human, those of the rest unhuman, i. e., egoistic? Perhaps
because this book, painting, symphony, etc., is the
labor of his whole being, because he has done his best in it,
has spread himself out wholly and is wholly to be known from it,
while the work of a handicraftsman mirrors only the handicraftsman,
i.e. the skill in handicraft, not "the man?"
In his poems we have the whole Schiller; in so many hundred stoves,
on the other hand, we have before us only the stove-maker, not
"the man."
But does this mean more than "in
the one work you see me as completely as possible, in
the other only my skill?" Is it not me again that the act
expresses? And is it not more egoistic to offer oneself
to the world in a work, to work out and shape oneself,
than to remain concealed behind one's labor? You say, to be sure,
that you are revealing Man. But the Man that you reveal is you;
you reveal only yourself, yet with this distinction from the handicraftsman
-- that he does not understand how to compress himself into one
labor, but, in order to be known as himself, must be searched
out in his other relations of life, and that your want, through
whose satisfaction that work came into being, was a -- theoretical
want.
But you will reply that you reveal
quite another man, a worthier, higher, greater, a man that is
more man than that other. I will assume that you accomplish all
that is possible to man, that you bring to pass what no other
succeeds in. Wherein, then, does your greatness consist? Precisely
in this, that you are more than other men (the "masses"),
more than men ordinarily are, more than "ordinary
men"; precisely in your elevation above men. You are distinguished
beyond other men not by being man, but because you are a "unique"9 man. Doubtless you show what
a man can do; but because you, a man, do it, this by no means
shows that others, also men, are able to do as much; you have
executed it only as a unique man, and are unique therein.
It is not man that makes up your
greatness, but you create it, because you are more than man, and
mightier than other -- men.
It is believed that one cannot be
more than man. Rather, one cannot be less!
It is believed further that whatever
one attains is good for Man. In so far as I remain at all times
a man -- or, like Schiller, a Swabian; like Kant, a Prussian;
like Gustavus Adolfus, a near-sighted person -- I certainly become
by my superior qualities a notable man, Swabian, Prussian, or
near-sighted person. But the case is not much better with that
than with Frederick the Great's cane, which became famous for
Frederick's sake.
To "Give God the glory"
corresponds the modern "Give Man the glory." But I mean
to keep it for myself.
Criticism, issuing the summons to
man to be "human," enunciates the necessary condition
of sociability; for only as a man among men is one companionable.
Herewith it makes known its social object, the establishment
of "human society."
Among social theories criticism
is indisputably the most complete, because it removes and deprives
of value everything that separates man from man: all
prerogatives, down to the prerogative of faith. In it the love-principle
of Christianity, the true social principle, comes to the purest
fulfillment, and the last possible experiment is tried to take
away exclusiveness and repulsion from men: a fight against egoism
in its simplest and therefore hardest form, in the form of singleness,10
exclusiveness, itself.
"How can you live a truly social
life so long as even one exclusiveness still exists between you?"
I ask conversely, How can you be
truly single so long as even one connection still exists between
you? If you are connected, you cannot leave each other; if a "tie"
clasps you, you are something only with another, and
twelve of you make a dozen, thousands of you a people, millions
of you humanity.
"Only when you are human can
you keep company with each other as men, just as you can understand
each other as patriots only when you are patriotic!"
All right; then I answer, Only when
you are single can you have intercourse with each other as what
you are.
It is precisely the keenest critic
who is hit hardest by the curse of his principle. Putting from
him one exclusive thing after another, shaking off churchliness,
patriotism, etc., he undoes one tie after another and separates
himself from the churchly man, from the patriot, till at last,
when all ties are undone, he stands -- alone. He, of all men,
must exclude all that have anything exclusive or private; and,
when you get to the bottom, what can be more exclusive than
the exclusive, single person himself!
Or does he perhaps think that the
situation would be better if all became "man"
and gave up exclusiveness? Why, for the very reason that "all"
means "every individual" the most glaring contradiction
is still maintained, for the "individual" is exclusiveness
itself. If the humane liberal no longer concedes to the individual
anything private or exclusive, any private thought, any private
folly; if he criticises everything away from him before his face,
since his hatred of the private is an absolute and fanatical hatred;
if he knows no tolerance toward what is private, because everything
private is unhuman -- yet he cannot criticize away the
private person himself, since the hardness of the individual person
resists his criticism, and he must be satisfied with declaring
this person a "private person" and really leaving everything
private to him again.
