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Eugen Dühring
Eugen Dühring
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Eugen Karl Dühring (German: [ˈdyːʁɪŋ]; 12 January 1833 – 21 September 1921) was a Positivist Socialist German philosopher and economist who was a strong critic of Marxism.

Key Information

Life and works

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Dühring was born in Berlin, Prussia. After a legal education he practised law in Berlin until 1859. A weakness of the eyes, ending in total blindness, led him to take up the studies with which his name is now connected. In 1864, he became docent of the University of Berlin, but, in consequence of a quarrel with the professoriate, was deprived of his licence to teach in 1874.[1]

Among his works are Kapital und Arbeit (1865); Der Wert des Lebens (1865); Natürliche Dialektik (1865); Kritische Geschichte der Philosophie (von ihren Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart) (1869); Kritische Geschichte der allgemeinen Principien der Mechanik (1872), one of his most successful works; Kursus der National und Sozialokonomie (1873); Kursus der Philosophie (1875), entitled in a later edition Wirklichkeitsphilosophie; Logik und Wissenschaftstheorie (1878); and Der Ersatz der Religion durch Vollkommeneres (1883).[1] He also published Die Judenfrage als Racen-, Sitten- und Culturfrage (1881, The Jewish Question as a Racial, Moral, and Cultural Question).[2][3]

He published his autobiography in 1882 under the title Sache, Leben und Feinde; the mention of Feinde ('enemies') is characteristic. Dühring's philosophy claims to be emphatically the philosophy of reality. He is passionate in his denunciation of everything which, like mysticism, tries to veil reality. He is, in the words of historian Carlton J. H. Hayes "almost Lucretian in his anger against religion"[4] which would withdraw the secret of the universe from our direct gaze. His substitute for religion is a doctrine in many points akin to Auguste Comte and Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach, the former of whom he resembles in his sentimentalism.[1]

Dühring's economic views are said to derive largely from those of Friedrich List.[5][6] On other matters, particularly their attitudes toward Jews, the two men held very different opinions.[7]

Thought

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He was "deeply" influenced by Schopenhauer throughout his career.[8] Dühring's opinions changed considerably after his first appearance as a writer. His earlier work, Natürliche Dialektik (Natural Dialectics), is entirely in the spirit of critical philosophy. Later, in his movement towards positivism, beginning with the publication of Kritische Geschichte der Philosophie (Critical History of Philosophy), he rejects Immanuel Kant's separation of phenomenon from noumenon and claims that our intellect is capable of grasping the whole reality. This adequacy of thought to things is because the universe contains but one reality, i.e. matter. It is to matter that we must look for the explanation both of conscious and of physical states. But matter is not, in his system, to be understood with the common meaning, but with a deeper sense as the substratum of all conscious and physical existence; and thus the laws of being are identified with the laws of thought. In this idealistic system Dühring finds room for teleology. The end of nature, he holds, is the production of a race of conscious beings. From his belief in teleology he is not deterred by the enigma of pain. As a determined optimist, he asserts that pain exists to throw pleasure into conscious relief.[1]

In ethics, Dühring follows Auguste Comte in making sympathy the foundation of morality. In political philosophy, he teaches an ethical communism and attacks Herbert Spencer's principle of Social Darwinism. In economics, he is best known by his vindication of the American writer H. C. Carey, who attracts him both by his theory of value, which suggests an ultimate harmony of the interests of capitalists and labourers; and also by his doctrine of national political economy, which advocates protection on the ground that the morals and culture of a people are promoted by having its whole system of industry complete within its own borders. His patriotism is fervent, but narrow and exclusive. He idolized Frederick the Great, and denounced Jews, Greeks, and the cosmopolitan Goethe. His writing has been characterized as clear and incisive, "though disfigured by arrogance and ill-temper, failings which may be extenuated on the ground of his physical affliction".[1]

