Philosophy Final Project – Karl Marx Heinrich and Henrietta Marx gave birth to Karl Marx on May 5, 1818 in Prussia. He was one of their nine children. Heinrich was a very successful lawyer and was a passionate activist for Prussian reform. Both of Karl’s parents were Jewish at first, but his father changed his religious views in 1816 becoming a Christian at 35 years old. Karl Marx was neither extremely intelligent nor academically challenged; he was just an average student. He was homeschooled until the age of 12 and he went to the Jesuit High School from 1830 to 1835. In October of 1835, Karl Marx joined the University of Bonn. The university tended to have a rebellious and lively student body, and Marx fed off of that by becoming more …show more content…
This is around the same time he finally broke off from the philosophy of the Young Hegelians completely. In Brussels, he wrote The German Ideology, where he explains his theory of historical materialism. He was unable to find a publisher, and it ended up being published after his death. Marx created a Communist Correspondence Committee in an attempt to link socialists form around Europe in the beginning of 1846. Socialists in England were inspired by his ideas so they formed the Communist League. The organization asked Marx and Engels to write a Communist Manifesto, which was published in 1848. In 1849, Marx was expelled from Belgium and moved to France, where he was expelled from as well. He ended up moving to London regardless of their denial of his citizenship and he stayed their till his …show more content…
He believed what he thought was correct and he wanted to share it with everyone, regardless of the negativity and bad feedback he would get in return. He was anxious to share his beliefs with the world wondering if people would actually agree with him and take on his beliefs. These people would then share his beliefs with other and this was a way Marxism could spread across the world. He created Marxism, which some people believed, regardless of its ideas sounding absolutely ridiculous. He did what he thought was right and shared what he thought was true with the world through his writings. He would also revise other people’s manuscripts so that they would match his beliefs, but many of these were left unfinished by the time of his death in