What will the society that no longer
cares about anything private do? Make the private impossible?
No, but "subordinate it to the interests of society, and,
e. g., leave it to private will to institute holidays
as many as it chooses, if only it does not come in collision with
the general interest."11 Everything private is left free;
i.e., it has no interest for society.
"By their raising barriers
against science the church and religiousness have declared that
they are what they always were, only that this was hidden under
another semblance when they were proclaimed to be the basis and
necessary foundation of the State
-- a matter of purely private concern. Even when they were connected
with the State and made it Christian, they were only the proof
that the State had not yet developed its general political idea,
that it was only instituting private rights -- they were only
the highest expression for the fact that the State was a private
affair and had to do only with private affairs. When the State
shall at last have the courage and strength to fulfil its general
destiny and to be free; when, therefore, it is also able to give
separate interests and private concerns their true position --
then religion and the church will be free as they have never been
hitherto. As a matter of the most purely private concern, and
a satisfaction of purely personal want, they will be left to themselves;
and every individual, every congregation and ecclesiastical communion,
will be able to care for the blessedness of their souls as they
choose and as they think necessary. Every one will care for his
soul's blessedness so far as it is to him a personal want, and
will accept and pay as spiritual caretaker the one who seems to
him to offer the best guarantee for the satisfaction of his want.
Science is at last left entirely out of the game."12
What is to happen, though? Is social
life to have an end, and all affability, all fraternization, everything
that is created by the love or society principle, to disappear?
As if one will not always seek the
other because he needs him; as if one must accommodate
himself to
the other when he needs him. But the difference is this,
that then the individual really unites with the individual,
while formerly they were bound together by a tie; son
and father are bound together before majority, after it they can
come together independently; before it they belonged
together as members of the family, after it they unite as egoists;
sonship and fatherhood remain, but son and father no longer pin
themselves down to these.
The last privilege, in truth, is
"Man"; with it all are privileged or invested. For,
as Bruno Bauer himself says, "privilege remains even when
it is extended to all."13
Thus liberalism runs its course
in the following transformations: "First, the individual
is not man, therefore his individual personality is of no account:
no personal will, no arbitrariness, no orders or mandates!
"Second, the individual has
nothing human, therefore no mine and thine, or property, is valid.
"Third, as the individual neither
is man nor has anything human, he shall not exist at all: he shall,
as an egoist with his egoistic belongings, be annihilated by criticism
to make room for Man, 'Man, just discovered.'"
But, although the individual is
not Man, Man is yet present in the individual, and, like every
spook and everything divine, has its existence in him. Hence political
liberalism awards to the individual everything that pertains to
him as "a man by birth,"
as a born man, among which there are counted liberty of conscience,
the possession of goods, etc. -- in short, the "rights of
man"; Socialism grants to the individual what pertains to
him as an active man, as a "laboring" man;
finally. humane liberalism gives the individual what he has as
"a man," i. e., everything that belongs to
humanity. Accordingly the single one14 has nothing at all, humanity
everything; and the necessity of the "regeneration"
preached in Christianity is demanded unambiguously and in the
completest measure. Become a new creature, become "man!"
One might even think himself reminded
of the close of the Lord's Prayer. To Man belongs the lordship
(the "power" or dynamis); therefore no individual
may be lord, but Man is the lord of individuals; -- Man's is the
kingdom, i.e. the world, consequently the individual
is not to be proprietor, but Man, "all," command the
world as property -- to Man is due renown, glorification
or "glory" (doxa) from all, for Man or humanity
is the individual's end, for which he labors, thinks, lives, and
for whose glorification he must become "man."