Throughout his life, Dühring was a vehement antisemite and was one of the first proponents of racial antisemitism in Germany. In 1881 Dühring's pamphlet Die Judenfrage als Racen-, Sitten- und Culturfrage (The Jewish Question as a Question of Race, Morals and Culture) was published. It was a pseudo-scientific attempt to give antisemitism as a political movement a biological, historical, and philosophical foundation. He described the "Jewish question" similarly to Wilhelm Marr, as an expression of an irresolvable racial antagonism, and openly advocated for the "murder and extermination" of Jews as a solution to the Jewish question.[9]

Legacy

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Grave of Dühring in Potsdam

He is chiefly remembered among English-speakers because of Engels' criticism of his views in Anti-Dühring: Herr Eugen Dühring's Revolution in Science. Engels wrote his Anti-Dühring in opposition to Dühring's ideas, which had found some disciples among the German Social Democrats. He is also the most prominent representative of the socialism of that era attacked by Nietzsche in his later works. Most of Dühring's work remains unavailable in English, aside from his work on the Jewish question.[10] Dühring's writing on the Jewish question influenced later antisemites and racist thinkers such as Theodor Fritsch, Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Georg von Schönerer. Through this legacy, Dühring's antisemitic views later found their way into the racial doctrines of Nazism.[11]

Friedrich Nietzsche heavily criticized Dühring's opinions on morality in his work On the Genealogy of Morality:

I again remind readers who have ears to hear of that apostle of revenge from Berlin, Eugen Dühring, who makes the most indecent and disgusting use of moral clap-trap of anyone in Germany today: Dühring, today's biggest loudmouth of morality, even amongst his kind, the anti-Semites.[12]

"Heroic materialism" characterised Dühring's philosophy. He attacked capitalism, Marxism, and organised Christianity and Judaism. Many scholars[13] believe that Dühring's invention of a modern-sounding antisemitism helped persuade Theodor Herzl that Zionism was the only answer:

Herzl acknowledged this over and over in his diaries and correspondence: "I will fight anti-Semitism in the place it originated—in Germany and in Austria," he said in one letter. He identified the genealogy of modern, racist antisemitism in the writings of the German social scientist Dr. Eugen Duehring in the 1890s.[14]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Eugen Karl Dühring (12 January 1833 – 21 September 1921) was a German philosopher, political economist, mathematician, and heterodox socialist whose positivist system sought to derive social and economic principles from natural laws, rejecting Hegelian dialectics and metaphysical speculation. Born in Berlin to a Prussian state official, he studied law and briefly practiced before turning to academia and independent scholarship, though he was dismissed from the University of Berlin in 1868 amid accusations of anti-Jewish agitation. Despite losing his sight around age 30, Dühring produced voluminous works on philosophy, economics, and natural science, including critiques of capitalism and organized religion, and proposed a "natural dialectic" unifying empirical observation with axiomatic reasoning. His economic theories emphasized producer cooperatives and mutual credit over state intervention or Marxist class struggle, influencing splinter socialist movements but earning sharp refutation in Friedrich Engels' 1878 polemic Anti-Dühring, which exposed inconsistencies in his purported revolution of science. A defining controversy arose from Dühring's early advocacy of racial anti-Semitism, articulated in his 1881 pamphlet distinguishing Jews as a cultural and biological threat distinct from other Semites, ideas that prefigured later extremist ideologies despite his rejection of nationalism. Early in Friedrich Nietzsche's career, Dühring's anti-idealist vigor shaped the philosopher's thought, though Nietzsche later derided him as superficial. Dühring's marginalization in mainstream socialism stemmed partly from institutional biases favoring Marxist orthodoxy, yet his insistence on empirical realism over dialectical abstractions highlighted tensions in 19th-century German social theory.

