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Chapter Two
1. The “Thing-In-Itself,” or V. Chernov Refutes
Frederick Engels
Our Machians have written so much about the
“thing-in itself” that were all their writings
to be collected they would result in mountains
of printed matter. The "thing-in-itself”
is a veritable bête noire with Bogdanov and Valentinov, Bazarov and
Chernov, Berman and Yushkevich. There is
no abuse they have not hurled at it, there
is no ridicule they have not showered on
it. And against whom are they breaking lances
because of this luckless “thing-in-itself”?
Here a division of the philosophers of Russian
Machism according to political parties begins.
All the would-be Marxists among the Machians
are combating Plekhanov’s “thing-in-itself"; they accuse Plekhanov
of having become entangled and straying into
Kantianism, and of having forsaken Engels.
(We shall discuss the first accusation in
the fourth chapter; the second accusation
we shall deal with now.) The Machian Mr.
Victor Chernov, a Narodnik and a sworn enemy
of Marxism, opens a direct campaign against Engels because of the “thing-in-itself.”
One is ashamed to confess it, but it would
be a sin to conceal the fact that on this
occasion open enmity towards Marxism has
made Mr. Victor Chernov a more principled literary antagonishan our comrades
in party and opponents in philosophy For only a guilty conscience (and in addition, perhaps, ignorance of materialism?)
could have been responsible for the fact
that the Machian would-be Marxists have diplomatically
set Engels aside, have completely ignored
Feuerbach and are circling exclusively around
Plekhanov. It is indeed circling around one
spot, tedious and petty pecking and cavilling
at a disciple of Engels, while a frank examination
of the views of the teacher himself is cravenly
avoided. And since the purpose of these cursory
comments is to disclose the reactionary character
of Machism and the correctness of the materialism
of Marx and Engels, we shall leave aside
the fussing of the Machian would-be Marxists
with Plekhanov and turn directly to Engels,
whom the empirio-criticist Mr. V. Chernov
refuted. In his Philosophical and Sociological Studies(Moscow, 1907—a collection of articles written,
with few exceptions, before 1900) the article
“Marxism and Transcendental Philosophy” bluntly
begins with an attempt to set up Marx against
Engels and accuses the latter of “naïve dogmatic
materialism,” of “the crudest materialist
dogmatism” (pp. 29 and 32). Mr. V. Chernov
states that a “sufficient” example of this
is Engels’ argument against the Kantian thing-in
itself and Hume’s philosophical line. We
shall begin with this argument.
In his Ludwig Feuerbach, Engels declares that the fundamental philosophical
trends are materialism and idealism. Materialism
regards nature as primary and spirit as secondary;
it places being first and thought second.
Idealism holds the contrary view. This root
distinction between the “two great camps”
into which the philosophers of the “various
schools” of idealism and materialism are
divided Engels takes as the cornerstone,
and he directly charges with “confusion”
those who use the terms idealism and materialism
in any other way.
“The great basic question of all philosophy,”
Engels says, “especially of modern philosophy,
is that concerning the relation of thinking
and being,” of “spirit and nature.” Having
divided the philosophers into “two great
camps” on this basic question, Engels shows
that there is “yet another side” to this
basic philosophical question, viz., “in what relation do our thoughts about
the world surrounding us stand to this world
itself? Is our thinking capable of the cognition
of the real world? Are we able in our ideas
and notions of the real world to produce
a correct reflection of reality?[Fr. Engels, Ludwig Feuerbach, etc., 4th Germ. ed., p. 15. Russian translation,
Geneva ed., 1905, pp. 12-13. Mr. V. Chernov
translates the wordSpiegelbild literally (a mirror reflection), accusing
Plekhanov of presenting the theory of Engels
“in a very weakened form “ by speaking in Russian simply of a “reflection”
instead of a “mirror reflection.” This is
mere cavilling. Spiegelbild in German is also used simply in the sense
of Abbild]
“The overwhelming majority of philosophers
give an affirmative answer to this question,”
says Engels, including under this head not
only all materialists but also the most consistent
idealists, as, for example, the absolute
idealist Hegel, who considered the real world
to be the realisation of some premundane
“absolute idea,” while the human spirit,
correctly apprehending the real world, apprehends
in it and through it the “absolute idea.”
“In addition [i.e., to the materialists and
the consistent idealists] there is yet a
set of different philosophers—those who question
the possibility of any cognition, or at least
of an exhaustive cognition, of the world.
To them, among the more modern ones, belong
Hume and Kant, and they have played a very
important role in philosophical development.
Mr. V. Chernov, quoting these words of Engels’,
launches into the fray. To the word “Kant”
he makes the following annotation:
“In 1888 it was rather strange to term such
philosophers as Kant and especially Hume
as ‘modern.’ At that time it was more natural
to hear mentioned such names as Cohen, Lange,
Riehl, Laas, Liebmann, Goring, etc. But Engels,
evidently, was not well versed in ‘modern’
philosophy” (op. cit., p. 33, note 2).
Mr. V. Chernov is true to himself. Equally
in economic and philosophical questions he
reminds one of Turgenev’s Voroshilov,annihilating now the ignorant Kautsky,[V.
Ilyin, The Agrarian Question, Part I, St. Petersburg, 1908, p. 1908.] now
the ignorant Engels by merely referring to
“scholarly” names! The only trouble is that
all the authorities mentioned by Mr. Chernov
are the very Neo-Kantians whom Engels refers to on this very same page of hisLudwig Feuerbach as theoretical reactionaries, who were endeavouring to resurreche corpse
of the long since refuted doctrines of Kant
and Hume. The good Chernov did not understand
that it is jushese authoritative (for Machism)
and muddled professors whom Engels is refuting
in his argument!
Having pointed out that Hegel had already
presented the “decisive” arguments against
Hume and Kant, and that the additions made
by Feuerbach are more ingenious than profound,
Engels continues:
“The most telling refutation of this as of
all other philosophical crotchets (Schrullen) is practice, namely, experiment and industry.
If we are able to prove the correctness of
our conception of a natural process by making
it ourselves, bringing it into being out
of its conditions and making it serve our
own purposes into the bargain, then there
is an end to the Kantian incomprehensible
[or ungraspable, unfassbaren—this important word is omitted both in Plekhanov’s
translation and in Mr. V. Chernov’s translation]
‘thing-in-itself.’ The chemical substances
produced in the bodies of plants and animals
remained just such ‘things-in-themselves’
until organic chemistry began to produce
them one after another, where upon the ‘thing-in-itself’
became a ‘thing for us,’ as, for instance,
alizarin, the colouring matter of the madder,
which we no longer trouble to grow in the
madder roots in the field, but produce much
more cheaply and simply from coal tar” (op.
cit., p. 16).
Mr. V. Chernov, quoting this argument, finally
loses patience and completely annihilates
poor Engels. Listen to this: “No Neo-Kantian
will of course be surprised that from coal
tar we can produce alizarin ‘more cheaply
and simply.’ Buhaogether with alizarin it
is possible to produce from this coal tar
and just as cheaply a refutation of the ‘thing-in-itself’
will indeed seem a wonderful and unprecedented
discovery—and not to the Neo-Kantians alone.
“Engels, apparently, having learned that
according to Kant the ‘thing-in-itself’ is
unknowable, turned this theorem into its
converse and concluded that everything unknown
is a thing-in-itself” (p. 33).
Listen, Mr. Machian: lie, but don’t overdo
it! Why, be fore the very eyes of the public
you are misrepresenting the very quotation
from Engels you have set out to “tear to
pieces,” without even having grasped the
point under discussion!
In the first place, it is not true that Engels
“is producing a refutation of the thing-in-itself.”
Engels said explicitly and clearly that he
was refuting the Kantian ungraspable (or unknowable) thing-in-itself. Mr. Chernov
confuses Engels’ materialist conception of
the existence of things independently of
our consciousness. In the second place, if
Kant’s theorem reads that the thing-in-itself
is unknowable, the “converse “ theorem would be: theunknowable is the thing in-itself. Mr. Chernov replaces the unknowable by the unknown,without realising that by such a substitution
he has again confused and distorted the materialist
view of Engels!
Mr. V. Chernov is so bewildered by the reactionaries
of official philosophy whom he has taken
as his mentors that he raises an outcry against
Engels without in the least comprehending the meaning of the example quoted. Let us
try to explain to this representative of
Machism what it is all about.
Engels clearly and explicitly states that
he is contesting both Hume and Kant. Yet
there is no mention whatever in Hume of “unknowable
things-in-themselves.” what then is there
in common between these two philosophers?
It is that they both in principle fence off “the appearance” from that which appears,
the perception from that which is perceived
the thing-for-us from the “thing-in-itself.”
Furthermore, Hume does not want to hear of
the “thing-in-itself,” he regards the very
thought of it as philosophically inadmissible,
as “physics” (as the Humeans and Kantians
call it); whereas Kant grants the existence
of the “thing-in-itself,” but declares it
to be “unknowable,” fundamentally different
from the appearance, belonging to a fundamentally
different realm, the realm of the “beyond” (Jenseits), inaccessible to knowledge, but revealed to
faith.
What is the kernel of Engels’ objections?
Yesterday we did not know that coal tar contained
alizarin. Today we learned that it does.
The question is, did coal tar contain alizarin
yesterday?
Of course it did. To doubt it would be to
make a mockery of modern science.
And if that is so, three important epistemological
conclusions follow:
1)Things exist independently of our consciousness,
independently of our perceptions, outside
of us, for it is beyond doubt that alizarin
existed in coal tar yesterday and it is equally
beyond doubt that yesterday we knew nothing
of the existence of this alizarin and received
no sensations from it.
2)There is definitely no difference in principle
between the phenomenon and the thing-in-itself,
and there can be no such difference. The
only difference is between what is known
and what is not yet known. And philosophical
inventions of specific boundaries between
the one and the other, inventions to the
effect that the thing-in-itself is “beyond”
phenomena (Kant), or that we can and must
fence ourselves off by some philosophical
partition from the problem of a world which
in one part or another is still unknown but
which exists outside us (Hume)—all this is
the sheerest nonsense, Schrulle, crotchet, invention.