Hitherto men have always striven
to find out a fellowship in which their inequalities in other
respects should become "nonessential"; they strove for
equalization, consequently for equality, and wanted to
come all under one hat, which means nothing less than that they
were seeking for one lord, one tie, one faith ("`Tis in one
God we all believe"). There cannot be
for men anything more fellowly or more equal than Man himself,
and in this fellowship the love-craving has found its contentment:
it did not rest till it had brought on this last equalization,
leveled all inequality, laid man on the breast of man. But under
this very fellowship decay and ruin become most glaring. In a
more limited fellowship the Frenchman still stood against the
German, the Christian against the Mohammedan, etc. Now, on the
contrary, man stands against men, or, as men
are not man, man stands against the un-man.
The sentence "God has become
man" is now followed by the other, "Man has become I."
This is the human 1. But we invert it and say: I was
not able to find myself so long as I sought myself as Man. But,
now that it appears that Man is aspiring to become I and to gain
a corporeity in me, I note that, after all, everything depends
on me, and Man is lost without me. But I do not care to give myself
up to be the shrine of this most holy thing, and shall not ask
henceforward whether I am man or un-man in what I set about; let
this spirit keep off my neck!
Humane liberalism goes to work radically.
If you want to be or have anything especial even in one point,
if you want to retain for yourself even one prerogative above
others, to claim even one right that is not a "general right
of man," you are an egoist.
Very good! I do not want to have
or be anything especial above others, I do not want to claim any
prerogative against them, but -- I do not measure myself by others
either, and do not want to have any right whatever. I
want to be all and have all that I can be
and have. Whether others are and have anything similar,
what do I care? The equal, the same, they can neither be nor have.
I cause no detriment to them, as I cause no detriment
to the rock by being "ahead of it" in having motion.
If they could have it, they would have it.
To cause other men no detriment
is the point of the demand to possess no prerogative; to renounce
all "being ahead," the strictest theory of renunciation.
One is not to count himself as "anything especial,"
e. g. a Jew or a Christian. Well, I do not count myself
as anything especial, but as unique.15 Doubtless I have similarity
with others; yet that holds good only for comparison or reflection;
in fact I am incomparable, unique. My flesh is not their flesh,
my mind is not their mind. If you bring them under the generalities
"flesh, mind," those are your thoughts, which
have nothing to do with my flesh, my mind, and
can least of all issue a "call" to mine.
I do not want to recognize or respect
in you any thing, neither the proprietor nor the ragamuffin, nor
even the man, but to use you. In salt I find that it
makes food palatable to me, therefore I dissolve it; in the fish
I recognize an aliment, therefore I eat it; in you I discover
the gift of making my life agreeable, therefore I choose you as
a companion. Or, in salt I study crystallization, in the fish
animality, in you men, etc. But to me you are only what you are
for me -- to wit, my object; and, because my object,
therefore my property.
In humane liberalism ragamuffinhood
is completed. We must first come down to the most ragamuffin-like,
most poverty-stricken condition if we want to arrive at ownness,
for we must strip off everything alien. But nothing seems more
ragamuffin-like than naked -- Man.
It is more than ragamuffinhood,
however, when I throw away Man too because I feel that he too
is alien to me and that T can make no pretensions on that basis.
This is no longer mere ragamuffinhood: because even the last rag
has fallen off, here stands real nakedness, denudation of everything
alien. The ragamuffin has stripped off ragamuffinhood itself,
and therewith has ceased to be what he was, a ragamuffin.
I am no longer a ragamuffin, but
have been one.
Up to this time the discord could
not come to an outbreak, because properly there is current only
a contention of modern liberals with antiquated liberals, a contention
of those who understand "freedom" in a small measure
and those who want the "full measure" of freedom; of
the moderate and measureless, therefore. Everything
turns on the question, how free must man be?
That man must be free, in this all believe; therefore all are
liberal too. But the un-man16 who is somewhere in every individual,
how is he blocked? How can it be arranged not to leave the un-man
free at the same time with man?
Liberalism as a whole has a deadly
enemy, an invincible opposite, as God has the devil: by the side
of man stands always the un-man, the individual, the egoist. State,
society, humanity, do not master this devil.
Humane liberalism has undertaken
the task of showing the other liberals that they still do not
want "freedom."