Biography

Early Life and Education

Eugen Dühring was born on January 12, 1833, in , then part of the Kingdom of Prussia. His father, Wilhelm Ferdinand Dühring, served as a Prussian state bureaucrat and had fought as a in the , instilling in the family a stable yet conventional environment marked by Prussian discipline and progressive leanings against rigid institutional norms. This upbringing emphasized home-based intellectual fostering over the perceived dullness of formalized schooling, providing Dühring with early exposure to iconoclastic ideas amid Berlin's bureaucratic milieu. Dühring attended some of Prussia's premier schools before enrolling in 1853 at Friedrich-Wilhelm University in (now Humboldt University) to study . His formal education centered on , supplemented by self-directed pursuits in and related fields, culminating in a 1861 doctoral dissertation in philosophy titled De Tempore, Spatio, Causalitate Atque de Analysis Infinitesimalis Logica, which examined logical foundations of time, space, causality, and infinitesimal analysis. From an early stage, Dühring rejected speculative philosophy, particularly Hegelian idealism, in favor of empirical methods grounded in observation and verifiable reality, drawing initial inspiration from Ludwig Feuerbach's atheistic and realism. This orientation toward shaped his formative intellectual leanings, prioritizing natural and causal explanations over abstract metaphysics.

Academic Career and Dismissal

Dühring qualified as a at the University of in 1864, enabling him to deliver unsalaried lectures on and without a full professorship. His evening lectures at the institution drew significant attendance during the mid-1860s, attracting students interested in his critiques of established academic doctrines. Early publications contributed to his rising profile within academic circles. In 1865, Dühring published Natürliche Dialektik (Natural Dialectic), a work that challenged Kantian by advocating a naturalistic approach to logic and , thereby gaining notice among contemporaries seeking alternatives to . This text marked his initial foray into systematic philosophical argumentation, distinguishing him from prevailing neo-Kantian trends. Dühring's tenure ended in July 1877 when the Prussian Ministry of Education revoked his lecturing , citing administrative grounds related to his persistent feuds with colleagues and public criticisms of university practices. Contemporary observers attributed the decision to his unwillingness to adhere to institutional norms, including sharp attacks on academic hierarchies that alienated the professoriate. Supporters mounted petitions for reinstatement, sparking protests among democratic and socialist-leaning groups, but these efforts failed, and Dühring received no further academic appointment. The dismissal highlighted tensions between individual scholarly independence and Prussian bureaucratic control over higher education during the era.

Later Years and Personal Challenges

Following his dismissal from the University of Berlin in , Dühring lived reclusively in Nowawes, near , where he remained until his death. but shared his home with Emilie Gladow, who assisted in his daily affairs and dictation of writings, alongside occasional secretaries and family members such as his son until the latter's death in 1880. This arrangement enabled him to sustain intellectual productivity amid growing isolation from academic circles, exacerbated by bitterness over his exclusion and opposition from figures like . Dühring's blindness, which onset around 1861 at age 28 and progressed to total loss of vision, severely limited his independence but did not halt his output; he dictated content systematically, relying on aides to transcribe and revise, which allowed continued work despite physical constraints. Financially, the loss of his academic salary led to hardships, eased somewhat by income from book sales, writing commissions, and a modest , supplemented by inheritances such as 17,000 from a follower in the 1880s. Further personal losses compounded his challenges, including the death of Emilie Gladow in 1911 and declining health with hearing impairment during . In his final years, Dühring observed the upheavals of and the emergence of the from his secluded residence, without direct engagement or public role. He persisted in intellectual activity through dictation until shortly before his death on September 21, 1921, in Nowawes, demonstrating resilience against accumulating disabilities and obscurity.

Philosophical Foundations

Critique of Idealism and Development of Reality Philosophy

Dühring launched a systematic of , particularly Hegelian dialectics, which he regarded as an artificial construct failing to capture genuine causal processes in nature and society. In his Kritische Geschichte der Philosophie (1869), he traced philosophical errors to speculative abstractions, synthesizing Ludwig Feuerbach's materialist of with Auguste Comte's to lay the groundwork for his "" (Wirklichkeitsphilosophie). This framework rejected Hegel's dialectical method as a logical contrivance confined to formal thought, incapable of explaining empirical through sequential stages originating from a primordial state of material rest. Central to Dühring's alternative was a methodological commitment to deriving principles from the empirical findings of physics and , prioritizing observable causal mechanisms over a priori deductions or metaphysical dualisms. He insisted that must align with the natural sciences, constructing a unified free from mystical or idealistic intrusions, where advances through testable hypotheses rather than speculative synthesis. This empiricist orientation positioned reality philosophy as a corrective to Hegel's system, favoring continuous, law-governed progression—evident in Dühring's thermodynamic principles linking scales linearly—over contradictory leaps that he deemed illusory. By grounding in verifiable natural forces, Dühring aimed to resolve contradictions not through dialectical but via scientific resolution of apparent antinomies into harmonious developments.

