Feuerbach’s concepts
Homo homini deus est
God:
Nothing but the subject’s
objectified essence, i.e. the reflected image and illusory projection of human
qualities. Regarding the ‘origin’ of the idea of God, Feuerbach makes several
hypotheses. One traces it back to the genesis of the distinction between
individual and species; another to the opposition between will (unlimited) and
power (conditioned); another finds it in the feeling of dependency man
experiences with regards to Nature (nature is hostile to men). In any case,
though, religion clearly retains an anthropological character.
Hegel:
For Hegel, the foundation is Reason
, for Feuerbach it is Nature and man as an element of nature, derivative of it.
Feuerbach accepts Hegel’s dialectical process of Infinite/Finite, but regards
finite as what alienates itself in infinite rather than viceversa. He claims
that thought is inadequate to reality since it cannot contemplate the concrete.
Man:
Man is a psycho-somatic
unity. Truth is arrived at via confrontation, man is not autarchic, he relates
to others for gnoseological (truth discovered via communication), ethical (man
is ethical only in so far as he expresses solidarity with fellow beings), and utilitarian
reasons (it takes two men to make one).
Religion:
The way Feuerbach conceives
of religion is through a reversed anthropology, as ‘man’s first, though indirect, form of self-consciousness’. His
work includes several examples from daily life through which he reinterprets
all theological concepts in an anthropological fashion.
Alienation:
Indicates the pathological
element intrinsic to religious ‘objectification’, as Feuerbach describes it. In
other words, the process through which man, through an internal scission,
projects outside himself a superior power to which he subjugates himself
as object. ‘Man, this is the mystery of
religion, projects his being outside of himself and then turns himself into the
object of this being metamorphised into subject, into a person; he thinks, but
as the object of another being’s thought, and this being is God’(55-56EC).
Alienation is linked to the fact that the more man projects into God, the more
he takes away from himself.
Atheism:
Identified
with the reappropriation, by man, of his alienated essence. As such, it is not
only an act of philosophical intelligence, but also a moral and human duty. Feuerbach’s
atheism does not have a purely negative character, since it presents itself
positively as the proposal for a new divinity: Man. Feuerbach ends up
substituting atheism with a form of
anthropotheism, also known as religious integral (since it accounts for man’s
corporeal aspect too) humanism.
Rationalized
or concealed theology:
Feuerbach
regards Hegelian idealism as the speculative translation of Christian religion:
Unless one renounces Hegel’s philosophy, one cannot renounce theology’.