3)In the theory of knowledge, as in every
other branch of science, we must think dialectically,
that is, we must not regard our knowledge
as ready-made and unalterable, but must determine
how knowledge emerges from ignorance, how incomplete, inexact knowledge becomes
more complete and more exact.
Once we accept the point of view that human
knowledge develops from ignorance, we shall
find millions of examples of it just as simple
as the discovery of alizarin in coal tar,
millions of observations not only in the
history of science and technology but in
the everyday life of each and every one of
us that illustrate the transformation of
“things-in-themselves” into “things-for-us,”
the appearance of “phenomena” when our sense-organs
experience an impact from external objects,
the disappearance of “phenomena” when some
obstacle prevents the action upon our sense-organs
of an object which we know to exist. The
sole and unavoidable deduction to be made
from this—a deduction which all of us make
in everyday practice and which materialism
deliberately places at the foundation of
its epistemology—is that outside us, and
independently of us, there exist objects,
things, bodies and that our perceptions are
images of the external world. Mach’s converse
theory (that bodies are complexes of sensations)
is nothing but pitiful idealist nonsense.
And Mr. Chernov, in his “analysis” of Engels,
once more revealed his Voroshilov qualities;
Engels’ simple example seemed to him “strange
and naïve”! He regards only gelehrte fiction as genuine philosophy and is unable
to distinguish professorial eclecticism from
the consistent materialist theory of knowledge.
It is both impossible and unnecessary to
analyse Mr. Chernov’s other arguments; they
all amount to the same pretentious rigmarole
(like the assertion that for the materialists
the atom is the thing-in-itself!). We shall
note only the argument which is relevant
to our discussion (an argument which has
apparently led certain people astray), viz., that Marx supposedly differed from Engels.
The question at issue is Marx’s second Thesis on Feuerbach and Plekhanov’s translation
of the word Diesseitigkeit.
Here is the second Thesis:
“The question whether objective truth can
be attributed to human thinking is not a
question of theory, but is a practical question.
In practice man must prove the truth, i.e.,
the reality and power, the ‘this-sidedness’
of his thinking. The dispute over the reality
or non-reality of thinking which is isolated
from practice is a purely scholastic question.”
Instead of “prove the this-sidedness of thinking”
(a literal translation), Plekhanov has: prove
that thinking “does not stop at this side
of phenomena.” And Mr. V. Chernov cries:
“The contradiction between Marx and Engels
has been eliminated very simply. . . . It
appears as though Marx, like Engels, asserted
the knowability of things-in-themselves and
the ‘other-sidedness’ of thinking” (loc.
cit. p. 34, note).
What can be done with a Voroshilov whose
every phrase makes confusion worse confoundedl
It is sheer ignorance, Mr. Victor Chernov,
not to know that all materialists assert
the knowability of things-in-themselves.
It is ignorance, Mr. Victor Chernov, or infinite
slovenliness, to skip the very first phrase of the thesis and not to realise that
the “objective truth” (gegenständliche Wahrheit) of thinking means nothing else than the existence of objects (i.e., “things-in-themselves”) truly reflected by thinking. It is sheer illiteracy
Mr. Victor Chernov, to assert that from Plekhanov’s
paraphrase (Plekhanov gave a paraphrase and
not a translation) “it appears as though”
Marx defended the other-sidedness of thought. Because only the Humeans and
the Kantians confine thought to “this side
of phenomena.” But for all materialists,
including those of the seventeenth century
whom Bishop Berkeley demolished (see Introduction),
“phenomena” are “things-for-us” or copies of the “objects in themselves.” Of course,
Plekhanov’s free paraphrase is not obligatory
upon those who desire to know Marx himself,
but it is obligatory to try to understand
what Marx meant and not to prance about like
a Voroshilov.
It is interesting to note that while among
people who call themselves socialists we
encounter an unwillingness or inability to
grasp the meaning of Marx’s “Theses,” bourgeois
writers, specialists in philosophy, sometimes
manifest greater scrupulousness. I know of
one such writer who studied the philosophy
of Feuerbach and in connection with it Marx’s
“Theses.” That writer is Albert Lévy, who
devoted the third chapter of the second part
of his book on Feuerbach to an examination
of the influence of Feuerbach on Marx.[Albert
Lévy, La philosophie de Feuerbach et son influence
sur la littéruture allemande [Feuerbach’s
Philosophy and His Influence on German Literature] Paris, 1904, pp. 249-338, on the influence
of Feuerbach on Marx, and pp. 290-98, an
examination of the “Theses.”] Without going
into the question whether Lévy always interprets
Feuerbach correctly, or how he criticises
Marx from the ordinary bourgeois standpoint,
we shall only quote his opinion of the philosophical
content of Marx’s famous “Theses.” Regarding
the firshesis, Lévy says: “Marx, on the one
hand, together with all earlier materialism
and with Feuerbach, recognises that there
are real and distinct objects outside us
corresponding to our ideas of things. . .
.”
As the reader sees, it was immediately clear
to Albert Levy that the basic position not
only of Marxist materialism but of every
materialism, of “all earlier “ materialism, is the recognition of real
objects outside us, to which objects our
ideas “correspond.” This elementary truth,
which holds good for all materialism in general,
is unknown only to the Russian Machians.
Lévy continues:
“. . . On the other hand, Marx expresses
regrehat materialism had left it to idealism
to appreciate the importance of the active
forces [i.e., human practice], which, according
to Marx, must be wrested from idealism in
order to integrate them into the materialist
system. But it will of course be necessary
to give these active forces the real and
sensible character which idealism cannot
grant them. Marx’s idea, then, is the following:
just as to our ideas there correspond real
objects outside us, so to our phenomenal
activity there corresponds a real activity
outside us, an activity of things. In this
sense humanity partakes of the absolute,
not only through theoretical knowledge but
also through practical activity; thus all
human activity acquires a dignity, a nobility,
that permits it to advance hand in hand with
theory. Revolutionary activity henceforth
acquires a physical significance. . . .”
Albert Lévy is a professor. And a proper
professor must abuse the materialists as
being physicians. For the professorial idealists,
Humeans and Kantians every kind of materialism
is “physics,” because beyond the phenomenon
(appearance, the thing-for-us) it discerns
a reality outside us. A. Lévy is therefore
essentially right when he says that in Marx’s
opinion there corresponds to man’s “phenomenal
activity” “an activity of things,” that is
to say, human practice has not only a phenomenal
(in the Humean and Kantian sense of the term),
but an objectively real significance. The
criterion of practice—as we shall show in
detail in its proper place (§ 6)—has entirely
different meanings for Mach and Marx. “Humanity
partakes of the absolute” means that human
knowledge reflects absolute truth ; the practice
of humanity, by verifying our ideas, corroborates
what in those ideas corresponds to absolute
truth. A. Lévy continues:
“. . . Having reached this point, Marx naturally
encounters the objections of the critics.
He has admitted the existence of things-in-themselves,
of which our theory is the human translation.
He cannot evade the usual objection: what
assurance have you of the accuracy of the
translation? What proof have you that the
human mind gives you an objective truth?
To this objection Marx replies in his second
Thesis” (p. 291).
The reader sees that Lévy does not for a
moment doubt that Marx recognised the existence
of things-in-themselves!
2. “Transcendence,” Or Bazarov “Revises”
Engels
But while the Russian Machian would-be Marxists
diplomatically evaded one of the most emphatic and explicit statements
of Engels, they “revised” another statement of his in quite the Chernov manner.
However tedious and laborious the task of
correcting distortions and perversions of
the meaning of quotations may be, he who
wishes to speak of the Russian Machians cannot
avoid it.
Here is Bazarov’s revision of Engels.
In the article “On Historical Materialism,”[This
article forms the Introduction to the English
edition of Engels’ Socialism: Utopian and Scientific and was translated by Engels himself into
German in the Neue Zeit XI, I (1892-93, No. 1), S. 15 et seq. The only Russian translation, if I am not
mistaken, is to be found in the symposium Historical Materialism p. 162, et seq. Bazarov quotes the passage in the Studies “in” the Philosophy of Marxism, p. 64.] Engels speaks of the English agnostics
(philosophers of Hume’s trend of thought)
as follows:
“. . . Our agnostic admits that all our knowledge
is based upon the information (Mitteilungen)imparted to us by our senses. . . .”
Let us note for the benefit of our Machians
that the agnostic (Humean) also starts fromsensations and recognises no other source of knowledge.
The agnostic is a pure “positivist,” be it said for the benefit of the adherents
of the “latest positivism!”
“. . . But, he [the agnostic] adds, how do
we know that our senses give us correct representations (Abbilder) of the objects we perceive through them?
And he proceeds to in form us that, whenever
he speaks of objects or their qualities,
he does in reality not mean these objects
and qualities, of which he cannot know anything
for certain, but merely the impressions which
they have produced on his senses. . . .
Whawo lines of philosophical tendency does
Engels contrast here? One line is that the
senses give us faithful images of things,
that we know the things themselves, that the outer world acts on our sense-organs.
This is materialism—with which the agnostic
is not in agreement. what then is the essence of the agnostic’s line? It is that he does not go beyondsensations, that he stops on this side of phenomena, refusing to see anything “certain” beyond
the boundary of sensations. About these things themselves (i.e., about the things-in-themselves, the
“objects in themselves,” as the materialists
whom Berkeley opposed called them), we can
know nothing certain—so the agnostic categorically
insists. Hence, in the controversy of which
Engels speaks the materialist affirms the
existence and knowability of things-in-themselves.
The agnostic does not even admit the thought of things-in-themselves and insists that
we can know nothing certain about them.