Key Metaphysical and Epistemological Principles

Dühring's metaphysics, as developed in Philosophie der Wirklichkeit (), embraces a materialist wherein reality constitutes a singular, self-contained totality of —encompassing both persistent elements and dynamic changes—without dualistic divides between thought, sensation, and external . He identified as a primordial unifying force inherent in , promoting cohesion from atomic to cosmic scales and extending to social bonds, thereby providing a naturalistic account of interconnection that precludes or idealistic interventions. Complementary principles, such as the of definite number limiting divisibility and the of difference (antagonism) driving evolutionary change from a primordial nucleus, underscore a balanced persistence amid flux, rejecting or creation ex nihilo. Epistemologically, Dühring restricted valid knowledge to the phenomenal domain discernible through empirical observation, inductive generalization, and sensory , critiquing transcendent metaphysics as unverifiable . Truth emerges as progressive approximations via scientific induction, where errors refine understanding and synthesizes disciplines hierarchically—from logic and to physics, , and social sciences—prioritizing concrete, anschaulich (intuitive) clarity over deductive absolutism or historical overemphasis. This framework, influenced by positivist forerunners like Comte, positions as the apex of , enabling causal penetration into while acknowledging intellect's bounded sovereignty. Anti-dualistically, Dühring conceived mind as an emergent, epiphenomenal activity of processes, fully immanent to conditions and homogeneous with bodily functions, devoid of autonomous spiritual substance. thus operates within natural laws, with volition and shaping yet constrained by physical determinants; , grounded in as a biological imperative, follows from evolutionary rather than transcendental dictates.

Economic and Social Theories

Analysis of Capitalism and Exploitation

Dühring's value theory centered on labor as the source of economic value, defined as the overcoming of natural and social obstacles in production, with all labor-time deemed equal in principle. He argued that capital functions not merely as accumulated labor but as a coercive instrument that extracts unearned proceeds through "possession-rent" (besitzrente), encompassing and profits as parasitic appropriations of labor's output. This dynamic, he contended, arises from force-backed property rights, contrasting with pre-capitalist systems where masters and collaborated without such rents, distributing production more equitably based on direct contribution. Economic crises, in Dühring's analysis, stemmed from among the masses, a consequence of monopolistic exploitation and unequal distribution that curtails despite expanding output. He rejected explanations rooted solely in anarchy, instead emphasizing deviations from "normality" caused by the proletariat's impoverished , leading to gluts, price collapses, and widespread bankruptcies. This diagnosis aligned with empirical patterns in 19th-century , including the 1847 panic triggered by railway speculation and harvest failures amid wage stagnation, the 1857 global crisis marked by commodity surpluses and 5,000 U.S. bank failures, and the 1873 depression following overinvestment in railroads, with industrial output halving in key sectors by 1879. Regarding class dynamics, Dühring portrayed the as an exploiting stratum whose power derives from historical force and legal monopolies on possession, rendering it a non-progressive "cul-de-sac" in human economic evolution, sustained by appropriation rather than productive innovation. The , conversely, embodies disciplined labor-power capable of asserting collective economic dominance, facilitating societal transition through organized self-reliance rather than as a dependent on dialectical upheaval. This antagonism, he maintained, manifests historically as mitigated subjugation under wage-labor, with exploitation verifiable in the widening gap between bourgeois wealth accumulation and proletarian subsistence levels documented in Prussian factory statistics from the onward.

