Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox philosopher with unknown parameter "influences"
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox philosopher with unknown parameter "influenced"
Moses (Moritz)[2]Hess (21 January 1812 – 6 April 1875)[1] was a German-Jewish philosopher, early communist and Zionist thinker.[3] His socialist theories led to disagreements with Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.[4] He is considered a pioneer of Labor Zionism.[citation needed]
Part of a series on
Socialism
History
Outline
Development
Age of the Enlightenment
French Revolution
Revolutions of 1848
Socialist calculation debate
Socialist economics
Ideas
Calculation in kind
Collective ownership
Cooperative
Common ownership
Critique of political economy
Economic democracy
Economic planning
Equal liberty
Equal opportunity
Free association
Freed market
Industrial democracy
Input–output model
Internationalism
Labor-time calculation
Labour voucher
Material balance planning
Peer‑to‑peer economics
Production for use
Sharing economy
Spontaneism
Social dividend
Social ownership
Socialism in one country
Socialist mode of production
Soviet democracy
Strike action
To each according to his contribution/needs
Vanguardism
Workers' self-management
Workplace democracy
Models
Communalism
Socialist planned economy
Decentralized planning
Inclusive Democracy
OGAS
Project Cybersyn
Soviet-type
Market socialism
Lange model
Mutualism
Socialist market economy
Socialist-oriented market
Participatory economics
Variants
21st-century
African
Arab
Agrarian
Anarchism
Authoritarian
Blanquism
Buddhist
Chinese
Christian
Communism
Democratic
Democratic road
Digital
Ethical
Ecological
Evolutionary
Feminist
Fourierism
Free-market
Gandhian
Guild
Islamic
Jewish
Laissez-faire
Liberal
Libertarian
Marhaenism
Market
Marxism
Municipal
Nationalist
Nkrumaism
Owenism
Popular
Reformism
Religious
Revolutionary
Ricardian
Saint-Simonianism
Scientific
Sewer
Social democracy
State
Syndicalism
Third World
Utopian
Yellow
Zionist
People
Gracchi Brothers
Mazdak
Ball
More
Winstanley
Morelly
Hall
Saint-Simon
Buonarroti
Owen
Fourier
Thompson
Hodgskin
Schulz
Leroux
Babeuf
Pecqueur
Sue
Blanqui
Ledru-Rollin
Dézamy
Considerant
Proudhon
Blanc
Andrews
Herzen
Bakunin
Marx
Engels
Wallace
Lavrov
Pi
Lassalle
Saltykov
Chernyshevsky
Tolstoy
Michel
Morris
Jones
Bebel
Lorenzo
Mainwaring
Kropotkin
Carpenter
Sorel
Parsons
Bernstein
Iglesias
Parsons
León
Malatesta
Kautsky
Wilde
Taylor
Debs
Plekhanov
Ferrer
Dewey
Barone
Wells
Markievicz
Du Bois
Gorky
Connolly
Goldman
Gandhi
Landauer
Berkman
Luxemburg
Liebknecht
Blum
Russell
Pannekoek
Larkin
Einstein
Trotsky
Keller
Tawney
Schapiro
Pankhurst
Attlee
Lukács
Pestaña
Korsch
Polanyi
Peiró
Seguí
Vanzetti
Makhno
Cole
Gramsci
Sacco
Petrichenko
Tito
Maksimov
Leval
Nagy
Durruti
Gerhardsen
Santillán
Day
Marcuse
James
García
Ascaso
Erlander
Orwell
Mattick
Douglas
Montseny
Sartre
Senghor
Allende
van der Lubbe
Kreisky
Mitterrand
Chartrand
Nasser
Mandela
Bookchin
Dubček
Zinn
Castoriadis
Gorz
Thompson
Lefort
Ward
Manley
Che
Chomsky
Gorbachev
Scargill
Fotopoulos
Wolff
Ali
Lula
Holloway
Žižek
Öcalan
Corbyn
Sankara
West
Chávez
Hedges
Marcos
Graeber
Varoufakis
Organizations
International socialist organizations
Socialist parties
Related topics
Anarchism
Capitalism
Communist society
Criticism of capitalism
Criticism of socialism
Economic calculation problem
Economic system
French Left
Left-libertarianism
Libertarianism
List of socialist economists
Market abolitionism
Marxist philosophy
Nanosocialism
Progressivism
Socialism and LGBT rights
Socialist calculation debate
Socialist Party
Socialist state
Workers' council
Lists
Related lists
Category
By country
Socialists
Songs
Socialism portal (WikiProject)
Communism portal
Organized Labour portal
v
t
e
^ abSilberner, Edmund (1966). Moses Hess. Geschichte seines Lebens (in German). E. J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-02020-7.