It may be asked in what way the position
of the agnostic as outlined by Engels differs
from the position of Mach? In the “new” term
“element”? But it is sheer childishness to
believe that a nomenclature can change a
philosophical line, that sensations when
called “elements” cease to be sensations!
Or does the difference lie in the “new” idea
that the very same elements constitute the
physical in one connection and the psychical
in another? But did you not observe that
Engels’ agnostic also puts “impressions” in place of the “things
themselves”? That means that in essence the agnostic too differentiates between physical
and psychical “impressions “! Here again the difference is exclusively one of nomenclature. When Mach says that
objects are complexes of sensations, Mach is a Berkeleian;
when Mach “corrects” himself, and says that
“elements” (sensations) can be physical in
one connection and psychical in another,
Mach is an agnostic, a Humean. Mach does
not go beyond these two lines in his philosophy, and it requires extreme
naïveté to take this muddlehead at his word
and believe that he has actually “transcended”
both materialism and idealism.
Engels deliberately mentions no names in
his exposition, and criticises not individual
representatives of Humism (professional philosophers
are very prone to call original systems the
petty variations one or another of them makes
in terminology or argument), but the wholeHumean line. Engels criticises not particulars
but the essential thing; he examines thefundamental wherein all Humeans deviate from materialism, and his criticism therefore
embraces Mill, Huxley and Mach alike. Whether
we say (with J. S. Mill) that matter is the
permanent possibility of sensation, or (with
Ernst Mach) that matter is more or less stable
complexes of “elements”—sensations—we remain within the bounds of agnosticism, or Humism. Both standpoints,
or more correctly both formulations, are covered by Engels’ exposition of agnosticism: the
agnostic does not go beyond sensations and
asserts that hecannot know anything certain about their source,
about their original, etc. And if Mach attributes
such great importance to his disagreement
with Mill on this question, it is because
Mach comes under Engels’ characterisation
of a professor-in-ordinary: Flohknacker.— Ay, gentlemen, you have only cracked a
flea by making petty corrections and by altering
terminology instead of entirely abandoning
the basic, half-hearted standpoint.
And how does the materialist Engels—at the
beginning of the article Engels explicitly
and emphatically contrasts his materialism
to agnosticism—refute the foregoing arguments?
“. . . Now, this line of reasoning seems
undoubtedly hard to beat by mere argumentation.
But before there was argumentation there
was action. Im Anfang war die That. And human action had solved the difficulty
long before human ingenuity invented it.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
From the moment we turn to our own use these
objects, according to the qualities we perceive
in them, we put to an infallible test the
correctness or otherwise of our sense-perceptions.
If these perceptions have been wrong, then
our estimate of the use to which an object
can be turned must also be wrong, and our
attempt must fail. But if we succeed in accomplishing
our aim, if we find that the object does
agree with our idea of it, and does answer
the purpose we intended it for, then that
is positive proof that our perceptions of
it and of its qualities, so far, agree with
reality outside ourselves. . . .”
Thus, the materialist theory, the theory
of the reflection of objects by our mind,
is here presented with absolute clarity:
things exist outside us. Our perceptions
and ideas are their images. Verification
of these images, differentiation between
true and false images, is given by practice.
But let us listen to a little more of Engels
(Bazarov at this point ends his quotation
from Engels, or rather from Plekhanov, for
he deems it unnecessary to deal with Engels
himself):
“. . . And whenever we find ourselves face
to face with a failure, then we generally
are not long in making out the cause that
made us fail; we find that the perception
upon which we acted was either incomplete
and superficial, or combined with the results
of other perceptions in a way not warranted
by them” (the Russian translation in On Historical Materialism is incorrect). “So long as we take care to
train and to use our senses properly, and
to keep our action within the limits prescribed
by perceptions properly made and properly
used, so long we shall find that the result
of our action proves the conformity (Uebereinstimmung) of our perceptions with the objective (gegenstandlich) nature of the things perceived. Not in one
single instance, so far, have we been led
to the conclusion that our sense-perceptions,
scientifically controlled, induce in our
minds ideas respecting the outer world that
are, by their very nature, at variance with
reality, or that there is an inherent incompatibility
between the outer world and our sense-perceptions
of it.
“But then come the Neo-Kantian agnostics
and say. . . .”—
We shall leave to another time the examination
of the arguments of the Neo-Kantians. Let
us remark here that anybody in the least
acquainted with the subject, or even the
least bit attentive, cannot fail to understand
that Engels is here expounding the very same
materialism against which the Machians are
always and everywhere doing battle. And now
just watch the manner in which Bazarov revises
Engels:
“Here,” writes Bazarov in connection with
the fragment of the quotation we have given,
“Engels is actually attacking Kantian idealism.
. . .”
It is not true. Bazarov is muddling things.
In the passage which he quoted, and which
is quoted by us more fully, there is not a syllable either about Kantianism or about idealism. Had Bazarov
really read the whole of Engels’ article,
he could not have avoided seeing that Engels
speaks of Neo-Kantianism, and of Kant’s whole
line, only in the next paragraph, just where we broke off our quotation.
And had Bazarov attentively read and reflected
on the fragment he himself quotes, he could
not have avoided seeing that in the arguments
of the agnostic which Engels here refutes
there is not a trace of either idealism or Kantianism; for idealism
begins only when the philosopher says that
things are our sensations, while Kantianism
begins when the philosopher says that the
thing-in-itself exists but is unknowable.
Bazarov confuses Kantianism with Humism;
and he confuses them because, being himself
a semi-Berkeleian, semi-Humean of the Machian
sect, he does not understand (as will be
shown in detail below) the distinction between
the Humean and the materialist opposition
to Kantianism.
“. . . But, alas!” continues Bazarov, “his
argument is aimed against Plekhanov’s philosophy
just as much as it is against Kantian philosophy.
In the school of Plekhanov-Orthodox, as Bogdanov
has already pointed out, there is a fatal
misunderstanding regarding consciousness.
To Plekhanov, as to all idealists, it seems
that everything perceptually given, i.e.,
cognised, is ‘subjective’; that to proceed
only from what is factually given is to be
a solipsist; that real being can be found
only beyond the boundaries of everything
that is immediately given. . . .”
This is entirely in the spirit of Chernov
and his assurances that Liebknecht was a
true-Russian Narodnik! If Plekhanov is an
idealist who has deserted Engels, then why
is it that you, who are supposedly an adherent
of Engels, are not a materialist? This is
nothing but wretched mystification, Comrade
Bazarov! By means of the Machian expression
“immediately given “ you begin to confuse the difference between
agnosticism, idealism and materialism. Don’t
you understand that such expressions as the
“immediately given” and the “factually given”
are part of the rigmarole of the Machians,
the immanentists, and the other reactionaries
in philosophy, a masquerade, whereby the
agnostic (and sometimes, as in Mach’s case,
the idealisoo) disguises himself in the cloak
of the materialist? For the materialishe
“factually given” is the outer world, the
image of which is our sensations. For the
idealist the “factually given” is sensation,
and the outer world is declared to be a “complex
of sensations.” For the agnostic the “immediately
given” is also sensation, but the agnosticdoes not go on either to the materialist recognition of
the reality of the outer world, or to the
idealist recognition of the world as our
sensation. Therefore your statement that
“real being [according to Plekhanov] can
be found only beyond the boundaries of everything that is immediately given “ is sheer nonsense and inevitably follows
from your Machian position. But while you
have a perfect right to adopt any position
you choose, including a Machian one, you
have no right to falsify Engels once you
have undertaken to speak of him. And from
Engels’ words it is perfectly clear that
for the materialist real being lies beyond the “sense-perceptions,” impressions and
ideas of man, while for the agnostic it is
impossible to gobeyond these perceptions. Bazarov believed Mach,
Avenarius, and Schuppe when they said that
the “immediately” (or factually) given connects
the perceiving self with the perceived environment in the famous
“indissoluble” co-ordination, and endeavours,
unobserved by the reader, to impute this
nonsense to the materialist Engels!
“. . . It is as though the foregoing passage
from Engels was deliberately written by him
in a very popular and accessible form in
order to dissipate this idealist misunderstanding.
. . .”
Not for nought was Bazarov a pupil of Avenarius!
He continues his mystification: under the
pretence of combating idealism (of which
Engels is not speaking here), he smuggles
in theidealist “co-ordination.” Not bad, Comrade Bazarov!
“. . . The agnostic asks, how do we know
that our subjective senses give us a correct
presentation of objects?. . .”
You are muddling things, Comrade Bazarov!
Engels himself does not speak of, and does
not even ascribe to his foe the agnostic,
such nonsense as “subjective “ senses. There are no other senses except
human, i.e., “subjective” senses, for we
are speaking from the standpoint of man and
not of a hobgoblin. You are again trying
to impute Machism to Engels, to imply that
he says: the agnostic regards senses, or,
to be more precise, sensations, asonly subjective (which the agnostic does not do!), while we and Avenarius have “co-ordinated”
the object into an indissoluble connection
with the subject. Not bad, Comrade Bazarov!
“. . . But what do you term ‘correct’?—Engels
rejoins.—That is correct which is confirmed
by our practice; and consequently, since
our sense-perceptions are confirmed by experience,
they are not ‘subjective,’ that is, they
are not arbitrary, or illusory, but correct
and real as such. . . .”
You are muddling things, Comrade Bazarov!
You have substituted for the question of
the existence of things outside our sensations,
perceptions, ideas, the question of the criterion
of the correctness of our ideas of “these
things themselves,” or, more precisely, you
arehedging the former question with the help of the
latter. But Engels says explicitly and clearly
that what distinguishes him from the agnostic
is not only the agnostic’s doubt as to whether
our images are “correct,” but also the agnostic’s
doubt as to whether we may speak of thethings themselves, as to whether we may have “certain” knowledge
of their existence. Why did Bazarov resort
to this juggling? In order to obscure and
confound what is the basicquestion for materialism (and for Engels,
as a materialist), viz., the question of the existence of things
outside our mind, which, by acting on our
sense-organs evoke sensations. It is impossible
to be a materialist without answering this
question in the affirmative; but one can
be a materialist and still differ on what
constitutes the criterion of the correctness
of the images presented by our senses.
