Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Principal events in Stimer's life
- Further reading
- Note on the translation
- The Ego and Its Own
- First Part: MAN
- Second Part: I
- I Ownness
- II The owner
- III The unique one
- Biographical and other notes on the text
- Index of subjects
- Index of proper names
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
III - The unique one
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Principal events in Stimer's life
- Further reading
- Note on the translation
- The Ego and Its Own
- First Part: MAN
- Second Part: I
- I Ownness
- II The owner
- III The unique one
- Biographical and other notes on the text
- Index of subjects
- Index of proper names
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
Summary
Pre-Christian and Christian times pursue opposite goals; the former wants to idealize the real, the latter to realize the ideal; the former seeks the ‘holy spirit’, the latter the ‘glorified body’. Hence the former closes with insensitiveness to the real, with ‘contempt for the world’; the latter will end with the casting off of the ideal, with ‘contempt for the spirit’.
The opposition of the real and the ideal is an irreconcilable one, and the one can never become the other: if the ideal became the real, it would no longer be the ideal; and, if the real became the ideal, the ideal alone would be, but not at all the real. The opposition of the two is not to be vanquished otherwise than if some one annihilates both. Only in this ‘some one’ the third party, does the opposition find its end; otherwise idea and reality will ever fail to coincide. The idea cannot be so realized as to remain idea, but is realized only when it dies as idea; and it is the same with the real.
But now we have before us in the ancients adherents of the idea, in the moderns adherents of reality. Neither can get clear of the opposition, and both pine only, the one party for the spirit, and, when this craving of the ancient world seemed to be satisfied and this spirit to have come, the others immediately for the secularization of this spirit again, which must forever remain a ‘pious wish’.
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- Information
- Stirner: The Ego and its Own , pp. 320 - 324Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995