Edgar Bauer
Edgar Bauer | |
|---|---|
Portrait of Bauer at a meeting of Die Freien by Friedrich Engels, 1842 | |
| Born | 7 October 1820 |
| Died | 18 August 1886 (aged 65) Hanover, Province of Hanover, Kingdom of Prussia |
| Other names | Martin von Geismar and Radge |
| Occupation | Writer |
| Relatives | Bruno Bauer |
| Education | |
| Alma mater | Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin |
| Philosophical work | |
| Era | 19th-century philosophy |
| Region | Western philosophy |
| School | Young Hegelians |
Edgar Bauer (7 October 1820 – 18 August 1886) was a German writer and political philosopher associated with the Young Hegelians. The younger brother of Bruno Bauer, he became known in the 1840s for radical political and anti-religious writings. His 1843 book Critique's Quarrel with Church and State led to a conviction for sedition and four years' imprisonment at Magdeburg.
After his release, Bauer took part in the German revolutions of 1848–49, especially in Berlin's democratic and radical political circles. Following the defeat of the revolution, he went underground and lived in exile in Hamburg, Altona, Denmark and later London. During his London years he worked as a journalist, moved among German political émigrés including Karl Marx, and from 1852 supplied reports on the émigré milieu to the Danish authorities while also publishing on behalf of the Danish position in the Schleswig–Holstein question. After returning to Germany in 1861, Bauer gradually adopted conservative positions, worked as a civil servant in Hanover, and founded the periodical Kirchliche Blätter (Church gazette) in 1870.
In his early writings Bauer remained within the Young Hegelian milieu and was associated with anti-theism, radical democracy and socialism. Marx and Engels polemicized against him and his brother in The Holy Family (1844) and The German Ideology (1846). Some later anarchist writers treated Bauer's early work as an influence on German anarchism.