Max Stirner and Nihilism

Between Two Nothings

By (author) Dr Tim Dowdall

Ebook (VitalSource) - £24.99

Publication date:

14 May 2024

Length of book:

294 pages

Publisher

Camden House

Dimensions:

229x154mm

ISBN-13: 9781805432869

A reassessment of the controversial, yet still influential nineteenth-century German philosopher that explores the contentious issue of whether he was, as his critics frequently claim, a nihilist.

Max Stirner (1806-1856) is often regarded as an enfant terrible of nineteenth-century German philosophy, but he has continued to exert an influence despite his marginalization as a nihilist. This study is the first to tackle head-on the question of whether Stirner can indeed reasonably be described as a nihilist. Although he is not known ever to have used the word "nihilism" or any of its derivatives, he was first accused of being a nihilist immediately after the publication of his magnum opus Der Einzige und sein Eigentum (translated in most English editions as The Ego and His Own) in 1844. Since then, the allegation has been repeated by well over a hundred writers and critics, with the result that it has become something of a truism. The book aims, first, to establish a clear understanding of the many meanings of the term nihilism; second, to examine the accusations leveled at Stirner in the light of those meanings; and third, to assess not only the fairness and accuracy of the imputation of nihilism but also its usefulness in understanding Stirner as a thinker. It thus provides new insights into Stirner's thought, challenges the orthodox view of him as a philosophical pariah, reassesses his ideas and their place in the history of philosophy, and addresses the recurrent issue of his contemporary relevance.
This book is a comprehensive and convincing rejection of the commonplace view of Stirner as a nihilistic thinker. Based on rigorous and extensive scholarship from German and English sources, the book develops an original interpretation of Stirner as a hedonistic and iconoclastic demythologizer who seeks to free us from illusions and false beliefs. The book makes a valuable contribution to "Stirner studies" and will go a long way to rehabilitating this influential yet often neglected figure.