^ abCite error: The named reference Berlin 1957 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Hess, Moses (2 December 2004). Moses Hess: The Holy History of Mankind and Other Writings. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-38756-9.
^Cite error: The named reference Marx & Engels 1932 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
Moses (Moritz) Hess (21 January 1812 – 6 April 1875) was a German-Jewish philosopher, early communist and Zionist thinker. His socialist theories led...
Proletariat. Major theoreticians of the Labor Zionist movement included MosesHess, Nachman Syrkin, Ber Borochov, and Aaron David Gordon; and leading figures...
Moses ben Maimon (1138–1204), commonly known as Maimonides (/maɪˈmɒnɪdiːz/ my-MON-ih-deez) and also referred to by the Hebrew acronym Rambam (Hebrew:...
evident that the newspaper was becoming bankrupt soon, George Jung and MosesHess convinced some leading rich liberals of the Rhineland, like Camphausen...
Although there were socialist Zionists in the nineteenth century (such as MosesHess), as a movement, labor Zionism became a mass movement in the early twentieth...
(British) Moses Montefiore. Other advocates of Jewish independence include (American) Mordecai Manuel Noah, (Russian) Leon Pinsker and (German) MosesHess. The...
European Triarchy (Die europäische Triarchie) was a book by MosesHess published in Leipzig 1841. European Triarchy was originally published anonymously...
are in Joseph Weydemeyer's hand. Chapter V in Volume II was written by MosesHess and edited by Marx and Engels. The text in German runs to around 700 pages...
in which he first reported a visit to MosesHess in Cologne and then went on to note that during this visit Hess had given him a press copy of a new book...
philosopher MosesHess. Although the work was completely disregarded at the time it was published, the work is significant not only as Hess’s first large-scale...
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and on the early Zionist political theories of MosesHess and Theodor Herzl. He has also written numerous books and articles on...
found the essence of the human in citizenship, and social liberals like MosesHess found it in labor, all of them made a similar error of ossifying an "essence"...
not merely denied the other prophets, but has also denied the Torah and Moses, our Rabbi." The roots of Jewish eschatology are to be found in the pre-exile...
philosopher and respected atheist thinker of the 20th century, became a deist. MosesHess - Socialist philosopher and Left Hegelian who first influenced Karl Marx...
major influence among other prominent Jewish intellectuals including MosesHess. In one of his most cited comments on religion he stated: "Religion is...
the third is of silver, gold, gems and pearls, and is for the Patriarchs, Moses and Aaron, the Israelites that left Egypt and lived in the wilderness, and...
Israelites—delivered them from slavery in Egypt, and gave them the Law of Moses at Mount Sinai as described in the Torah. Jews traditionally believe in...
Moses ben Nachman (Hebrew: מֹשֶׁה בֶּן־נָחְמָן Mōše ben-Nāḥmān, "Moses son of Nachman"; 1194–1270), commonly known as Nachmanides (/nækˈmænɪdiːz/; Greek:...
branch to find that MosesHess had written an inadequate manifesto for the group, now called the League of Communists. In Hess's absence, Engels severely...
Autoemancipation was pre-figured by a similar conclusion drawn by Marx's friend MosesHess, in Rome and Jerusalem (1862). Leon Pinsker had never yet read it, but...
organized religion, denial of the soul's immortality, and the idea that Moses didn't write the Torah, influencing Spinoza's intellectual journey. Spinoza...
tried to contribute in the forming of the political opinion. For example, MosesHess and Karl Marx in 1842 wrote in the newly established "Rheinische Zeitung"...
(1921–2006), Polish-born Rabbi, lived in the United States, scholar of Zionism MosesHess (1812–1875), French-born philosopher, Labor Zionist Ze'ev Jabotinsky (1880–1940)...
of Jewish-Hellenistic syncretism. His work attempts to combine Plato and Moses into one philosophical system. Philo bases his doctrines on the Hebrew Bible...