And Bazarov muddles matters still more when
he attributes to Engels, in the dispute with
the agnostic, the absurd and ignorant expression
that our sense-perceptions are confirmed
by “experience.” Engels did not use and could not have
used this word here, for Engels was well aware that the idealist Berkeley, the agnostic
Hume and the materialist Diderot all had
recourse to experience.
“. . . Inside the limits within which we
have to do with objects in practice, perceptions of the object and of its properties
coincide with the reality existing outside
us. ‘To coincide’ is somewhat different from
being a ‘hieroglyphic.’ ‘They coincide’ means
that, within the given limits, the sense
perception is [Bazarov’s italics] the reality existing
outside us. . . .
The end crowns the work! Engels has been
treated à la Mach, fried and served with a Machian sauce.
Buake care you do not choke, worthy cooks!
“Sense-perception is the reality existing outside us”!! This is just the fundamental absurdity, the fundamental
muddle and falsity of Machism, from which
flows all the rest of the balderdash of this
philosophy and for which Mach and Avenarius
have been embraced by those arrant reactionaries
and preachers of priestlore, the immanentists.
However much V. Bazarov wriggled, however
cunning and diplomatic he was in evading
ticklish points, in the end he gave himself
away and betrayed his true Machian character!
To say that “sense-perception is the reality
existing outside us” is to return to Humism, or even Berkeleianism,concealing itself in the fog of “co-ordination.”
This is either an idealist lie or the subterfuge
of the agnostic, Comrade Bazarov, for sense-perception is not the reality existing outside us, it is only
the image of that reality. Are you trying to make capital
of the ambiguous Russian word sovpadat? Are you trying to lead the unsophisticated
reader to believe that sovpadathere means “to be identical,” and not “to
correspond”? That means basing one’s falsification
of Engels à la Mach on a perversion of the meaning of a
quotation, and nothing more.
Take the German original and you will find
there the words stimmen mit, which means to correspond with, “to voice
with”—the latter translation is literal,
for Stimme means voice. The words “stimmen mit “ cannot mean “to coincide” in the sense
of “to be identical.” And even for the reader who does
not know German but who reads Engels with
the least bit of attention, it is perfectly
clear, it cannot be otherwise than clear,
that Engels throughout his whole argumenreats
the expression “sense-perception” as the image (Abbild) of the reality existing outside us, and that
therefore the word “coincide” can be used
in Russian exclusively in the sense of “correspondence,”
“concurrence,” etc. To attribute to Engels
the thought that “sense-perception is the reality existing outside us” is such
a pearl of Machian distortion, such a flagrant
attempt to palm off agnosticism and idealism
as materialism, that one must admit that
Bazarov has broken all records!
One asks, how can sane people in sound mind
and judgment assert that “sense-perception
[within what limits is not important] is
the reality existing outside us”? The earth
is a reality existing outside us. It cannot
“coincide” (in the sense of being identical)
with our sense-perception, or be in indissoluble
co-ordination with it, or be a “complex of
elements” in another connection identical
with sensation; for the earth existed at
a time when there were no men, no sense-organs,
no matter organised in that superior form
in which its property of sensation is in
any way clearly perceptible.
That is just the point, that the tortuous
theories of “co-ordination,” “introjection,”
and the newly-discovered world elements which
we analysed in Chapter I serve to cover up
this idealist absurdity. Bazarov’s formulation,
so inadvertently and incautiously thrown
off by him, is excellent in that it patently
reveals that crying absurdity, which otherwise
it would have been necessary to excavate
from the piles of erudite, pseudo-scientific,
professorial rigmarole.
All praise to you, Comrade Bazarov! We shall
erect a monument to you in your lifetime.
On one side we shall engrave your dictum,
and on the other: “To the Russian Machian
who dug the grave of Machism among the Russian
Marxists!”
We shall speak separately of the two points
touched on by Bazarov in the above-mentioned
quotation, viz., the criteria of practice of the agnostics
(Machians included) and the materialists,
and the difference between the theory of
reflection (or images) and the theory of
symbols (or hieroglyphs). For the present
we shall continue to quote a little more
from Bazarov:
“. . . But what is beyond these boundaries?
Of this Engels does not say a word. He nowhere
manifests a desire to perform that ‘transcendence,’
that stepping beyond the boundaries of the
perceptually-given world, which lies at the
foundation of Plekhanov’s ‘theory of knowledge’.
. . .”
Beyond what “boundaries”? Does he mean the
boundaries of the “co-ordination” of Mach
and Avenarius, which supposedly indissolubly
merges the self with the environment, the subject with the
object? The very question put by Bazarov
is devoid of meaning. But if he had put the
question in an intelligible way, he would
have clearly seen that the external world
lies “beyond the boundaries” of man’s sensations,
perceptions and ideas. But the word “transcendence”
once more betrays Bazarov. It is a specifically
Kantian and Humean “fancy” to erect in principle a boundary between the appearance and the thing-in-itself. To pass from the appearance, or, if you
will, from our sensation, perception, etc.,
to the thing existing outside of perception
is a transcendence, Kant says; and transcendence is permissible not to knowledge but to faith.
Transcendence is not permissible at all,
Hume objects. And the Kantians, like the
Humeans, call the materialists transcendental realists, “physicians,” who effect an illegitimate passage (in Latin, transcensus) from one region to another, fundamentally
different, region. In the works of the contemporary
professors of philosophy who follow the reactionary
line of Kant and Hume, you may encounter
(take only the names enumerated by Voroshilov-Chernov)
endless repetitions made in a thousand keys
of the charge that materialism is “physical”
and “transcendent.” Bazarov borrowed from
the reactionary professors both the word
and the line of thought, and flourishes them
in the name of “recent positivism”! As a
matter of fact the very idea of the “transcendence,”
i.e., of a boundary in principle between the appearance and the thing-in-itself,
is a nonsensical idea of the agnostics (Humeans
and Kantians included) and the idealists.
We have already explained this in connection
with Engels’ example of alizarin, and we
shall explain it again in the words of Feuerbach
and Joseph Dietzgen. But let us first finish
with Bazarov’s “revision” of Engels:
“. . . In one place in his Anti-Dühring, Engels says that ‘being’ outside of the realm
of perception is an offene Frage, i.e., a question, for the answer to which,
or even for the asking of which we have no
data.”
Bazarov repeats this argument after the German
Machian, Friedrich Adler. This last example
is perhaps even worse than the “sense-perception”
which “is the reality existing outside us.”
In his Anti-Dühring, p. 31 (5th Germ. ed.), Engels says:
“The unity of the world does not consist
in its being, although its being is a pre-condition
of its unity, as it must certainly first be, before it can be one. Being, indeed, is always an open question (offene Frage) beyond the point where our sphere of observation (Gesichtskreis)ends. The real unity of the world consists
in its materiality, and this is proved not
by a few juggling phrases, but by a long
and wearisome development of philosophy and
natural science.”
Behold the new hash our cook has prepared.
Engels is speaking of being beyond the point where our sphere of observation
ends, for instance, the existence of men
on Mars. Obviously, such being is indeed
an open question. And Bazarov, as though
deliberately refraining from giving the full
quotation, paraphrases Engels as saying that
“being beyond the realm of perception “ is an open question!! This is the sheerest
nonsense and Engels is here being saddled
with the views of those professors of philosophy
whom Bazarov is accustomed to take at their
word and whom Dietzgen justly called the
graduated flunkeys of clericalism or fideism.
Indeed, fideism positively asserts that something
does exist “beyond the world of perception.”
The materialists, in agreement with natural
science, vigorously deny this. An intermediate
position is held by those professors, Kantians,
Humeans (including the Machians), etc., “who
have found the truth outside materialism
and idealism” and who “compromise,” saying:
it is an open question. Had Engels ever said
anything like this, it would be a shame and
disgrace to call oneself a Marxist.
But enough! Half a page of quotation from
Bazarov presents such a complete tangle that
we are obliged to content ourselves with
what has already been said and not to continue
following all the waverings of Machian thought.
3.L. Feuerbach and J. Dietzgen on the Thing-In-Itself
To show how absurd are the assertions of
our Machians that the materialists Marx and
Engels denied the existence of things-in-themselves
(i.e., things outside our sensations, perceptions,
and so forth) and the possibility of their
cognition, and that they admitted the existence
of an absolute boundary between the appearance
and the thing-in-itself, we shall give a
few more quotations from Feuerbach. The whole
trouble with our Machians is that they set
about parroting the words of the reactionary
professors on dialectical materialism without
themselves knowing anything either of dialectics or of materialism.
“Modern philosophical spiritualism,” says
Feuerbach, “which calls itself idealism,
utters the annihilating, in its own opinion,
stricture against materialism that it is
dogmatism, viz., that it starts from the sensuous (sinnlichen) world as though from an undisputed (ausgemacht)objective truth, and assumes that it is a
world in itself (an sich), i.e., as existing without us, while in reality
the world is only a product of spirit” (Sämtliche Werke, X. Band, 1866, S. 185).
This seems clear enough. The world in itself
is a world that exists without us. This materialism of Feuerbach’s, like the
materialism of the seventeenth century contested
by Bishop Berkeley, consisted in the recognition
that “objects in themselves” exist outside
our mind. The an sich (of itself, or “in itself”) of Feuerbach
is the direct opposite of the an sich of Kant. Let us recall the excerpt from Feuerbach
already quoted, where he rebukes Kant because
for the latter the “thing-in-itself” is an
“abstraction without reality.” For Feuerbach
the “thing-in-itself” is an “abstraction with reality,” that is, a world existing outside
us, completely knowable and fundamentally
not different from “appearance.”
