Leopold Schwarzschild

Leopold Schwarzschild (8 December 1891, in Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 October 1950, in Santa Margherita Ligure, Italy) was a German author.

His 1943 book World in Trance[1] was praised by Winston Churchill but criticised by H. G. Wells, who called Schwarzschild "superficially intelligent and massively stupid", and Michael Foot, who denounced it as "a facile, scintillating treatise which...has received applause from those weary brains which prefer the dismal past to the adventurous future".[2] A. J. P. Taylor called the book a "brilliant argument in favour of firmness".[3]

In the first edition of his The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945), Karl Popper distinguished between Karl Marx himself and his followers, claiming that they had transformed Marx's works into an unscientific dogma. However Popper added a note to the fifth edition: "Some years after I wrote this...Leopold Schwarzschild's...The Red Prussian...became known to me...it contains documentary evidence, especially from the Marx-Engels correspondence, which shows that Marx was less of a humanitarian, and less of a lover of freedom, than he is made to appear in my book. Schwarzschild describes him as a man who saw in 'the proletariat' mainly an instrument of his own personal ambition. Though this may put the matter more harshly than the evidence warrants, it must be admitted that the evidence itself is shattering".[4]

Works

Further reading

Mauthner, Martin (2006). German Writers in French Exile, 19331940. London: Vallentine Mitchell. ISBN 978-0853035411. 

References

  1. Schwarzschild, Leopold (1943). World in trance. Hamish Hamilton. ASIN B0007IX5O8.
  2. "INTERNATIONAL: The Old Adam" (abstract). Time magazine. 24 July 1944. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  3. A. J. P. Taylor, The Origins of the Second World War (London: Penguin, 1991), p. 344.
  4. Leopold Schwarzschild, The Red Prussian: The Life and Legend of Karl Marx (London: Pickwick Books, 1986), p. 4.

External links

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