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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 .

  3. Jun 22, 2024 · Max Stirner (born October 25, 1806, Bayreuth, Bavaria [Germany]—died June 26, 1856, Berlin, Prussia) was a German antistatist philosopher in whose writings many anarchists of the late 19th and the 20th centuries found ideological inspiration.

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  4. Jun 27, 2002 · Max Stirner (1806–1856) is best known as the author of the idiosyncratic and provocative book entitled Der Einzige und sein Eigenthum (1844). Familiar in English as The Ego and Its Own (a more literal translation would be The Unique Individual and his Property ), both the form and content of Stirner's work are disconcerting.

  5. Aug 12, 2010 · Max Stirner (pseudonym for an early European Anarchist and Johann Caspar Schmidt) is best known as a central figure in the dissolution of the post-Hegelian philosophical milieu during the years leading up to the Prussian Revolution (and wider revolutionary events) of 1848.

  6. The Ego and Its Own (German: Der Einzige und sein Eigentum), also known as The Unique and Its Property is an 1844 work by German philosopher Max Stirner.

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  8. Apr 16, 2022 · Max Stirner’s ideal is this: a world in which men, unbound by laws, untrammeled even by any maxims of morality or right, will nevertheless live together like affectionate brothers. That is anarchism carried to its logical conclusion.

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