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  2. Relationship between Friedrich Nietzsche and Max Stirner

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relationship_between...

    Anselm Ruest [47] reviewed the Nietzsche controversy in his 1906 biography of Stirner [48] and came to the conclusion that "Nietzsche had read Stirner, but withheld mention of him in his writings because he feared that while it was 'a positive philosophy which yearned for life', it was apt to be 'misused by many readers as a justification for ...

  3. Talk : Relationship between Friedrich Nietzsche and Max Stirner

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Relationship_between...

    It is very possible, almost probable, that Nietzsche never read Stirner but was influenced by the few sentences that Lange had written about Stirner. After all, Nietzsche went to Lange because of Lange's discussion of the atheist Schopenhauer, whom Nietzsche revered. Among Lange's references to Schopenhauer was a comparison to Stirner's doctrine.

  4. Max Stirner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Stirner

    Stirner's birthplace in Bayreuth. Stirner was born in Bayreuth, Bavaria.What little is known of his life is mostly due to the Scottish-born German writer John Henry Mackay, who wrote a biography of Stirner (Max Stirner – sein Leben und sein Werk), published in German in 1898 (enlarged 1910, 1914) and translated into English in 2005.

  5. Egoist anarchism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egoist_anarchism

    Egoist anarchism or anarcho-egoism, often shortened as simply egoism, is a school of anarchist thought that originated in the philosophy of Max Stirner, a 19th-century philosopher whose "name appears with familiar regularity in historically orientated surveys of anarchist thought as one of the earliest and best known exponents of individualist ...

  6. Bruno Bauer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno_Bauer

    Bauer is also known for his association and sharp break with Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, and for his later association with Max Stirner and Friedrich Nietzsche. Starting in 1840, he began a series of works arguing that Jesus of Nazareth was a 2nd-century fusion of Jewish, Greek, and Roman theology.

  7. God is dead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_is_dead

    German philosopher Max Stirner, whose influence on Nietzsche is debated, writes in his 1844 book The Ego and its Own that "the work of the Enlightenment, the vanquishing of God: they did not notice that man has killed God in order to become now – 'sole God on high ' ".

  8. A History of Philosophy (Copleston) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_History_of_Philosophy...

    A History of Philosophy is a history of Western philosophy written by the English Jesuit priest Frederick Charles Copleston originally published in nine volumes between 1946 and 1975. As is noted by The Encyclopedia Britannica , the work became a "standard introductory philosophy text for thousands of university students, particularly in its U ...

  9. The Ego and Its Own - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ego_and_Its_Own

    Stirner sees Feuerbach's philosophy as merely a continuation of religious ways of thinking. Feuerbach had argued that Christianity was mistaken in taking human qualities and projecting them into a transcendent God. But according to Stirner, Feuerbach's philosophy, while rejecting a God, left the Christian qualities intact.