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Reinhard Opitz (1934, Beuthen, Province of Upper Silesia – 3 April 1986) was a German left-wing intellectual and social scientist whose best-known thesis postulates that members of the German middle class had acquired a "falsified" consciousness. A prolific writer and theorist, Opitz, who had a Ph.D. in philosophy, spent the greater part of his working life on the fringes of political movements. While the majority of his writings forcefully argue the correctness of finer points in the works of Karl Marx, his most widely remembered personal contribution to Marxist theory was the "falsified" consciousness position. The completed essay, entitled ''On Genesis and Prevention of Fascism'', appeared in the autumn 1974 issue of the leftist German academic publication ''Das Argument''. Reinhard Opitz died of cancer in Cologne, where he had lived for twenty years. He was 51 years old. In 1999, thirteen years after his death, Rainer Rilling and Ilina Fach published ''Liberalism—Fascism—Integration'' (ISBN 3-924684-88-X), a three-volume edition (in German, 1490 pages) of the most relevant pieces Opitz had written and published. ==References== *(Extensive German essay (with an English-language introduction) examining Opitz's legacy and the cogency of his philosophical views on the 30th anniversary of the 1974 publication of ''On Genesis and Prevention of Fascism'' ) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Reinhard Opitz」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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