The Founding Belief In Karl Marx's Philosophy

650 Words3 Pages

An incredible gift to people that shouldn’t be taken for granted, the power to choose, prevents them from solely acting on their basest impulses and creates infinite possibilities for thought, meaning that no two people think exactly alike. Many philosophers, however, try to categorize people with descriptions that they believe will fully encompass all those within the category. In doing so, however, they tend to generalize human behavior with broad descriptions that don’t always hold true. This leads to inconsistent philosophies, both realistic in some ways and idealistic in others. Multiple examples of philosophers like this exist, but one, in my opinion, has the most inconsistencies: Karl Marx.
The founding belief in Marx’s philosophy, …show more content…

Marx argues that some use religion as an excuse for not wanting to try to change things themselves, claiming that their gods will change things for them. This directly contradicts Marx’s message, of a person's ability to seize power themselves, the reasoning behind Marx’s opposition of religion. For communism to work, people can't just sit to the side and hope some outside force changes things for them, they have to take matters into their own hands. To many the way things work define justice, but to Marx the actions you take defines justice, and in this way he takes a very different approach to justice. However, in generalizing religion he generalizes society, believing that religious people sit and stand by while others seize control. Marx believes that anyone and everyone can make a difference, but for me personally this seems untrue. I personally do not devote much free time to religion, and yet I still sometimes feel helpless trying to struggle against the tide of everyone else. It staggers me that I and many others in my community can advocate so strongly for a cause only to have it hopelessly slip through the cracks. My town for the most part supports democratic candidates, and my family and a large group of family friends strongly advocated against Trump. It felt horrible with everyone knowing how much they did, just to have Trump win. While Marx tries to explain that anyone can make a difference, sadly this doesn’t always hold