Chapter Fourteen: Realism and Nihilism. Černyševskii and Dobroljubov. Pisarev.
I.
§ 95.Černyševskii's philosophical Development.—Realism (Nihilism); Feuerbach, Positivism, Utilitarianism.—The "anthropological Principle."—Philosophy of the Enlightenment in the Sense of Peter the Great and that of Lessing.—Černyševskii versus Kant
§ 96.Černyševskii's Utilitarianism.—The Problem of the Will.—His Ethic social and socialistic; Love and Egoism upon a materialistic Basis necessitate Communism as a System of Equality an Equal Rights.—What is to be done as a Description of the materialistic and positivist Utilitarianism, the Realists or Nihilists.—The Woman's Question.—Černyševskii versus Self-Sacrifice
§ 101.Černyševskii's Socialism is ethical.—He favours the Liberation of the Peasantry and the Assignment of Land to the Peasants.—Economics.—The Mir and the social Order of the Future; Russia can overleap Stages of Development
§ 102.Černyševskii's Sociology and Politics.—Anarchist Elements.—The Opposition between Aristocracy and Democracy.—The Conflict with Herzen.—Černyševskii and Dobroljubov as Representatives of the Rasnočinec, as "Children" against "Fathers."—The Question of Nationality from the materialist Outlook