B. Hegel and Marx
How problematic it is to speak of a German philosophy can also be
illustrated by the names of Hegel and Marx. Marx has unquestionably
become a thinker of worldwide significance, and Hegel‘s philosophy is as
international as that of Kant. Hegel had considerable influence on Marx.
Hegel‘s conservative political views were rejected by Marx. But Hegel
cultivated the ancient philosophical method called dialectic in a way that
convinced Marx. To use the dialectic approach meant of course, that a
given theoretical position is subjected to argument and allowed to be
questioned by confronting it with contradictory statements. In the next step
a synthesis between the two, originally contradictory positions new insight
is then achieved at a higher level.
Hegel had been a Protestant Christian theologian, and his intellectual
development led him to conceive a philosophy in which the creator god is
replaced with what Hegel calls the World Sprit. That Spirit appears in a
variety of forms, and the changes which it undergoes are treated in Hegel‘s
famous text: The Phenomenology of Spirit
39
. The section on self-reliance
and dependence of self-certainty (which English translations call The Truth
of Self-Certainty) contains reflections on the dialectic of the relationship
between Master and Servant and shows how that relationship gradually
inverts the hierarchical positions letting the servant became master and the
master in turn become the servant. This occurs in the context of physical
38
Kant, ibid.
39
G. W. F. Hegel. Werke in zwanzig Bänden (Hegel WW), Bd. 3: Phänomenologie
des Geistes. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1970. Chapter heading: Selbständigkeit
und Unselbständigkeit des Selbstbewusstseins.
518
work, an activity the servant originally performs under the direction of his
master.
It does not take much imagination to come up with the conjecture that Marx
replaced the servant with the working class and the master with the class of
the capital, finding in the dialectic of their interaction the blueprint for the
historical events that would lead to the revolution. But first, what were the
inspirations he found in Hegel‘s text?
Being Master depends – as Max Weber later also states in his sociology of
domination – on the assent of the servant. However, if the dialogue between
Master and Servant gradually dies down and eventually ceases entirely, the
servant will become estranged, stop agreeing with the superior position of
his counterpart and thus no longer view the Master as a Master. The
servant‘s estrangement is derived from the observation that in his work he
creates a material product which however, not he, the maker, but the master
defines with regard to that product‘s meaning and significance. As a
consequence, the servant is the maker of a material form which then
represents in a symbolic way not his, but somebody else’s Self-Certainty as
content. This tension initiates change in the relationship between the two
actors.
Change must be visualized as occurring in several phases: Originally the
loyal servant fully agrees to the arrangement, by which an object he
produces becomes the objectification of his master‘s Self-Certainty. As a
result, in this initial phase, the servant gives his master power over the
material objects he manipulates, by letting them become expressions of the
master‘s mind. But if – as was indicated above – the dialogue between the
two fades away and eventually disappears, the Master no longer even
recognizes his servant as a person with a Self-Certainty of his own, but
instead counts him among the material objects under the master‘s control.
That will then deprive the master of his previous ability to recognize and
appreciate his servant‘s state of mind.
The dialogue between master and servant having completely disappeared
the master is isolated and cut off from any chances to anticipate and
possible influence what will happen next. The servant on the other hand,
learns more and more to form a realistic impression of his position with
regard to his master. He will thus become the self-conscious subject of his
own Self-Certainty, also by realizing that and how he depends on his master
for attaching immaterial significance to the object he produces through his
work. Gaining this insight means in Hegel‘s language that now comes "das
dienende Bewusstsein zum Fürsichsein" (the serving consciousness arrives
at existing for itself). This – in a completely nonviolent way – is the final
519
step toward the emancipation of who previously was the servant, merely as
the result of the dialectic process working automatically.
As we indicated above, the young Marx most likely read these reflections
by Hegel with admiration. But in contrast to the individualistic thinking of
German Idealism, Marx grew out of the Mosaic religion about the people of
god, and thus was used to thinking in terms of peoples deciding the course
of history. Accordingly, in his thinking he replaced the two individuals
confronted in Hegel‘s philosophy with the two classes whom he saw as
giving history shape in the drama of the struggle between the proletariat and
the capitalists
40
.
C. Hegel and Schelling
Again, the question must be raised, if philosophy can be national or ethnic
at all, or if it is by necessity a project which overarches the borders
separating nations and populations. But while leaving that unanswered here,
as a next deliberation we can look at the writings of two noted German
philosophers: Again G.W.F. Hegel (1770-1831) and F.W.J. Schelling
(1775-1854). Schelling became Hegel‘s successor in Berlin and started
lecturing there in November of 1841. Both share some basic assumptions in
their philosophy of religion, a comparatively young discipline within
philosophy which had established itself as late as the end of the 18th
century.