Proposed Socialist Alternatives

Dühring proposed a socialist economy structured around decentralized associations of producers, organized into self-managing economic communes that would replace capitalist enterprises with and operation of the . These communes would abolish private land ownership and coordinate production through mutual agreements, emphasizing local over centralized planning to align output with actual needs and avoid bureaucratic inefficiencies. Exchange within and between communes would rely on labor notes, a denominated in units of socially necessary labor time, to ensure equivalence in trade and eliminate the inflationary distortions of or gold-based systems, which Dühring viewed as prone to and unequal accumulation. This labor-money scheme aimed to directly tie value to productive effort, facilitating equitable distribution without state monopolies on . Socially, Dühring's alternatives included universal to cultivate rational, ethical citizens capable of sustaining cooperative production, coupled with incentives for eugenic improvement of population quality—such as preferential resource access for families demonstrating heritable traits of and —to tie demographic policies to equitable resource use and long-term societal productivity. These measures sought to elevate as a foundation for , integrating biological realism with economic equity. Implementation would occur through gradual evolution driven by ethical persuasion and voluntary cooperation, drawing on empirical successes like producer cooperatives, rather than coercive or state expropriation, allowing socialism to emerge organically from proven mutualist experiments.

Distinctions from Marxism

Dühring rejected the core tenets of Marxist , which posits class struggle as the primary determinant of historical progress toward inevitable driven by economic contradictions. Instead, he emphasized biological factors, such as racial hierarchies and hereditary traits, alongside ethical imperatives of and rational force as the foundational forces shaping human societies, rendering class antagonism a secondary phenomenon rather than an inexorable . This framework dismissed dialectical materialism's reliance on Hegelian and contradiction, viewing it as speculative metaphysics incompatible with empirical reality , and precluded any teleological inevitability of without deliberate moral and institutional reform. In contrast to Marxism's advocacy for centralized state expropriation of capital leading to a proletarian dictatorship, Dühring warned that such collectivism would foster bureaucratic despotism and stifle individual initiative. He advanced a "socialitarian" model of decentralized economic communes—autonomous, territorially based producer associations with open access and self-management—that incorporated market-like competition and incentives to sustain productivity and personal freedom, eschewing the abolition of private economic agency in favor of cooperative yet voluntary structures. This system prioritized ethical distribution through mutual aid over revolutionary seizure, aiming to transition capitalism gradually via ethical persuasion and legal reforms rather than violent upheaval. Dühring also contested Marxism empirically, highlighting the falsification of its immiseration thesis—the prediction of declining absolute and relative worker welfare under capitalism. He pointed to data from 1870s Germany, where industrial wages rose amid economic expansion, union organization, and state interventions like Bismarck's social insurance laws introduced in 1883, demonstrating improved living standards that undermined claims of pauperizing tendencies and supported his case for reformist socialism over cataclysmic predictions.

Racial and Cultural Views

Theory of Race in Human Development

Dühring maintained that human development proceeds through racial differentiation and selection, with the Indo-European peoples functioning as the principal creative engine of civilization. He attributed the origins of advanced societies to their migratory conquests and cultural impositions, tracing these expansions from a northern Eurasian cradle around the second millennium BCE, which introduced hierarchical social structures, linguistic innovations, and technological breakthroughs like and . Empirical support for this included the widespread archaeological record of burials and remains correlating with Indo-European linguistic diffusion across , Persia, and , enabling the overthrow of indigenous stagnation and the establishment of dynamic empires. Central to Dühring's mechanism was the imperative of racial endogamy to perpetuate superior strains, positing that hybridization erodes the genetic and psychological vigor required for progress. Cross-breeding, in his analysis, yields dysgenic outcomes by averaging traits toward mediocrity, as seen in historical declines following prolonged contact between disparate groups, where inventive momentum waned amid cultural syncretism. He drew on linguistic evidence, noting the preservation of syntactic complexity and phonetic purity in isolated Indo-European branches versus the simplification in mixed zones, alongside archaeological indications of societal vigor in homogeneous settlements. Dühring's framework, while derided as pseudoscientific by egalitarian critics, invoked contemporaneous anthropometric for validation, such as cranial capacity measurements linking cerebral to cognitive —Europeans averaging 1,448 cm³ per Samuel Morton's compilations, exceeding non-European averages by 10-20% in Pierre Broca's validations. These metrics, derived from thousands of skulls across global populations, underscored innate disparities in abstract reasoning and volitional drive, aligning with Dühring's causal emphasis on hereditary endowments over environmental equalizers.

