The Utopian Communist: A Biography of Wilhelm Weitling

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CHAPTER IV

IV. Weitling's "System"

N


o SUBSTANTIAL change occurred in Weitling's prin­
ciples or theories after the publication of the Garan­
tieen, although the later Evangelium des armen Sunders
provided some additional insight into the nature of the particular
kind of communism which he advocated. Though he published
millions of additional words during the remainder of his life, it
can be said that, as far as contributions to the literature of social
revolution are concerned, Weitling became intellectually "unem­
ployed" after the appearance of the Menschheit, the Garantieen,
and the Evangelium. The activities of Marx and Engels had no
effect on Weitling. He remained completely isolated from the
trends that marked the development of so-called modern, scien­
tific socialism.
The main purpose of Weitling's writings was to help mankind
find happiness and contentment, and these he believed were at­
tainable only under a system which guaranteed equality for all.
To produce a balance between the desires that are inherent in all
men, and the capacity to satisfy those desires by mechanical and
intellectual labor, he regarded a communist society as essential;
for it was harmony between desires and capacities that produced
good, and failure to provide that harmony was the cause of all evil.
It followed that production and exchange, or production and con­
sumption, would have to be administered in such a way as to ensure
that desirable balance between desires and capacities. Weitling
recognized that men were not equal in stature, intellectual powers,
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