Feuerbach very ingeniously and clearly explains
how ridiculous it is to postulate a “transcendence”
from the world of phenomena to the world
in itself, a sort of impassable gulf created
by the priests and taken over from them by
the professors of philosophy. Here is one
of his explanations:
“Of course, the products of fantasy are also
products of nature, for the force of fantasy,
like all other human forces, is in the last
analysis (zuletzt) both in its basis and in its origin a force
of nature; nevertheless, a human being is
a being distinguished from the sun, moon
and stars, from stones, animals and plants,
in a word, from those beings (Wesen) which he designates by the general name,
‘nature’; and consequently, man’s presentations (Bilder) of the sun, moon and stars and the other
beings of nature (Naturwesen), although these presentations are products
of nature, are yet products distinct from
their objects in nature”(Werke, Band VII, Stuttgart, 1903, S. 516).
The objects of our ideas are distinct from
our ideas, the thing-in-itself is distinct
from the thing-for-us, for the latter is
only a part, or only one aspect, of the former,
just as man himself is only a fragment of
the nature reflected in his ideas.
“. . . The taste-nerve is just as much a
product of nature as salt is, but it does
not follow from this that the taste of salt
is directly as such an objective property
of salt, that what salt is merely as an object
of sensation it also is in itself (an und für sich), hence that the sensation of salt on the tongue
is a property of salhought of without sensation (des ohne Empfindung gedachten Salzes). . . .” And several pages earlier: “Saltiness,
as a taste, is the subjective expression
of an objective property of salt” (ibid,
p. 514).
Sensation is the result of the action of
a thing-in-itself, existing objectively outside
us, upon our sense-organs—such is Feuerbach’s
theory. Sensation is a subjective image of
the objective world, of the world an und für sich.
“. . . So is man also a being of nature (Naturwesen), like sun, star, plant, animal, and stone,
nevertheless, he is distinct from nature,
and, consequently, nature in the head and
heart of man is distinct from nature outside
the human head and heart.”
“. . . However, this object, viz., man, is the only object in which, according
to the statement of the idealists themselves,
the requirement of the ‘identity of object
and subject’ is realised; for man is an object
whose equality and unity with my being are
beyond all possible doubt. . . . And is not
one man for another, even the most intimate,
an object of fantasy, of the imagination?
Does not each man comprehend another in his
own way, after his own mind (in und nach seinem Sinne)? . . . And if even between man and man,
between mind and mind, there is a very considerable
difference which it is impossible to ignore,
how much greater must be the difference between
an unthinking, non-human, dissimilar (to
us) being in itself(Wesen an sich) and the same being as we think of it, perceive
it and apprehend it?” (ibid., p. 518).
All the mysterious, sage and subtle distinctions
between the phenomenon and the thing-in-itself
are sheer philosophical balderdash. In practice
each one of us has observed times without
number the simple and palpable transformation
of the “thing-in-itself” into phenomenon,
into the “thing-for-us.” It is precisely
this transformation that is cognition. The
“doctrine” of Machism that since we know only sensations, we cannot know of the existenceof anything beyond the bounds of sensation,
is an old sophistry of idealist and agnostic
philosophy served up with a new sauce.
Joseph Dietzgen is a dialectical materialist.
We shall show below that his mode of expression
is often inexact, that he is often not free
from confusion, a fact which has been seized
upon by various foolish people (Eugen Dietzgen
among them) and of course by our Machians.
But they did not take the trouble or were
unable to analyse the dominant line of his
philosophy and to disengage his materialism
from alien elements.
“Let us take the world as the ‘thing-in-itself,’”
says Dietzgen in his The Nature of the Workings of the Human Mind. “We shall easily see that the ‘world in itself’ and the world as it appears to us, the phenomena of the world, differ
from each other only as the whole differs
from its parts” (Germ. ed., 1903, p. 65).
“A phenomenon differs no more and no less
from the thing which produces it than the
ten-mile stretch of a road differs from the
road itself” (pp. 71-72). There is not, nor
can there be, any essential difference here,
any “transcendence,” or “innate disagreement.”
But a difference there is, to be sure, viz., the passage beyond the bounds of sense-perceptions to the existence of
things outside us.
“We learn by experience (wir erfahren),” says Dietzgen in his Excursions of a Socialist into the Domain
of the Theory of Knowledge, “that each experience is only a part of that
which, in the words of Kant, passes beyond
the bounds of all experience. . . . For a
consciousness that has become conscious of
its own nature, each particle, be it of dust,
or of stone, or of wood, is something unknowable in its full extent (Unauskenntliches), i.e., each particle is inexhaustible material
for the human faculty of cognition and, consequently,
something which passes beyond experience” (Kleinere philosophische Schriften [Smaller
Philosophical Essays], 1903, S. 199).
You see: in the words of Kant, i.e., adopting—exclusively for purposes of
popularisation, for purposes of contrast—Kant’s erroneous, confusing terminology, Dietzgen recognises
the passage “beyond experience.” This is
a good example of what the Machians are grasping
at when they pass from materialism to agnosticism:
you see, they say, we do not wish to go “beyond
experience”, for us “sense-perception is the reality existing outside us.”
“Unhealthy mysticism [Dietzgen says, objecting
precisely to such a philosophy] unscientifically
separates the absolute truth from the relative
truth. It makes of the thing as it appears
and the ‘thing-in-itself,’ that is, of the
appearance and the verity, two categories
which differ toto coelo [completely, fundamentally] from each other
and are not contained in any common category”
(S. 200).
We can now judge the knowledge and ingenuity
of Bogdanov, the Russian Machian, who does
not wish to acknowledge himself a Machian
and wishes to be regarded as a Marxist in
philosophy.
“A golden mean [between “panpsychism and
panmaterialism”] has been adopted by materialists
of a more critical shade who have rejected
the absolute unknowability of the ‘thing-in-itself,’ but
at the same time regard it as being fundamentally [Bogdanov’s italics] different from the ‘phenomenon’
and, therefore, always only ‘dimly discernible’
in it, outside of experience as far as its
content is concerned [that is, presumably,
as far as the “elements” are concerned, which
are not the same as elements of experience],
but yet lying within the bounds of what is
called the forms of experience, i.e., time,
space and causality. Such is approximately
the standpoint of the French materialists
of the eighteenth century and among the modern
philosophers—Engels and his Russian follower,
Beltov” (Empirio-Monism, Bk. II, 2nd ed., 1907, pp. 40-41).
This is a complete muddle. 1) The materialists
of the seventeenth century, against whom Berkeley argues, hold that “objects
in themselves” are absolutely knowable, for
our presentations, ideas, are only copies
or reflections of those objects, which exist
“outside the mind” (see Introduction). 2) Feuerbach, and J. Dietzgen after him, vigorously dispute
any “fundamental” difference between the
thing-in-itself and the phenomenon, and Engels
disposes of this view by his brief example
of the transformation of the “thing-in-itself”
into the “thing-for-us.” 3) Finally, to maintain
that the materialists regard things-in-themselves
as “always only dimly discernible in the
phenomenon” is sheer nonsense, as we have
seen from Engels’ refutation of the agnostic.
The reason for Bogdanov’s distortion of materialism
lies in his failure to understand the relation
of absolute truth to relative truth (of which
we shall speak later). As regards the “outside-of-experience”
thing-in-itself and the “elements of experience,”
these are already the beginnings of the Machian
muddle of which we have already said enough.
Parroting the incredible nonsense uttered
by the reactionary professors about the materialists,
disavowing Engels in 1907, and attempting
to “revise” Engels into agnosticism in 1908—such
is the philosophy of the “recent positivism”
of the Russian Machians!
4. Does Objective Truth Exist?
Bogdanov declares: “As I understand it, Marxism
contains a denial of the unconditional objectivity
of any truth whatsoever, the denial of all
eternal truths” (Empirio-Monism, Bk. III, pp. iv-v). What is meant by “unconditional objectivity”? “Truth for all eternity” is
“an objective truth in the absolute meaning
of the word,” says Bogdanov in the same passage,
and agrees to recognise “objective truth
only within the limits of a given epoch.”
Two questions are obviously confused here:
1) Is there such a thing as objective truth,
that is, can human ideas have a content that
does not depend on a subject, that does not
depend either on a human being, or on humanity?
2) If so, can human ideas, which give expression
to objective truth, express it all at one
time, as a whole, unconditionally, absolutely,
or only approximately, relatively? This second
question is a question of the relation of
absolute truth to relative truth. Bogdanov
replies to the second question clearly, explicitly
and definitely by rejecting even the slightest
admission of absolute truth and by accusing
Engels of eclecticismfor making such an admission. Of this discovery
of eclecticism in Engels by A. Bogdanov we
shall speak separately later on. For the
present we shall confine ourselves to the
first question, which Bogdanov, without saying
so explicitly, likewise answers in the negative—for
although it is possible to deny the element
of relativity in one or another human idea
without denying the existence of objective
truth, it is impossible to deny absolute
truth without denying the existence of objective
truth. “. . . The criterion of objective
truth,” writes Bogdanov a little further
on (p. ix), “in Beltov’s sense, does not
exisruth is an ideological form, an organising
form of human experience. . . .” Neither
“Beltov’s sense”—for it is a question of
one of the fundamental philosophical problems
and not of Beltov—nor the criterion of truth—which
must be treated separately, without confounding
it with the question of whether objective
truth exists—has anything to do with the case here. Bogdanov’s
negative answer to the latter question is
clear: if truth is only an ideological form, then there can be no
truth independent of the subject, of humanity,
for neither Bogdanov nor we know any other
ideology but human ideology. And Bogdanov’s
negative answer emerges still more clearly
from the second half of his statement: if
truth is a form of human experience, then
there can be no truth independent of humanity;
there can be no objective truth.