Hegel and Schelling agree in wanting to overcome the rationalistic concept
of religion that is typical for Kant
41
. A general idea of a religion of reason is
for them nothing more than merely a theoretical construct. To stay close to
the reality of religious experience, they look instead into the history of
religions and study systems of faith in comparison without, however,
depriving Christianity of the status of the highest level of religious
evolution. Indeed, in their view the other religions were necessary as it
were, as the background against which Christianity could become the
highest form. In this context Hegel expresses quite remarkable views on
40
Compare Karl Marx, "Kritik der Hegelschen Rechtsphilosophie, Einleitung",
1964, original written in 1843.
41
We follow here the thoughts of the Schelling expert Albert Franz (born 1947),
Professor emeritus of Theology at the Technical University of Dresden, Germany,
see his article: Religion und Religionen bei Hegel und Schelling - Ein kritischer
Vergleich aus heutiger Perspektive, pp. 453-470 in: Kircheneinheit und
Weltverantwortung, Festschrift für Peter Neuner, edited by Christoph Böttigheimer
and Hubert Filser. Verlag Friedrich Pustet, Regensburg 2006: 779 pages. We also
point the reader to the book on Schelling by Albert Franz: Philosophische Religion.
Editions Rodopi B.V., Amsterdam and Würzburg 1992.
520
Islam in his lectures on the philosophy of history. Nevertheless, Hegel and
Schelling also disagree in a crucial point, to which we will come later in
this article.
First, we must confirm the consensus between Hegel and Schelling about
leaving the rationalistic approach to religion and replacing it with an
historical and empirical study of comparative religions. To subject religion
to the judgment of reason is of course a method familiar also from certain
schools of theological thinking. Both German philosophers agree on
wanting to reject that subordination of what happened in history to the one-
sidedness of asking how reasonable it has been
42
. Hegel as well as Schelling
were leading representatives of German Idealism and in spite of their
differences, they agreed in wanting to overcome the rationalist take on
religion that was current
43
. To them religion had to be studied and
interpreted in the context of its specific phase of historical change and in
that particular culture in which it had evolved and was practiced.
Schelling in particular also criticized the notion, according to which a
―religion for the senses‖ was needed to engage the masses who wanted
music and theatrical performances in their liturgies. He argued: ―Not just
the masses, the philosopher too is in need for such‖ appeals to the senses
44
.
An additional view helpful in overcoming Kant‘s rationalism was Hegel‘s
claim that empirical religions needed to be acknowledged and studied with
the understanding, that ―religion in general was to be regarded as the
species (genus) and the particular religions as the types‖
45
. The question
was no longer: ―Is this system of beliefs and behavior a religion?‖ But
rather: ―What type of religion is this?‖
Along with this elevation of religion as empirical and historical
phenomenon came Hegel‘s statement that as such it was not the subjective
opinion of certain, possibly misguided, people: ―But religion is not merely a
type of subjective notion, instead it is in and of itself objective, since it has
a way of existing all its own‖
46
. Hegel thus wants individual religions to be
looked at and listened to independently of the urge to press them into a
corset of ―truths‖ generated by reason
47
.
Schelling agrees with that. For him too it would be unacceptable to subject
42
Ibid, p. 453.
43
Ibid, p. 455.
44
Ibid, p. 455.
45
Ibid, p. 456.
46
Ibid, p. 456
47
Ibid, p. 457.
521
the various religions to a general concept of religion and then to deduce
from it what is and what is not religious about them
48
. Schelling even
describes the variety of historical religions as ―a coherent chain from which
no link may be removed‖ provided one really wants to understand the
religion under study. It had essentially been the achievement of Kant to
construe a scholarly religion based on reason. Precisely that is not
acceptable to Schelling because according to him Kant‘s religion of reason
did not come about as a result of ―mythology and revelation‖ as the
historical religions did
49
. Those are thus unfairly compared to the construct
of the scholar and as a result the ―age-old faith of the peoples for which
they have given their lives are dissolved into mere philosophy‖
50
.
Schelling is particular stringent when he attacks the rationalistic method by
applying it to Christianity: ―From the point of view of rationalism which
excludes anything historical from explaining the world, mythology is
merely a chaos of nonsensical impressions. From that point of view, anyone
looking at Christianity must find its historical dimensions just as absurd as
the notions of mythology‖
51
. Therefore, any scholarly religion is to be
rejected as having no foundation in experienced reality. It has been
deprived of all that is historical, and mythology as well revelation are
reduced to media of communication.
