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The Classical Marxist Critiques of Religion: Marx, Engels, Lenin, Kautsky

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In view of the enormous number of works on Marxism in general and in light of the many books and articles touching on the relationship of Marxism to religion in particular, it may fairly be asked why yet another such work should be produced. My reply is that in eliciting answers to the kinds of questions posed by the methodology I have used, it was necessary to go to the primary sources almost exclusively. This is not to bemoan a sad fate but to affirm that there are notable deficiencies in the secondary sources relevant to my topic. By way of general indictment, I contend that the major difficulty with existing studies of the Marxist critique of religion is that their authors, whether expositors or critics, have failed both to specify their own presuppositions concerning religion and to approach the subject with an adequate comprehension of its many dimensions. Since, in most cases, the reader is equally unprepared, anthropologically, sociologically, psychologically, and historically, for clear and informed thought in this vast and nebulous area, the result has been widespread confusion. As if this were not enough, numerous writers with little more than polemical interests have compounded the confusion by failing to distinguish between religion in general and their own brands of faith in particular. Others have not discriminated between the concepts of metaphysics and the supernatural items of religious belief.

184 pages, Paperback

First published May 31, 1975

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Delos McKown

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Profile Image for Titus Hjelm.
Author 18 books101 followers
September 26, 2013
Five stars if it wasn't for McKown's problematic functionalism. Great exposition and analysis of the main contributions of these for thinkers, but still waiting for a critical study of religion in the Marxist tradition from a Marxist perspective.
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