Abstract
… The problem of man appears, already at the epistemological-ontological level, as one of man's mode of existence and relationship to being and to the real, in general. An effective solution of this problem would be directed against both man's "alienation" from being and the alienation of being from man. The content of this alienation lies, on the one hand, in the idealist factoring-out of consciousness beyond the limits of being, of the real, the detachment of pure consciousness from real man as the subject of consciousness, the de-ontologization of man, and, on the other hand, in the reduction of all the real, all being, purely to that which is tangible