In contrast with approaches to older religions as representing error of the
unbelieving versus Christianity representing the truth, Hegel as well as
Schelling acknowledge and accept the world of the religions as necessary
preconditions for Christianity. The process of finding the truth and of
realizing human freedom in history is dependent upon the critical study of
the various religions and religious phenomena
52
. Thus, Christianity does in
fact need those studies. This becomes abundantly clear in Hegel‘s works, be
it his philosophy of history, his phenomenology of the sprit, his philosophy
of law: Religion is a topic throughout theses texts.
In his lectures on the Philosophy of History Hegel deals with Islam in
detail, giving it the name Mohammedanism. He praises what he calls
Islamic Monotheism as a ―Revolution of the Orient‖. While ―the West
begins to feel at home in matters of coincidence, complications, and
particularisms‖ the radical monotheism of Islam encourages the ―principle
48
Ibid, p. 458.
49
Ibid, p. 458
50
Ibid, p. 459.
51
Ibid, p. 459.
52
Ibid, p. 464.
522
of simply unity‖
53
. This Hegel sees leading to the high levels of poetry and
scholarship in Islam. When its monotheism later degenerates into fanatism
and fatalism, this happens – according to Hegel – because that principle
becomes an empty formalism not taking advantage of its potential for the
freedom of the faithful. Hegel compares this sad state of Islam with the
Enlightenment: In both cases the concept of ―God does not have any
content, is not concrete‖
54
as a You.
Schelling may not engage in comparing religions with the same systematic
consistency as Hegel, however, Schelling not only reads his sources in
Greek and Latin, but also in Hebrew, Arabic and the Sanskrit of Persia,
which gave him access to a wide variety of religious texts, wider than
Hegel‘s access. But more important than this is Hegel‘s decision to classify
historical religions as forms of consciousness. Hegel writes: ―Religion finds
its reality as consciousness… its content is determined by the fact that it is
in consciousness and how it is there‖
55
. This premise subjects religion to
human thinking! ―Thinking is the absolute judge, before whom content
must authenticate and certify itself‖
56
.
This has fundamental consequences for Hegel in that in none of the
religions, not even in Christianity, can truth really be recognized, nor can
freedom be realized. To Hegel religious truth is only that truth which results
from a particular way of looking at things, just as religious freedom always
exists merely as imagined freedom. At the end of his Phenomenology of the
Spirit Hegel concludes that true freedom can exist only as ―der sich in
Geistgestalt wissende Geist,‖ meaning ―the spirit which recognizes itself as
existing in no other form than in that of being spirit.‖ This indeed subjects
all religious knowledge to philosophy, and true knowledge is to Hegel post-
religious knowledge. True freedom too, is possible only as the result of
abandoning religious ties, as the achievement of post-religious autonomy!
57
.
This is a position Schelling does not accept! In contrast to Hegel he
includes human knowledge and human freedom into the general course of
history as the process of creation. Thus, to him the history of religions is not
a history of forms of consciousness, but instead is the result of the evolution
of the direct dialogue between man and God. Truth and freedom cannot be
realized without religion and cannot be post-religious. Rather, for Schelling,
53
Ibid, p. 464, Hegel, WW 12, 428.
54
Hegel WW 17, 337, as quoted by A. Franz 464.
55
Hegel WW 16, p. 251, Franz 466.
56
Hegel WW 16, p. 341, Franz 466.
57
A. Franz, op. cit. 467.
523
in confrontation with the philosophy of religion a-religious (or even anti-
religious) rationalism and secularism are post-secular
58
.
The philosophy of religion is a discipline which suggests a comparison with
China. But first we must introduce the fundamental Chinese philosophers.
IV. Chinese Philosophy: Confucianism and Daoism
A. Confucianism as Family Ethic
1) Objectification – Personalization
As we move toward Chinese culture and philosophy, we follow (to some
extent) the views of the most influential Chinese sociologist of the last
century, Fei Xiaotong (費孝通) (1910 – 2005). Possibly the most
fundamental difference between philosophical thinking in the orient and the
occident can be illustrated by first quoting from Simmel, and then adding
Fei Xiaotong‘s very short comment to that. Simmel describes a transition
in Wester philosophy toward objectification in several steps, and Fei states
that this leads him to a fundamental distinction between Chinese and
Western philosophy. Here is the exchange between the two scholars:
Simmel writes: ―When the stoics later demanded, as an ethical goal, to be in
harmony with the general supreme reason of the world [Weltvernunft],
when the Christian ethic depicted the same as a realization of God's
Kingdom on Earth, then we have to search for the founder of these
objective moral principles in Plato, who for the first time cut loose the
absolute good from the entanglement with human subjectivity, be it
egotistical or altruistic, and who placed that highest objective idea into the
center of the world orbit‖
59
. It is one of the striking theses of Fei Xiaotong
that this turn toward objective moral principles never happened in China
60
.
