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| | Karl Marx (Excerpt) |
 | | basic principles, reflections, definitions of concepts, [was] divorced from all actual law and every actual form of law.' Worse still, having failed to bridge the gap between theory and practice he found himself unable to reconcile the form of law with its content. |
 | | In 1832, after a rally at Hambach in support of free speech, police officers raided the school and found seditious literatureincluding speeches from the Hambach protestcirculating among the pupils. |
 | | She admitted to suffering from `excessive mother love', and one of her few surviving letters to her sonwritten while he was at universityamply justifies the diagnosis: `Allow me to note, dear Carl, that you must never regard cleanliness and order as something secondary, for health and cheerfulness depend on them. |
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