Bogdanov’s denial of objective truth is agnosticism
and subjectivism. The absurdity of this denial
is evident even from the single example of
a scientific truth quoted above. Natural
science leaves no room for doubt that its
assertion that the earth existed prior to
man is a truth. This is entirely compatible
with the materialist theory of knowledge:
the existence of the thing reflected independent
of the reflector (the independence of the
external world from the mind) is a fundamental
tenet of materialism. The assertion made
by science that the earth existed prior to
man is an objective truth. This proposition
of natural science is incompatible with the
philosophy of the Machians and with their
doctrine of truth: if truth is an organising
form of human experience, then the assertion
that the earth exists outside human experience cannot be true.
But that is not all. If truth is only an
organising form of human experience, then
the teachings, say, of Catholicism are also
true. For there is not the slightest doubt
that Catholicism is an “organising form of
human experience.” Bogdanov himself senses
the crying falsity of his theory and it is
extremely interesting to watch how he attempts
to extricate himself from the swamp into
which he has fallen.
“The basis of objectivity,” we read in Book
I of Empirio-Monism, “must lie in the sphere of collective experience.
We term those data of experience objective
which have the same vital meaning for us
and for other people, those data upon which
not only we construct our activities without
contradiction, but upon which, we are convinced,
other people must also base themselves in
order to avoid contradiction. The objective
character of the physical world consists
in the fact that it exists not for me personally,
but for everybody [that is not true! It exists independently of “everybody”!], and has a definite meaning
for everybody, the same, I am convinced,
as for me. The objectivity of the physical
series is its universal significance “ (p. 25, Bogdanov’s italics). “The objectivity
of the physical bodies we encounter in our
experience is in the last analysis established
by the mutual verification and coordination
of the utterances of various people. In general,
the physical world is socially-co-ordinated,
socially-harmonised, in a word, socially-organised experience “ (p. 36, Bogdanov’s italics).
We shall not repeahahis is a fundamentally
untrue, idealist definition, that the physical
world exists independently of humanity and
of human experience, that the physical world
existed at a time when no “sociality” and
no “organisation” of human experience was
possible, and so forth. We shall now on an
exposure of the Machian philosophy from another
aspect, namely, that objectivity is so defined
that religious doctrines, ‘which undoubtedly
possess a “universal significance”, and so
forth, come under the definition. But listen
to Bogdanov again: “We remind the reader
once more that ‘objective’ experience is
by no means the same as ‘social’ experience....
Social experience is far from being altogether
socially organised and always contains various
contradictions, so that certain of its parts
do not agree with others. Sprites and hobgoblins
may exist in the sphere of social experience
of a given people or of a given group of
people-for example, the peasantry; but they
need not therefore be included under socially-organised
or objective experience, for they do not
harmonise with the rest of collective experience
and do not fit in with its organising forms,
for example, with the chain of causality”
(45).
Of course it is very gratifying that Bogdanov
himself “does not include” social experience
in regard to sprites and hobgoblins under
objective experience. But this well-meant
amendment in the spirit of anti-fideism by
no means corrects the fundamental error of
Bogdanov’s whole position. Bogdanov’s definition
of objectivity and of the physical world
completely falls to the ground, since the
religious doctrine has “universal significance”
to a greater degree than the scientific doctrine;
the greater part of mankind cling to the
former doctrine to this day. Catholicism
has been “socially organised, harmonised
and co-ordinated” by centuries of development;
it “fits in” with the “chain of causality” in the most
indisputable manner; for religions did not
originate without cause, it is not by accidenhahey
retain their hold over the masses under modern
conditions, and it is quite “in the order
of things” that professors of philosophy
should adapt themselves to them. If this
undoubtedly universally significant and undoubtedly
highly-organised religious social experience
does “not harmonise” with the “experience”
of science, it is because there is a radical
and fundamental difference between the two,
which Bogdanov obliterated when he rejected
objective truth. And however much Bogdanov
tries to “correct” himself by saying that
fideism, or clericalism, does not harmonise
with science, the undeniable fact remains
that Bogdanov’s denial of objective truth
completely “harmonises” with fideism. Contemporary
fideism does not at all reject science; all
it rejects is the “exaggerated claims” of
science, to wit, its claim to objective truth.
If objective truth exists (as the materialists
think), if natural science, reflecting the
outer world in human “experience,” is alone
capable of giving us objective truth, then
all fideism is absolutely refuted. But if
there is no objective truth, if truth (including
scientific truth) is only an organising form
of human experience, then this in itself
is an admission of the fundamental premise
of clericalism, the door is thrown open for
it, and a place is cleared for the “organising
forms” of religious experience.
The question arises, does this denial of
objective truth belong personally to Bogdanov,
who refuses to own himself a Machian, or
does it follow from the fundamental teachings
of Mach and Avenarius? The latter is the
only possible answer to the question. If
only sensation exists in the world (Avenarius
in 1876), if bodies are complexes of sensations
(Mach, in the Analysis of Sensations), then we are obviously confronted with a philosophical
subjectivism which inevitably leads to the
denial of objective truth. And if sensations
are called “elements” which in one connection
give rise to the physical and in another
to the psychical, this, as we have seen,
only confuses but does not reject the fundamental
point of departure of empirio-criticism.
Avenarius and Mach recognise sensations as
the source of our knowledge. Consequently,
they adopt the standpoint of empiricism (all
knowledge derives from experience) or sensationalism
(all knowledge derives from sensations).
But this standpoint gives rise to the difference
between the fundamental philosophical trends,
idealism and materialism and does not eliminate
that difference, no matter in what “new”
verbal garb (“elements”) you clothe it. Both
the solipsist, that is, the subjective idealist,
and the materialist may regard sensations
as the source of our knowledge. Both Berkeley
and Diderot started from Locke. The first
premise of the theory of knowledge undoubtedly
is that the sole source of our knowledge
is sensation. Having recognised the first
premise, Mach confuses the second important
premise, i.e., regarding the objective reality
that is given to man in his sensations, or
that forms the source of man’s sensations.
Starting from sensations, one may follow
the line of subjectivism, which leads to
solipsism (“bodies are complexes or combinations
of sensations”), or the line of objectivism,
which leads to materialism (sensations are
images of objects, of the external world).
For the first point of view, i.e., agnosticism,
or, pushed a little further, subjective idealism,
there can be no objective truth. For the
second point of view, i.e., materialism,
the recognition of objective truth is essential.
This old philosophical question of the two
trends, or rather, of the two possible deductions
from the premises of empiricism and sensationalism,
is not solved by Mach, it is not eliminated
or overcome by him, but is muddled by verbal trickery with the word “element,”
and the like. Bogdanov’s denial of objective
truth is an inevitable consequence of Machism
as a whole, and not a deviation from it.
Engels in his Ludwig Feuerbach calls Hume and Kant philosophers “who question
the possibility of any cognition, or at least
of an exhaustive cognition, of the world.”
Engels, therefore, lays stress on what is
common both to Hume and Kant, and not on
what divides them. Engels states further
that “what is decisive in the refutation
of this [Humean and Kantian] view has already
been said by Hegel” (4th Germ. ed., pp. 15-16). In this connection it seems to me not uninteresting
to note that Hegel, declaring materialism to be “a consistent system of empiricism,”
wrote: “For empiricism the external (das Ausserliche) in general is the truth, and if then a supersensible
too be admitted, nevertheless knowledge of
it cannot occur(soll doch eine Erkenntnis desselben [d. h. des Uebersinnlichen] nicht stattfinden können) and one must keep exclusively to what belongs
to perception (das der Wahrnehmung Angehörige). However, this principle in its realisation (Durchführung) produced what was subsequently termed materialism.
This materialism regards matter, as such,
as the truly objective (das wahrhaft Objektive).”[Hegel, Encyklopädie der philosophischen Wissenschaften
im Grundrisse [Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical
Sciences in Outline],Werke, VI. Band (1843), S. 83. Cf. S. 122.]
All knowledge comes from experience, from
sensation, from perception. That is true.
But the question arises, does objective reality “belong to perception,” i.e., is it the source
of perception? If you answer yes, you are
a materialist. If you answer no, you are
inconsistent and will inevitably arrive at
subjectivism, or agnosticism, irrespective
of whether you deny the knowability of the
thing-in-itself, or the objectivity of time,
space and causality (with Kant), or whether
you do not even permit the thought of a thing-in-itself
(with Hume). The inconsistency of your empiricism,
of your philosophy of experience, will in
that case lie in the fact that you deny the
objective content of experience, the objective
truth of experimental knowledge.
Those who hold to the line of Kant or Hume
(Mach and Avenarius are among the latter,
in so far as they are not pure Berkeleians)
call us, the materialists, “physicians” because
we recognise objective reality which is given
us in experience, because we recognise an
objective source of our sensations independent
of man. We materialists follow Engels in
calling the Kantians and Humeans agnostics, because they deny objective reality as the
source of our sensations. Agnostic is a Greek
word: a in Greek means “no,” gnosis“knowledge.” The agnostic says: I do not know if there is an objective reality which is
reflected, imaged by our sensations; I declare
there is no way of knowing this (see the
words of Engels above quoted setting forth
the position of the agnostic). Hence the
denial of objective truth by the agnostic,
and the tolerance—the philistine, cowardly
tolerance—of the dogmas regarding sprites,
hobgoblins, Catholic saints, and the like.
Mach and Avenarius, pretentiously resorting
to a “new” terminology, a supposedly “new”
point of view, repeat, in fact, although
in a confused and muddled way, the reply
of the agnostic: on the one hand, bodies
are complexes of sensations (pure subjectivism,
pure Berkeleianism); on the other hand, if
we re-christen our sensations “elements,”
we may think of them as existing independently
of our sense-organs!