The objectivation to which Simmel refers is a step in Western, and by
implication also in German philosophy, which Simmel attributes to Plato. It
will have to be tested, if Plato can indeed be seen as the originator of this
crucial aspect of Western and of German philosophy, and if and why no
parallel development occurred in Chinese philosophy. Our tentative answer
is this: Western philosophy tended to extract from knowledge about human
behavior the general and abstract principles and formed those into a new
and independent system of knowledge. Chinese philosophy, however,
remained based on reports about striking and memorable events, and left it
58
Ibid. 468.
59
Georg Simmel, Einleitung in die Moralwissenschaft. Eine Kritik der ethischen
Grundbegriffe, Bd. 1, Aalen: Scientia Verlag 1983 (Original 1893), p. 154.
60
Fei Xiaotong, China‘s Gentry. Essays in Rural-Urban Relations. Chicago &
London: The University of Chicago Press, 1953, 26.
524
to the person reporting it as well as to his or her listener, to draw the correct
conclusion. Here are some illustrations:
There are four classical novels in Chinese literary tradition which virtually
everyone familiar with that culture knows: Journey to the West, A Dream of
Red Mansions, Water Margin, and Romance of the Three Kingdoms. In the
latter it happens that a band of soldiers approaches the large mansion of the
nobleman Zhuge to capture him, and he knows about this. Unable to defend
himself or to flee he takes two young boys to stand at his side while he
plays a Guzheng, a musical instrument similar to a zither.
The hostile group arrives and hears the music. Confronted with this
peaceful scene their leader concludes that there must be a large contingent
of fighters hiding in the building, and that the musician‘s composure can
only be explained as the total absence of fear on his part combined with
trickery due to the knowledge that nothing can happen to him because he
feels well protected. Being afraid of the suspected defenders of the
mansion, the band retreats and no violence occurs. – In China today, if a
person is admired for his or her good judgment, that person may be called
―as wise as Zhuge‖. A particular type of wisdom is not objectified but rather
personified in the noblemen Zhuge.
The Zhuge-story is an illustration of the method that dominates Chinese
philosophy. The following ancient test introduces us to the content of
family relations, and how reflections about the kinship system dominate that
subject matter: Both examples share the Chinese tradition of passing on
principles to future generations by telling stories about concrete events: In
the days of Confucius the special type of loyalty between father and son
was not the same all over the country and certainly not the same in the
different strata of society. But the following story explains how the ethical
imperative evolved that is valid in China to this day: That is spelled out
explicitly in the Analects of Confucius in the chapter that is named after his
student Zi Lu.
In a conversation that took place in 489 BCE the Duke of She (沈 諸 梁)
informed Confucius, saying, "Among us here there are those who may be
styled upright in their conduct. If their father has stolen a sheep, they will
bear witness to the fact." Confucius said, "Among us, in our part of the
country, those who are upright are different from this. The father conceals
the misconduct of the son, and the son conceals the misconduct of the
father. Uprightness is to be found in this". No matter how strange it may
appear to a Western observer of Chinese culture, the great sage himself here
defines law-abiding conduct in the ―public sphere‖ to be of lesser dignity
than the family duty of filial piety toward a father.
525
We can see here, that in comparing the two philosophies there are not only
differences in method and procedure, but also in the results as ethical
conviction. We cannot go into the problem here, to which extent such
differences place a burden on the debate about corruption and favoritism
that happens at the present time. Since spectacular advancements usually
come at a price, we can conclude that the West suffered the loss of some
valuable component of its cultural tradition in exchange for its turn toward
objective moral principles. In response to this question it seems that the
absence of ―that highest objective idea‖
61
helped China maintain value
positions that – for better or for worse – have been lost in occidental
quarters.
We can observe in this context that in the Chinese cultural tradition, loyalty
toward a person is regarded as being more important than obedience to an
abstract rule. We will come back to that later in the context of obligations a
son has toward his father. The priority of loyalty to a person has private as
well as political implications. It also puts less emphasis on objectification as
goal in cultural development.
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