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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Max_StirnerMax Stirner - Wikipedia

    Johann Kaspar Schmidt (25 October 1806 – 26 June 1856), known professionally as Max Stirner, was a German post-Hegelian philosopher, dealing mainly with the Hegelian notion of social alienation and self-consciousness. [3] .

  2. Jun 27, 2002 · Max Stirner (1806–1856) is the author of Der Einzige und sein Eigenthum (1844). This book is usually known as The Ego and Its Own in English, but a more literal, and informative, translation would be The Unique Individual and their Property. Both the form and content of Stirner’s major work are disconcerting.

  3. Max Stirner was a German antistatist philosopher in whose writings many anarchists of the late 19th and the 20th centuries found ideological inspiration. His thought is sometimes regarded as a source of 20th-century existentialism.

  4. The Ego and Its Own (‹See Tfd› German: Der Einzige und sein Eigentum), also known as The Unique and Its Property [1] [2] [3] is an 1844 work by German philosopher Max Stirner.

  5. It is a robust online edition of The Ego and His Own by Max Stirner, as translated by Stephen Byington. Benjamin Tucker’s 1907 edition will serve as a basis, but many additional materials will be continually added as the project progresses.

  6. Max Stirner was one of the most important and seminal thinkers of the mid-nineteenth century. He exposed the religiosity behind secular humanism and rationalism, and the domination of the individual behind liberal modes of politics.

  7. www.maxstirner.org › critiche › max-stirnerX MAX STIRNER

    MAX STIRNER. In 1888 John Henry Mackay, the Scottish-German poet, while at the British Museum reading Lange's History of Materialism, encoimtered the name of Max Stirner and a brief criticism of his forgotten book, Der Einzige und sein Eigenthum (The Only One and His Property; in French translated L'Unique et sa Propri^te, and in the first ...

  8. So said Max Stirner (1806–1856), one of the most radical philosophers of the nineteenth century. Born Johann Kaspar Schmidt in Bayreuth in 1806, Stirner (a pseudonym that meant “highbrow”) became one of the most notorious members of the Young Hegelian circle of intellectuals.

  9. Jan 24, 2017 · This paper will examine Max Stirner’s notion of ownness as an alternative paradigm of freedom. I argue that ownness – which implies a radical form of self-ownership or self-mastery – is not reducible to any of the familiar categories of freedom such as negative or positive liberty; nor does it fit in with the republican model ...

  10. Max Stirners Dialectical Egoism by John F. Welsh. Der Geist Journal by Union of Egoists. Max Stirner Bibliography by Trevor Blake.