The Jewish Question and Anti-Semitism

Dühring articulated his views on the Jewish question primarily in Die Judenfrage als Rassen-, Sitten- und Culturfrage (The Jewish Question as a Racial, , and Cultural Question), published in 1881, where he posited as a distinct nomadic race inherently parasitic on host societies through economic exploitation and cultural disruption. He argued that Jewish traits, rooted in racial biology rather than environment or religion, fostered usury, speculative finance, and subversive intellectualism that eroded productive labor and communal solidarity, contrasting the latter's emphasis on tangible creation with the former's alleged reliance on mediation and debt. This framework rejected assimilation as viable, viewing Jewish integration efforts as superficial masks for ongoing racial antagonism, and advocated exclusionary measures to preserve societal health without endorsing violence. Dühring supported his claims with observations of Jewish overrepresentation in 19th-century European finance, where historical guild exclusions channeled Jews into moneylending and banking, leading to prominence in private banking sectors; for instance, in late-19th-century , a notable proportion of private bankers were of Jewish origin, exemplified by families like the Rothschilds who dominated international loans. He linked this to broader patterns of involvement in revolutionary movements, such as the upheavals, attributing them to a racial propensity for destabilizing established orders in favor of cosmopolitan interests over national ones, though empirical data on such roles often reflects urban concentration and literacy advantages rather than innate . These assertions drew on verifiable disparities but interpreted them causally through racial , positing finance as a mechanism for extracting wealth without productive contribution, in opposition to agrarian or industrial economies. While Dühring's analysis resonated with völkisch intellectuals for highlighting perceived threats to ethnic cohesion and presaging interwar racial economics, it faced rebuke for conspiratorial overtones that generalized from group patterns while disregarding assimilated Jews' contributions to , , and industry, such as in Germany's pre-1914 intellectual elite where Jewish individuals integrated productively despite barriers. Critics, including contemporaries like , noted the framework's failure to account for individual agency and successful , potentially inflating racial over socioeconomic causation, though Dühring's emphasis on empirical disparities anticipated later recognitions of ethnic specialization in absent institutional reforms. This tension underscores the debate: observable concentrations in usury-derived sectors stemmed from medieval prohibitions on Christian lending and land ownership restrictions, enabling wealth accumulation that fueled both resentment and genuine economic utility, yet Dühring's racial lens prioritized existential threat over such contingencies.

Major Works and Polemics

Principal Publications

Dühring authored numerous works formulating a unified positivist integrating , , , and , with publications spanning from the onward. His output emphasized empirical over speculative , often presented in dense, technical prose suited for scholarly audiences rather than popular consumption. Early contributions centered on economic foundations, including Capital und Arbeit: Neue Antworten auf alte Fragen (1865), probing production relations, and Kritische Grundlegung der Volkswirthschaftslehre (1866), which critiqued prevailing doctrines of value and exchange. Mid-period efforts culminated in expansive philosophical and economic treatises, such as Kritische Geschichte der Nationalökonomie und des Socialismus (1871), reviewing historical developments, Cursus der National- und Socialökonomie (1873), outlining policy principles, and Cursus der Philosophie als streng wissenschaftlicher Weltanschauung und Lebensgestaltung (1875), synthesizing a scientific worldview. In the , Dühring extended his framework to political analysis, exemplified by Die Judenfrage als Racen-, Sitten- und Culturfrage (), addressing social and cultural conflicts. These later volumes, part of broader polemical engagements, maintained the interconnected thematic structure of his oeuvre, though few received contemporary translations into English or French.