The Machians love to declaim that they are
philosophers who completely trust the evidence
of our sense-organs, who regard the world
as actually being what it seems to us to
be, full of sounds, colours, etc., whereas
to the materialists, they say, the world
is dead, devoid of sound and colour, and
in its reality different from what it seems
to be, and so forth. Such declamations, for
example, are indulged in by J. Petzoldt,
both in his Introduction to the Philosophy of Pure Experience
and in his World Problem from the Positivist
Standpoint (1906). Petzoldt is parroted by Mr. Victor
Chernov, who waxes enthusiastic over the
“new” idea. But, in fact, the Machians are
subjectivists and agnostics, for they do
not sufficiently trust the evidence of our sense-organs and
are inconsistent in their sensationalism.
They do not recognise objective reality,
independent of man, as the source of our
sensations. They do not regard sensations
as a true copy of this objective reality,
thereby directly conflicting with natural
science and throwing the door open for fideism.
On the contrary, for the materialishe world
is richer, livelier, more varied than it
actually seems, for with each step in the
development of science new aspects are discovered.
For the materialist, sensations are images
of the sole and ultimate objective reality,
ultimate not in the sense that it has already
been explored to the end, but in the sense
that there is not and cannot be any other.
This view irrevocably closes the door not
only to every species of fideism, but also
to that professorial scholasticism which,
while not recognising an objective reality
as the source of our sensations, “deduces”
the concept of the objective by means of
such artificial verbal constructions as universal
significance, socially-organised, and so
on and so forth, and which is unable, and
frequently unwilling, to separate objective
truth from belief in sprites and hobgoblins.
The Machians contemptuously shrug their shoulders
at the “antiquated” views of the “dogmatists,”
the materialists, who still cling to the
concept matter, which supposedly has been refuted by “recent
science” and “recent positivism.” We shall
speak separately of the new theories of physics
on the structure of matter. But it is absolutely
unpardonable to confound, as the Machians
do, any particular theory of the structure
of matter with the epistemological category,
to confound the problem of the new properties
of new aspects of matter (electrons, for
example) with the old problem of the theory
of knowledge, with the problem of the sources
of our knowledge, the existence of objective
truth, etc. We are told that Mach “discovered
the world-elements”: red, green, hard, soft,
loud, long, etc. We ask, is a man given objective
reality when he sees something red or feels
something hard, etc., or not? This hoary
philosophical query is confused by Mach.
If you hold that it is not given, you, together
with Mach, inevitably sink to subjectivism
and agnosticism and deservedly fall into
the embrace of the immanentists, i.e., the
philosophical Menshikovs. If you hold that
it is given, a philosophical concept is needed
for this objective reality, and this concept
has been worked out long, long ago. This
concept is matter. Matter is a philosophical category denoting
the objective reality which is given to mall
by his sensations, and which is copied, photographed
and reflected by our sensations, while existing
independently of them. Therefore, to say
that such a concept can become “antiquated”
is childish talk, a senseless repetition of the arguments of
fashionable reactionary philosophy. Could the struggle between materialism
and idealism, the struggle between the tendencies
or lines of Plato and Democritus in philosophy,
the struggle between religion and science,
the denial of objective truth and its assertion,
the struggle between the adherents of supersensible
knowledge and its adversaries have become
antiquated during the two thousand years
of the development of philosophy?
Acceptance or rejection of the concept matter
is a question of the confidence man places
in the evidence of his sense-organs, a question
of the source of our knowledge, a question
which has been asked and debated from the
very inception of philosophy, which may be
disguised in a thousand different garbs by
professorial clowns, but which can no more
become antiquated than the question whether
the source of human knowledge is sight and
touch, healing and smell. To regard our sensations
as images of the external world, to recognise
objective truth, to hold the materialist
theory of knowledge—these are all one and
the same thing. To illustrate this, I shall
only quote from Feuerbach and from two textbooks
of philosophy, in order that the reader may
judge how elementary this question is.
“How banal,” wrote Feuerbach, “to deny that
sensation is the evangel, the gospel(Verkündung) of an objective saviour.”[Feuerbach, Sämtliche Werke, X. Band, 1866, S. 194-95.] A strange, a preposterous
terminology, as you see, but a perfectly
clear philosophical line: sensation reveals
objective truth to man. “My sensation is
subjective, but its foundation [or ground—Grund] is objective” (S. 195). Compare this with
the quotation given above where Feuerbach
says that materialism starts from the perceptual
world as an ultimate(ausgemachte) objective truth.
Sensationalism, we read in Franck’s dictionary
of philosophy,[Dictionnaire des sciences philosophiques
[Dictionary of the Philosophical Sciences], Paris, 1875.] is a doctrine which deduces
all our ideas “from the experience of sense-organs,
reducing all knowledge to sensations.” There
is subjective sensationalism (scepticism
and Berkeleianism), moral sensationalism
(Epicureanism),and objective sensationalism. “Objective
sensationalism is nothing but materialism,
for matter or bodies are, in the opinion
of the materialists, the only objects that
can affect our senses (atteindre nos sens).”
“If sensationalism,” says Schwegler in his
history of philosophy,[Dr. Albert Schwegler,Geschichte der Philosophie im Umriss [Outline
History of Philosophy], 15-te Aufl., S. 194.] “asserted that truth
or being can be apprehended exclusively by
means of the senses, one had only [Schwegler
is speaking of philosophy at the end of the
eighteenth century in France] to formulate
this proposition objectively and one had
the thesis of materialism: only the perceptual
exists; there is no other being save material
being.”
These elementary truths, which have managed
to find their way even into the textbooks,
have been forgotten by our Machians.
5. Absolute and Relative Truth, or the Eclecticism
of Engels as Discovered by A. Bogdanov
Bogdanov made his discovery in 1906, in the
preface to Book III of his Empirio-Monism. “Engels in Anti-Dühring,” writes Bogdanov, “expresses himself almost
in the same sense in which I have just described
the relativity of truth” (p. v)—that is,
in the sense of denying all eternal truth,
“denying the unconditional objectivity of
all truth whatsoever.” “Engels is wrong in
his indecision, in the fact that in spite
of his irony he recognises certain ‘eternal
truths,’ wretched though they may be. . .”
(p. viii). “Only inconsistency can here permit
such eclectic reservations as those of Engels.
. .” (p. ix). Let us cite one instance of
Bogdanov’s refutation of Engels’ eclecticism.
“Napoleon died on May 5, 1821,” says Engels
in Anti-Dühring, in the chapter “Eternal Truths,” where he
reminds Dühring of the “platitudes”(Plattheiten) to which he who claims to discover eternal
truths in the historical sciences has to
confine himself. Bogdanov thus answers Engels:
“What sort of ‘truth’ is that? And what is
there ‘eternal’ about it? The recording of
a single correlation, which perhaps even
has no longer any real significance for our
generation, cannot serve as a basis for any
activity, and leads nowhere” (p. ix). And
on page viii: “Can Plattheiten be called Wahrheiten? Are ‘platitudes’ truths? Truth is a vital
organising form of experience; it leads us
somewhere in our activity and provides a
point of support in the struggle of life.”
It is quite clear from these two quotations
that Bogdanov, instead of refuting Engels,
makes a mere declamation. If you cannot asserhahe proposition “Napoleon
died on May 5, 1821,” is false or inexact,
you acknowledge that it is true. If you do
not assert that it may be refuted in the
future, you acknowledge this truth to be
eternal. but to call phrases such as truth
is a “vital organising form of experience”
an answer, is to palm off a mere jumble of words as philosophy. Did the earth have the history
which is expounded in geology, or was the
earth created in seven days? Is one to be
allowed to dodge this question by Is one
to be allowed to dodge this question by talking
about “vital” (’what does that mean?) truth
which “leads” somewhere, and the like? Can
it be that knowledge of the history of the
earth and of the history of humanity “has
no real significance”? This is jusurgid nonsense,
used by Bogdanov to cover his re~treat. For
it is a retreat, when, having taken it upon
himself to prove that the admission of eternal
truths by Engels is eclecticism, he dodges
the issue by a mere noise and clash of words
and leaves unrefuted the fact that Napoleon
did die on May 5, 1821, and that to regard
this truth as refutable in the future is
absurd.
The example given by Engels is elementary,
and anybody without the slightest difficulty
can think of scores of similar truths that
are eternal and absolute and that only insane
people can doubt (as Engels says, citing
another example: “Paris is in France”). Why
does Engels speak here of “platitudes”? Because
he refutes and ridicules the dogmatic, physical
materialist Dühring, who was incapable of
applying dialectics to the relation between
absolute and relative truth. To be a materialist
is to acknowledge objective truth, which
is revealed to us by our sense-organs. To
acknowledge objective truth, i.e., truth
not dependent upon man and mankind, is, in
one Way or another, to recognise absolute
truth. And it is this “one way or another”
which distinguishes the physical materialist
Dühring from the dialectical materialist
Engels. On the most complex questions of
science in general, and of historical science
in particular, Dühring scattered words right
and left: ultimate, final and eternal truth.
Engels jeered at him. Of course there are
eternal truths, Engels said, but it is unwise
to use high-sounding words (gewaltige Worte) in connection with simple things. If we want
to advance materialism, we must drop this
trite play with the words “eternal truth”;
we must learn to put, and answer, the question
of the relation between absolute and relative
truth dialectically. It was on this issue
that the fight between Dühring and Engels
was waged thirty years ago. And Bogdanov,
who managed “not to notice “ Engels’ explanation of the problem of absolute
and relative truth given in this very same chapter, and who managed to accuse Engels of “eclecticism”
for his admission of a proposition which
is a truism for all forms of materialism, only once again betrays
his utter ignorance of both materialism and
dialectics.
“Now we come to the question,” Engels writes
in Anti-Dühring, in the beginning of the
chapter mentioned (Part I, Chap. IX), “whether
any, and if so which, products of human knowledge
ever can have sovereign validity and an unconditional
claim (Anspruch) to truth” (5th German ed., p. 79). And Engels
answers the question thus:
“The sovereignty of thought is realised in
a number of extremely unsovereignly-thinking
human beings; the knowledge which has an
unconditional claim to truth is realised
in a number of relative errors; neither the
one nor the other [i.e., neither absolutely
true knowledge, nor sovereign thought] can
be fully realised except through an endless
eternity of human existence.
