Guvenc, Deniz Ali Woloshin2019-02-222019-02-222019-02-22http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38841http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23093Max Stirner has historically been charged with nihilism, narcissism, and nominalism. Yet there exists another Stirner—a Stirner attentive and responsive to the intricate uncertainty of existence. I argue that we can find in his destructive an-archism a spirited celebration of creativity and experimentation; in his wild anti-humanism, a gentle sympathy for the human life; in his aggressive atheism, an unwavering clemency for the heathen. Stirner’s vagabond ontology, egoist ethics, and insurrectionary politics culminate in a singular, joyful affirmation: there are other ways of being.enMax StirnerGerman IdealismPolitical TheoryAnarchismYoung HegelianDialecticsIronyHegelMax Stirner: Ontology, Ethics, PoliticsThesis