If the other liberals had before
their eyes only isolated egoism and were for the most part blind,
radical liberalism has against it egoism "in mass,"
throws among the masses all who do not make the cause of freedom
their own as it does, so that now man and un-man rigorously separated,
stand over against each other as enemies, to wit, the "masses"
and "criticism";17 namely, "free, human criticism,"
as it is called (Judenfrage, p. 114), in opposition to
crude, that is, religious criticism.
Criticism expresses the hope that
it will be victorious over all the masses and "give them
a general certificate of insolvency."18 So it means finally
to make itself out in the right, and to represent all contention
of the "faint-hearted and timorous" as an egoistic stubbornness,19
as pettiness, paltriness. All wrangling loses significance, and
petty dissensions are given up, because in criticism a common
enemy enters the field. "You are egoists altogether, one
no better than another!" Now the egoists stand together against
criticism.
Really the egoists? No, they fight
against criticism precisely because it accuses them of egoism;
they do not plead guilty of egoism. Accordingly criticism and
the masses stand on the same basis: both fight against egoism,
both repudiate it for themselves and charge it to each other.
Criticism and the masses pursue
the same goal, freedom from egoism, and wrangle only over which
of them approaches nearest to the goal or even attains it.
The Jews, the Christians, the absolutists,
the men of darkness and men of light, politicians, Communists
-- all, in short -- hold the reproach of egoism far from them;
and, as criticism brings against them this reproach in plain terms
and in the most extended sense, all justify themselves
against the accusation of egoism, and combat -- egoism, the same
enemy with whom criticism wages war.
Both, criticism and masses, are
enemies of egoists, and both seek to liberate themselves from
egoism, as well by clearing or whitewashing themselves
as by ascribing it to the opposite party.
The critic is the true "spokesman
of the masses" who gives them the "simple concept and
the phrase" of egoism, while the spokesmen to whom the triumph
is denied were only bunglers. He is their prince and general in
the war against egoism for freedom; what he fights against they
fight against. But at the same time he is their enemy too, only
not the enemy before them, but the friendly enemy who wields the
knout behind the timorous to force courage into them.
Hereby the opposition of criticism
and the masses is reduced to the following contradiction: "You are egoists!"
"No, we are not!" "I will prove it to you!"
"You shall have our justification!"
Let us then take both for what they
give themselves out for, non-egoists, and what they take each
other for, egoists. They are egoists and are not.
Properly criticism says: You must
liberate your ego from all limitedness so entirely that it becomes
a human ego. I say: Liberate yourself as far as you can,
and you have done your part; for it is not given to every one
to break through all limits, or, more expressively: not to every
one is that a limit which is a limit for the rest. Consequently,
do not tire yourself with toiling at the limits of others; enough
if you tear down yours. Who has ever succeeded in tearing down
even one limit for all men? Are not countless persons
today, as at all times, running about with all the "limitations
of humanity?" He who overturns one of his limits
may have shown others the way and the means; the overturning of
their limits remains their affair. Nobody does anything
else either. To demand of people that they become wholly men is
to call on them to cast down all human limits. That is impossible,
because Man has no limits. I have some indeed, but then
it is only mine that concern me any, and only they can
be overcome by me. A human ego I cannot become, just because I
am I and not merely man.
Yet let us still see whether criticism
has not taught us something that we can lay to heart! I am not
free if I am not without interests, not man if I am not disinterested?
Well, even if it makes little difference
to me to be free or man, yet I do not want to leave unused any
occasion to realize myself or make myself count. Criticism
offers me this occasion by the teaching that, if anything plants
itself firmly in me, and becomes indissoluble, I become its prisoner
and servant, i.e. a possessed man. An interest, be it
for what it may, has kidnapped a slave in me if I cannot get away
from it, and is no longer my property, but I am its. Let us therefore
accept criticism's lesson to let no part of our property become
stable, and to feel comfortable only in -- dissolving
it.
So, if criticism says: You are man
only when you are restlessly criticizing and dissolving! then
we say: Man I am without that, and I am I likewise; therefore
I want only to be careful to secure my property to myself; and,
in order to secure it, I continually take it back into myself,
annihilate in it every movement toward independence, and swallow
it before it can fix itself and become a "fixed idea"
or a "mania."
