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German Idealism and the Jew: The Inner Anti-Semitism of Philosophy and German Jewish Responses 0th Edition

4 out of 5 stars 2 customer reviews
ISBN-13: 978-0226500942
ISBN-10: 0226500942
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (June 15, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226500942
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226500942
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.8 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,353,541 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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31 of 37 people found the following review helpful By Barrett Pashak on September 2, 2003
Format: Hardcover
Mack's book struck me as a kind of sequel. A few years ago, I read Jonathan Israel's Radical Enlightenment, with its thrilling enthronement of Spinoza at the heart of the Enlightenment. I was disappointed when the book ended with Christian Wolff, that is, just before Kant, who I had hoped to see exposed as the ultimate anti-Spinoza. Well, Mack picks up where Israel left off, criticizing not only Kant's "one-sided reading of Spinoza," but identifying Kant as an anti-Semite and the intellectual father of the Holocaust.
Mack's critique of Kant is well reasoned and indicative of a very sound knowledge of the Kantian conceptual universe. Mack makes good use of quotations in arguing his case, citing for example this horrifying example from Kant: "The euthanasia of Judaism is pure moral religion." Mack's charges against Kant alone makes his book not only worthwhile, but essential.
While Mack devotes only the first chapter to Kant, he remains the primary figure throughout the book. The second chapter, on Hegel, serves to demonstrate how the worm had got into the bud, that is, how Kantian anti-Semitism came to infect the whole German idealist project. Anti-Semitism lies at the heart of Hegel's project in that he basically subscribes to Christian supercessionism. Mack then proceeds to Wagner and the rise of anti-Semitism in its full flowering: social, political, economic, artistic, and racial.
These first three chapters describe the anti-Semitic core of German idealism. The rest of the book presents the responses of a selection of German Jews to this anti-Semitism. Mack starts with Mendelssohn, and then moves to Geiger, Heine, and Graetz. These latter struck back with "counter-histories" that overturned the conceptual framework into which idealism had cast Judaism.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful By Michael B on September 14, 2010
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Three or three-and-a-half stars.

When Mack keeps to the historical and empirical evidence, reviewing the more substantial evidence as applied to Kant, Hegel and Wagner, and in reviewing some of the German Jewish re-actions to German high idealism, his (Mack's) essay on the subject is well worth a considered review. However, in the book's introduction, most of which could have formed a conclusion, Mack strays a great deal from more responsible lines of inquiry and resulting conclusions.

A brief glimpse of this is encapsulated in the contrast exhibited in the title vs. the subtitle of the volume - German Idealism and the Jew: The Inner Anti-Semitism of Philosophy and German Jewish Responses. The volume does address problems within German idealism, but it does not address philosophy as a whole as the subtitle would imply. This juxtaposition might of course be dismissed as a minor editorial oversight, excepting there are passages, primarily within the extensive introduction, that do in fact (ambiguously) suggest philosophy as a whole is being indicted.

When keeping to the evidence, the historical and empirical facts (e.g., Mack cites a note by J.G. Herder, after attending one of Kant's lectures, that unequivocally hi-lights an anti-Semitic prejudice on the part of Kant), Mack's review is substantial. However, his analysis and too many of his conclusions are too often less than responsibly guarded, are formulated in less tentative terms than they should be. The idealism/realism nexus and divide, the general dialectic between idealism and "realism," reflects a perennial and in fact an on-going set of philosophical and broader cultural and anthropological issues. Mack fails to place his criticism within that larger sphere and too often substitutes assertions and unguarded presumptions in places where more tentative and more circumspect philosophical delineations are needed.
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