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Ernst Bloch

Western Philosophy
20th-century philosophyName Ernst Bloch Birth July 8, 1885(Ludwigshafen, Germany) Death August 4, 1977(aged 92) (Tübingen, Germany) School/tradition MarxismMain interests utopianism, revolutionaryideology, liberation theologyInfluenced by Marx, HegelInfluenced Ernesto Balducci, Jürgen Moltmann
For the composer, see Ernest Bloch.

Ernst Simon Bloch (IPA: [ɛʁnst ˈziːmɔn blɔx], July 8, 1885August 4, 1977) was a German Marxist philosopher.

Bloch was influenced by both Hegel and Marx. He was also interested in music (notably Gustav Mahler) and art (notably expressionism). He established friendships with Georg Lukacs, Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill and Theodor W. Adorno. Bloch's work focuses on the concept that in a utopian human world where oppression and exploitation have been eliminated there will always be a truly ideological revolutionary force.

Contents

Life

Bloch was born in Ludwigshafen, the son of an assimilated Jewish railway-employee. After studying philosophy, he married Else von Stritzky, daughter of a Baltic brewer in 1913, who died in 1921. His second marriage with Linda Oppenheimer lasted only a few years. His third wife was Karola Piotrowska, a Polish architect, whom he married 1934 in Vienna. When the Nazis came to power, they had to flee, first into Switzerland, then to Austria, France, Czechoslovakia, and finally the USA. Bloch returned to the GDR in 1949 and obtained a chair in philosophy at Leipzig. When the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, he did not return to the GDR, but went to Tübingen in West Germany, where he received an honorary chair in Philosophy. He died in Tübingen.

Work

Endlose Treppe by Max Bill, which is dedicated to the Principle of Hope by Bloch.

Bloch's work became very influential in the course of the student protest movements in 1968 and in liberation theology. It is cited as a key influence by Jürgen Moltmann in his Theology of Hope (1967, Harper and Row, New York), and by Ernesto Balducci.

Bloch's Principle of Hope was written during his emigration in the USA, where he lived briefly in New Hampshire before settling in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He wrote the lengthy three volume work in the reading room of Harvard's Widener Library. Bloch originally planned to publish it there under the title "Dreams of a Better Life". The Principle of Hope tries to provide an encyclopedic account of mankind's and nature's orientation towards a socially and technologically improved future.

Bibliography

Primary literature

  • Geist der Utopie (1918) (trans.: The Spirit of Utopia, Stanford, 2000)
  • Thomas Müntzer als Theologe der Revolution (1921)
  • Spuren (1930) (trans.: Traces, Stanford University Press, 2006)
  • Erbschaft dieser Zeit (1935)
  • Freiheit und Ordnung (1947)
  • Subjekt - Objekt (1949)
  • Christian Thomasius (1949)
  • Avicenna und die aristotelische Linke (1949)
  • Das Prinzip Hoffnung (3 vols.: 1954–1959) (trans.: The Principle of Hope, MIT Press, 1986)
  • Naturrecht und menschliche Würde (1961) (trans.: Natural Law and Human Dignity, MIT Press 1986)
  • Tübinger Einleitung in die Philosophie (1963)
  • Religion im Erbe (1959-66) (trans.: Man On His Own, Herder and Herder, 1970)
  • Atheismus im Christentum (1968) (trans.: Atheism in Christianity, 1972)
  • Politische Messungen, Pestzeit, Vormärz (1970)
  • Das Materialismusproblem, seine Geschichte und Substanz (1972)
  • Experimentum Mundi. Frage, Kategorien des Herausbringens, Praxis (1975)

Secondary literature

  • Adorno, Theodor W. (1991). "Ernst Bloch's Spuren," Notes to Literature, Volume One, New York, Columbia University Press
  • Geoghegan, Vincent (1996). Ernst Bloch, London, Routledge
  • Hudson, Wayne (1982). The Marxist philosophy of Ernst Bloch, New York, St. Martin's Press
  • Münster, Arno (1989). Ernst Bloch: messianisme et utopie, PUF, Paris
  • Münster, Arno (2001). L'utopie concrète d'Ernst Bloch, Kimé, Paris

External links

Categories: 1885 births | 1977 deaths | German theologians | German philosophers | German-language philosophers | People who emigrated to escape Nazism | German expatriates in the United States | Social philosophy | Marxist theorists | Atheist theologians | People from Ludwigshafen | People from the Palatinate | University of Leipzig faculty | University of Tübingen faculty

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