Conflict with Marx, Engels, and the SPD

In the mid-1870s, Eugen Dühring, a lecturer at the University of Berlin, began delivering public courses and publishing works that attracted significant interest among workers affiliated with the (SPD), positioning his "socialitarian" system as a superior alternative to . Dühring explicitly counterposed his positivist, anti-dialectical framework—emphasizing ethical imperatives, the role of force in history, and racial factors in societal evolution—to Karl Marx's materialist analysis of class antagonism and economic laws. This challenge prompted SPD co-founder to urge to intervene, leading Engels to commence writing a refutation in May 1876 after corresponding with Marx on the need to combat Dühring's spreading influence. Engels' response, Herr Eugen Dühring's Revolution in Science (commonly called Anti-Dühring), was serialized in the SPD's newspaper Vorwärts from October 1876 through July 1878 before appearing as a book in 1878. The text systematically dismantled Dühring's critiques, defending Marxist dialectics as grounded in empirical observation rather than Dühring's a priori philosophy, and upholding the theory of surplus value against Dühring's redefinition of exploitation as mere unequal exchange rather than the capitalist appropriation of unpaid labor time. Dühring's integration of racial hierarchy—asserting the Aryan race's innate superiority in driving cultural and economic advancement—clashed with Marxism's insistence on class universalism, where Engels portrayed such racialism as a bourgeois diversion from the proletarian struggle rooted in production relations. The exacerbated tensions within the SPD, as Dühring's adherents protested the at the party's May 27, , in , demanding its halt and a ban on book publication. The rebuffed these calls by a majority vote, instructing Vorwärts to proceed and effectively condemning Dühring's doctrines as incompatible with party principles, though Dühring himself held no formal membership. This outcome entrenched Marxist hegemony in the SPD, marginalizing Dühring's variant and foreshadowing broader schisms between and non-dialectical alternatives; itself gained enduring prominence, with excerpts forming the basis of Engels' 1880 pamphlet Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, which popularized core Marxist tenets across .

Engagements with Other Contemporaries

Dühring sharply criticized Ferdinand Lassalle's advocacy for , viewing it as a superficial that perpetuated dependency on government authority rather than fostering autonomous economic . In his economic analyses, Dühring rejected Lassalle's emphasis on state-financed producers' cooperatives as a pathway to , arguing that such measures would entrench bureaucratic control and fail to dismantle capitalist exploitation at its roots; instead, he proposed decentralized "socialitarian" communes grounded in mutual exchange and empirical . This critique extended to personal attacks, where Dühring accused Lassalle of moral compromise, including references to his legal troubles over inciting theft, portraying him as emblematic of opportunism within the socialist movement. In his responses to positivist thinkers, Dühring positioned himself as a reformer of the tradition, critiquing figures like for applying to society in ways that rationalized inequality under the guise of . He condemned Spencer's as insufficiently realist, insisting that ethical demanded active intervention for rather than passive adaptation to competitive struggles. Similarly, Dühring faulted John Stuart Mill's utilitarian economics for abstract that overlooked concrete mechanisms of exploitation, as outlined in his Kritische Geschichte der Nationalökonomie (1871), where he used historical data to challenge Mill's harmony-of-interests thesis. Dühring frequently bolstered these polemics with empirical defenses, employing statistical evidence on , resource distribution, and economic productivity to refute opponents' pessimism about socialist feasibility. For instance, he cited demographic figures to counter Malthusian arguments echoed by rivals, demonstrating through quantified trends that abundance could support egalitarian redistribution without crises. This data-driven approach distinguished his engagements, prioritizing verifiable metrics over speculative theory to undermine state socialist and positivist alternatives.

