- Front matter
- All Things Are Nothing To Me
- A Human Life
- The Ancients
- The Moderns
- The Spirit
- The Possessed - part 1
- The Possessed - part 2
- The Possessed - part 3
- The Hierarchy - part 1
- The Hierarchy - part 2
- The Hierarchy - part 3
- The Free AND Political Liberalism - part 1
- Political Liberalism - part 2
- Social Liberalism
- Humane Liberalism - part 1
- Humane Liberalism - part 2
- Humane Liberalism - part 3
- Part Second, Ownness - part 1
- Ownness - part 2
- The Owner
- My Power - part 1
- My Power - part 2
- My Power - part 3
- My Intercourse - part 1
- My Intercourse - part 2
- My Intercourse - part 3
- My Intercourse - part 4
- My Intercourse - part 5
- My Intercourse - part 6
- My Intercourse - part 7
- My Intercourse - part 8
- My Intercourse - part 9
- My Intercourse - part 10
- My Intercourse - part 11
- My Self-Enjoyment - part 1
- My Self-Enjoyment - part 2
- My Self-Enjoyment - part 3
- My Self-Enjoyment - part 4
- The Unique One
In this book, his most famous, Max Stirner presents a philosophical case for a radical egoism that shuns the socially-oriented outlooks of both "establishment" ideologies and of revolutionaries in favor of an extreme individualism. The book is most widely talked about today only through the lens of other philosophers' thought: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels launched a famous assault on it in The German Ideology, and some draw a connection between Stirner's thoughts here and Nietzsche's egoism a generation later. But it is worth reading in its own right, as much for its lyricism as the challenge of its philosophical proposals. (Summary by Mat Messerschmidt)
There are no reviews for this eBook.
There are no comments for this eBook.
You must log in to post a comment.
Log in