Milan Machovec (23 August 1925 – 15 January 2003) was a Czech philosopher. He lectured at the Charles University in Prague in 1950–1970, in the first half of the Czechoslovak communist era. Machovec is best known for hosting Christian-Marxistdialogue among major Czech- and German-speaking thinkers in the 1960s. He was forced out of the university for his involvement in the Prague Spring of 1968 and became a dissidentunderground intellectual for the second half of the communist era.
In 1990, Machovec returned to his academic position for life and published his previously banned Jesus for Modern Man (Ježíš pro moderního člověka, translated into English in 1976 as A Marxist Looks at Jesus). His other works similarly sought to popularize the legacy of landmark figures, such as Jan Hus (1953), Augustine (1967) or Tomáš Masaryk (1968). He addressed his own humanist philosophy in The Meaning of Human Existence (Smysl lidské existence, 1965/2002).
In the ensuing normalization era, Machovec was expelled from the university and became a dissident. He organized underground "flat seminars" (in the dissenting intellectual network of "flat universities") and samizdat publications, with the continued support of foreign friends. After signing Charter 77, a civil rights movement championed by fellow ex-academic philosopher Jan Patočka, he was denied even his surrogate job as a church organist.[1] His ex-wife Markéta Machovcová (née Hajná), mother to his two children, died of cancer in 1978.
In 1990 after the Velvet Revolution, Machovec's Jesus for Modern Man (Ježíš pro moderního člověka) was finally officially published in Czech (long since translations such as the 1972 German Jesus für Atheisten and 1976 English A Marxist Looks at Jesus). He simultaneously returned to his academic position and to official recognition, later highlighted by a 2000 Order of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk award.
Beginning in the 1960s, he supported the philosophical work of his friend Egon Bondy, with his son Martin Machovec [cs] later becoming the editor of Bondy's vast opus.
^Machovec, Milan (1948). Politické, náboženské a mravní stanovisko Tacitovo [Tacitus' Political, Religious and Moral Stance]. Prague: Charles University, Faculty of Arts (manuscript). / Machovec, Milan (1947/1948). "Tacitův poměr k mučedníkům svobody" [Tacitus' Relation to the Martyrs of Freedom]. Slovesná věda: Sborník pro literární historii, teorii literatury a literární kritiku I (4): 213–217.