Influence and Reception

Impact on Non-Marxist Socialism and Anarchism

Dühring's "socialitarian" model of economic organization, outlined in his 1875 work Kritische Geschichte der Nationalökonomie und des Sozialismus, proposed decentralized communes of producers operating through mutual agreements rather than centralized state planning, distinguishing it from Marxist emphasis on proletarian dictatorship. This framework influenced non-Marxist socialist variants by prioritizing self-regulating associations over hierarchical authority, serving as a conceptual precursor to market-oriented socialism where competitive elements persist under collective ownership. His advocacy for functional decentralization in production echoed in , particularly in G.D.H. Cole's 1915 Self-Government in Industry and subsequent writings, which envisioned industry guilds as autonomous bodies negotiating economic relations, countering both capitalist monopolies and socialist . Dühring's rejection of Marxist in favor of ethical and juridical reforms aligned with guild socialists' focus on democratic control at the point of production, though Cole did not explicitly cite him. In anarchist circles, Dühring exerted influence on German tendencies emphasizing individualist and mutualist elements, as noted by in his assessment of early 20th-century movements, where Dühring's positivist critiques of alongside Henry George's ideas shaped anti-authoritarian strains rejecting both and pure . However, Dühring's endorsement of a minimal regulatory state precluded full anarchist alignment, limiting his appeal to fellow travelers prioritizing over abolition of governance.

Nietzsche's Critique and Indirect Influences

Nietzsche first engaged substantively with Dühring's philosophy in the summer of 1875, when he read several of his works and compiled a summary exceeding 50 pages, documenting this effort in his notebooks as a deliberate study to grapple with contemporary German thought. This period overlapped with the composition and publication of Nietzsche's (1873–1876), during which he critiqued Hegelian and the burdens of excessive historical consciousness in essays like "On the Use and Abuse of History for Life." Dühring's own vehement anti-Hegelianism, rooted in positivist and rejection of dialectical , resonated thematically with Nietzsche's early assaults on speculative philosophy, though Nietzsche's approach emphasized cultural vitality over Dühring's mechanistic . In his mature critiques, Nietzsche excoriated Dühring's socialist prescriptions as emblematic of "herd morality," a leveling ethic that stifled individual greatness under the guise of collective justice, as elaborated in (1888) where he assailed egalitarian ideologies for fostering decadence and mediocrity. He similarly dismissed Dühring's anti-Semitism not as a principled stand but as —the vengeful inversion of values by the powerless against perceived superiors—aligning it with the slave moralities he dissected in (1887). Nietzsche's library, which included at least seven Dühring titles, underscores this direct confrontation, yet he viewed Dühring's blend of and as symptomatic of modern nihilism's reactive impulses. Indirectly, Dühring's strict materialist framework, which reduced human development to economic and racial mechanics, appears to have catalyzed Nietzsche's pivot toward , sharpening his advocacy for an affirmative of will, instinct, and creative overcoming against deterministic . Biographical records indicate Nietzsche referenced Dühring in private notes as a foil for developing these anti-materialist themes, contributing to the Dionysian that defined his later corpus. This dialectical tension, rather than outright adoption, highlights how Dühring served as a negative exemplar in Nietzsche's intellectual evolution, prompting refinements in his critique of and without endorsing their premises.

Later Assessments and Marginalization

Dühring's racial theories exerted influence on völkisch nationalist movements in the , where his framing of the as a racial, moral, and cultural threat aligned with emerging ethno-spiritual ideologies that emphasized and spiritual dilemmas posed by perceived alien elements. His writings contributed to antisemitic discourse that later fed into broader nationalist currents, including through intermediaries like . Historians have assessed Dühring as a proto-Nazi figure, citing his early for Jewish extermination as a precursor to more systematic racial . Post-1945, Dühring's legacy faced deepened obscurity and effective suppression in academic and intellectual circles, attributable to the taint of his anti-Semitism and associations with ideologies discredited by ; his untranslated corpus and prior polemical defeats, such as Engels' 1878 , compounded this marginalization. Scholarship since 2000 has shown selective revival of interest in Dühring's non-Marxist , emphasizing his decentralized economic models and force-based critiques of over Marxist dialectics, while subjecting his racial assertions to scrutiny for empirical overreach—distinguishing verifiable cultural observations from unsubstantiated . Critiques, such as those by George Himmelsherb in , highlight factual distortions in his anti-Semitic works like Die Judenfrage als Rassen-, Sitten- und Culturfrage (1881). Academic engagement today remains sparse, confined largely to specialized studies calling for reassessment of his positivist contributions amid persistent institutional biases favoring Marxist paradigms; his exclusion reflects not only ethical repudiations but also a historiographical preference for ideologically aligned thinkers.

References

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