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    Both Hegel and Marx aim for situation (iv): a social worl... — Carmelics
    Home/Democracy & Governance
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

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    Supports→Hegel and Marx share the same ultimate goal but differ in their proposed routes to that goal

    Both Hegel and Marx aim for situation (iv): a social world lacking systematic forms of both objective and subjective alienation

    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract
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    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract

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    Different starting diagnoses entail different strategies for reaching the shared...Hegel and Marx disagree about the current diagnosis of modern societyHegel and Marx share the same ultimate goal but differ in their proposed routes ...

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    Marx diagnoses modern society as starting from situation (i): a condit...85%Moving from situation (iii) to situation (iv) requires only overcoming...85%Hegel diagnoses modern society as starting from situation (iii): a con...84%Subjective alienation is overcome by recognising and reconciling onese...78%

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    That Hegel and Marx diagnose modern society in these different ways helps to explain their differing strategic political commitments. They both aim to bring society closer to situation (iv)—that is, a social world lacking systematic forms of both objective and subjective alienation—but, since they disagree about where we are starting from, they propose different routes to that shared goal. For Marx, since we start from situation (i), this requires that the existing world be overturned; that is,

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