Book contents
- German Philosophy and the First World War
- German Philosophy and the First World War
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Genius of War, the Genius of Peace
- Chapter 2 Deutschtum und Judentum
- Chapter 3 I and Thou
- Chapter 4 More than Life
- Chapter 5 The Apocalypse of Hope
- Chapter 6 The Road to Damascus in the Age of Capitalism
- Chapter 7 From Death into Life
- Chapter 8 “A Journey around the World”
- Chapter 9 Martin Heidegger and the Titanic Struggle over Being
- Chapter 10 The Tragedy of the Person
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 6 - The Road to Damascus in the Age of Capitalism
György Lukács and History and Class Consciousness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 March 2023
- German Philosophy and the First World War
- German Philosophy and the First World War
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Genius of War, the Genius of Peace
- Chapter 2 Deutschtum und Judentum
- Chapter 3 I and Thou
- Chapter 4 More than Life
- Chapter 5 The Apocalypse of Hope
- Chapter 6 The Road to Damascus in the Age of Capitalism
- Chapter 7 From Death into Life
- Chapter 8 “A Journey around the World”
- Chapter 9 Martin Heidegger and the Titanic Struggle over Being
- Chapter 10 The Tragedy of the Person
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In July 1914, Vladimir Lenin and his comrade Gregory Zinoviev found themselves as political émigrés “in a god-forsaken little mountain village in Galicia.” Under gathering clouds of war, Zinoviev recalls making a bet with Lenin that the German Social Democratic Party would never support financing a war. Lenin gladly took up this wager in full confidence that European socialist parties, as declared by the Second International, would call for a general strike of the proletariat in the event of war. As Zinoviev recalls, Lenin observed that “no, they [German Socialist Party or SPD ] are not such scoundrels as all that. They will not, of course, fight the war, but they will, to ease their conscience, vote against the credits lest the working class revolts against them.”
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- German Philosophy and the First World War , pp. 186 - 225Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023