But I do that not for the sake of
my "human calling," but because I call myself to it.
I do not strut about dissolving everything that it is possible
for a man to dissolve, and, e. g., while not yet ten
years old I do not criticize the nonsense of the Commandments,
but I am man all the same, and act humanly in just this -- that
I still leave them uncriticized. In short, I have no calling,
and follow none, not even that to be a man.
Do I now reject what liberalism
has won in its various exertions? Far be the day that anything
won should be lost! Only, after "Man" has become free
through liberalism, I turn my gaze back upon myself and confess
to myself openly: What Man seems to have gained, I alone
have gained.
Man is free when "Man is to
man the supreme being." So it belongs to the completion of
liberalism that every other supreme being be annulled, theology
overturned by anthropology, God and his grace laughed down, "atheism"
universal.
The egoism of property has given
up the last that it had to give when even the "My God"
has become senseless; for God exists only when he has at heart
the individual's welfare, as the latter seeks his welfare in him.
Political liberalism abolished the
inequality of masters and servants: it made people masterless,
anarchic. The master was now removed from the individual, the
"egoist," to become a ghost -- the law or the State.
Social liberalism abolishes the inequality of possession, of the
poor and rich, and makes people possessionless or propertyless.
Property is withdrawn from the individual and surrendered to ghostly
society. Humane liberalism makes people godless, atheistic.
Therefore the individual's God, "My God," must be put
an end to. Now masterlessness is indeed at the same time freedom
from service, possessionlessness at the same time freedom from
care, and godlessness at the same time freedom from prejudice:
for with the master the servant falls away; with possession, the
care about it; with the firmly-rooted God, prejudice. But, since
the master rises again as State, the servants appears again as
subject; since possession becomes the property of society, care
is begotten anew as labor; and, since God as Man becomes a prejudice,
there arises a new faith, faith in humanity or liberty. For the
individual's God the God of all, viz., "Man,"
is now exalted; "for it is the highest thing in us all to
be man." But, as nobody can become entirely what the idea
"man" imports, Man remains to the individual a lofty
other world, an unattained supreme being, a God. But at the same
time this is the "true God," because he is fully adequate
to us -- to wit, our own "self"; we ourselves,
but separated from us and lifted above us.
1 [In his strictures on "criticism" Stirner
refers to a special movement known by that name in the early forties
of the last century, of which Bruno Bauer was the principal exponent.
After his official separation from the faculty of the university
of Bonn on account of his views in regard to the Bible, Bruno
Bauer in 1843 settled near Berlin and founded the Allgemeine
Literatur-Zeitung, in which he and his
friends, at war with their surroundings, championed the "absolute
emancipation" of the individual within the limits of "pure
humanity" and fought as their foe "the mass," comprehending
in that term the radical aspirations of political liberalism and
the communistic demands of the rising Socialist movement of that
time. For a brief account of Bruno Bauer's movement of criticism,
see John Henry Mackay, Max Stirner. Sein
Leben und sein Werk.]
2 Br. Bauer, "Lit. Ztg." V, 18
3 "Lit. Ztg." V, 26
4 [Eigentum, "owndom"]
5 [Eigenwille "own-will"]
6 [Referring to minute subdivision of labor, whereby the single workman produces, not a whole, but a part.]
7 "Lit. Ztg." V, 34.
8 "Lit. Ztg." ibid.
9 ["einziger"]
10 ["Einzigkeit"]
11 Br. Bauer, "Judenfrage," p. 66
12 Br. Bauer, "Die gute Sache der Freiheit," pp. 62-63.
13 Br. Bauer, "Judenfrage," p. 60.
14 ["Einzige"]
15 ["einzig"]
16 [It should be remembered that to be an Unmensch ["un-man"] one must be a man. The word means an inhuman or unhuman man, a man who is not man. A tiger, an avalanche, a drought, a cabbage, is not an un-man.]
17 "Lit. Ztg., V, 23; as comment, V, 12ff.
18 "Lit. Ztg, V 15.
19 [Rechthaberei, literally the character of always insisting on making one's self out to be in the right.]
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