“Here once again we find the same contradiction
as we found above, between the character
of human thought, necessarily conceived as
absolute, and its reality in individual human
beings with their extremely limited thought.
This is a contradiction which can only be
solved in the infinite progression, or what
is for us, at least from a practical standpoint,
the endless succession, of generations of
mankind. In this sense human thought is just
as much sovereign as not sovereign, and its
capacity for knowledge just as much un limited
as limited. It is sovereign and unlimited
in its disposition (Anlage), its vocation, its possibilities and its historical
ultimate goal; it is not sovereign and it
is limited in its individual expression and
in its realisation at each particular moment”
(p. 81).[Cf. V. Chernov, loc. cit., p. 64, et seq. Chernov, the Machian, fully shares the
position of Bogdanov who does not wish to
own himself a Machian. The difference is
that Bogdanov tries to cover up his disagreement with Engels, to present
it as a casual matter, etc., while Chernov
feels that it is a question of a struggle
against both materialism and dialectics.]
“It is just the same,” Engels continues,
“with eternal truths.”
This argument is extremely important for
the question of relativism, i.e., the principle of the relativity of
our knowledge, which is stressed by all Machians.
The Machians one and allinsishahey are relativists, but the Russian
Machians, while repeating the words of the
Germans, are afraid, or unable to propound
the question of the relation of relativism
to dialectics clearly and straightforwardly.
For Bogdanov (as for all the Machians) recognition
of the relativity of our knowledge excludes even the least admission of absolute truth.
For Engels absolute truth is compounded from
relative truths. Bogdanov is a relativist;
Engels is a dialectician. Here is another,
no less important, argument of Engels from
the chapter of Anti-Dühring already quoted:
“Truth and error, like all thought-concepts
which move in polar opposites, have absolute
validity only in an extremely limited field,
as we have just seen, and as even Herr Dühring
would realise if he had any acquaintance
with the first elements of dialectics, which
deal precisely with the inadequacy of all
polar opposites. As soon as we apply the
antithesis between truth and error outside
of that narrow field which has been referred
to above it becomes relative and therefore
unserviceable for exact scientific modes
of expression; and if we attempt to apply
it as absolutely valid outside that field
we really find ourselves altogether beaten:
both poles of the antithesis become transformed
into their opposites, truth becomes error
and error truth” (p. 86). Here follows the example of Boyle’s law (the
volume of a gas is inversely proportional
to its pressure). The “grain of truth” contained
in this law is only absolute truth within
certain limits. The law, it appears, is a
truth “only approximately.”
Human thought then by its nature is capable
of giving, and does give, absolute truth,
which is compounded of a sum-total of relative
truths. Each step in the development of science
adds new grains to the sum of absolute truth,
but the limits of the truth of each scientific
proposition are relative, now expanding,
now shrinking with the growth of knowledge.
“Absolute truth,” says J. Dietzgen in his Excursions,— “can be seen, heard, smelt, touched and,
of course, also be known, but it is not entirely absorbed (geht nicht auf) into knowledge” (p. 195). “It goes without
saying that a picture does not exhaust its
object and the artist remains behind his
model. . . . How can a picture ‘coincide’
with its model? Approximately it can” (p.
197). “Hence, we can know nature and her
parts only relatively; since even a part,
though only a relation of nature, possesses
nevertheless the nature of the absolute,
the nature of nature as a whole (des Naturganzen an sich) which cannot be exhausted by knowledge. .
. . How, then, do we know that behind the
phenomena of nature, behind the relative
truths, there is a universal, unlimited,
absolute nature which does not reveal itself
to man completely? . . . Whence this knowledge?
It is innate; it is given us with consciousness”
(p. 198). This last statement is one of the
inexactitudes of Dietzgen’s which led Marx,
in one of his letters to Kugelmann, to speak
of the confusion in Dietzgen’s views. Only by seizing upon such incorrect passages
can one speak of a specific philosophy of
Dietzgen differing from dialectical materialism.
But Dietzgen corrects himself on the same page : “When I say that the consciousness of eternal,
absolute truth is innate in us, that it is
the one and only a prioriknowledge, experience also confirms this
innate consciousness” (p. 198).
From all these statements by Engels and Dietzgen
it is obvious that for dialectical materialism
there is no impassable boundary between relative
and absolute truth. Bogdanov entirely failed
to grasp this if he could write: “It [the
world outlook of the old materialism] sets
itself up as the absolute objective knowledge of the essence of things [Bogdanov’s italics] and is incompatible
with the historically conditional nature
of all ideologies” (Empirio-Monism, Bk. III, p. iv). From the standpoint of modern
materialism i.e., Marxism, the limits of approximation of our knowledge to objective,
absolute truth are historically conditional,
but the existence of such truth is unconditional, and the fact that we are approaching nearer
to it is also unconditional. The contours
of the picture are historically conditional,
but the fact that this picture depicts an
objectively existing model is unconditional.
When and under what circumstances we reached,
in our knowledge of the essential nature
of things, the discovery of alizarin in coal
tar or the discovery of electrons in the
atom is historically conditional; but that
every such discovery is an advance of “absolutely
objective knowledge” is unconditional. In
a word, every ideology is historically conditional,
but it is unconditionally true that to every
scientific ideology (as distinct, for instance,
from religious ideology), there corresponds
an objective truth, absolute nature. You
will say that this distinction between relative
and absolute truth is indefinite. And I shall
reply: yes, it is sufficiently “indefinite”
to prevent science from becoming a dogma
in the bad sense of the term, from becoming
something dead, frozen, ossified; but it
is at the same time sufficiently “definite”
to enable us to dissociate ourselves in the
most emphatic and irrevocable manner from
fideism and agnosticism, from philosophical
idealism and the sophistry of the followers
of Hume and Kant. Here is a boundary which
you have not noticed, and not having noticed
it, you have fallen into the swamp of reactionary
philosophy. It is the boundary between dialectical
materialism and relativism.
We are relativists, proclaim Mach, Avenarius,
Petzoldt. We are relativists, echo Mr. Chernov
and certain Russian Machians, would-be Marxists.
Yes, Mr. Chernov and Comrades Machians—and
therein lies your error. For to make relativism
the basis of the theory of knowledge is inevitably
to condemn oneself either to absolute scepticism,
agnosticism and sophistry, or to subjectivism.
Relativism as a basis of the theory of knowledge
is not only the recognition of the relativity
of our knowledge, but also a denial of any
objective measure or model existing independently
of humanity to which our relative knowledge
approximates. From the standpoint of naked
relativism one can justify any sophistry;
one may regard it as “conditional” whether
Napoleon died on May 5, 1821, or not; one
may declare the admission, alongside of scientific
ideology (“convenient” in one respect), of
religious ideology (very “convenient” in
another respect) a mere “convenience” for
man or humanity, and so forth.
Dialectics—as Hegel in his time explained—contains the element of relativism, of negation, of
scepticism, but is not reducible to relativism. The materialist dialectics
of Marx and Engels certainly does contain
relativism, but is not reducible to relativism,
that is, it recognises the relativity of
all our knowledge, not in the sense of denying
objective truth, but in the sense that the
limits of approximation of our knowledge
to this truth are historically conditional.
Bogdanov writes in italics: “Consistent Marxism does not admit such dogmatism
and such static concepts “ as eternal truths. (Empirio-Monism, Bk. III, p. ix.) This is a muddle. If the
world is eternally moving and developing
matter (as the Marxists think), reflected
by the developing human consciousness, what
is there “static” here? The point at issue
is not the immutable essence of things, or
an immutable consciousness, but the correspondence between the consciousness which reflects
nature and the nature which is reflected
by consciousness. In connection with this
question, and this question alone, the term
“dogmatism” has a specific, characteristic
philosophical flavour: it is a favourite
word used by the idealists and the agnostics against the materialists, as we have already seen
in the case of the fairly “old” materialist,
Feuerbach. The objections brought against
materialism from the standpoint of the celebrated
“recent positivism” are just ancienrash.
6. The Criterion of Practice in the Theory
of Knowledge
We have seen that Marx in 1845 and Engels
in 1888 and 1892 placed the criterion of
practice at the basis of the materialist
theory of knowledge. “The dispute over the reality or non-reality
of thinking which is isolated from practice
is a purely scholastic question,” says Marx
in his second Thesis on Feuerbach. The best
refutation of Kantian and Humean agnosticism
as well as of other philosophical crotchets (Schrullen) is practice, repeats Engels. “The result
of our action proves the conformity (Uebereinstimmung) of our perceptions with the objective nature
of the things perceived,” he says in reply
to the agnostics.
Compare this with Mach’s argument about the
criterion of practice: “In the common way
of thinking and speaking appearance, illusion, is usually contrasted with reality. A pencil held in front of us in the air
is seen as straight; when we dip it slantwise
into water we see it as crooked. In the latter
case we say that the pencil appears crooked but in reality it is straight. But what entitles us to declare one fact to be the reality, and to degrade the other to an appearance?. . . Our expectation is
deceived when we fall into the natural error
of expecting what we are accustomed to although
the case is unusual. The facts are not to
blame for that. In these cases, to speak
of appearance may have a practical significance, but not
a scientific significance. Similarly, the
question which is often asked, whether the
world is real or whether we merely dream
it, is devoid of all scientific significance.
Even the wildest dream is a fact as much
as any other” (Analysis of Sensations, pp. 18-19).
It is true that not only is the wildest dream
a fact, but also the wildest philosophy.
No doubt of this is possible after an acquaintance
with the philosophy of Ernst Mach. Egregious
sophishat he is, he confounds the scientific-historical
and psychological investigation of human
errors, of every “wild dream” of humanity,
such as belief in sprites, hobgoblins, and
so forth, with the epistemological distinction
between truth and “wildness.” It is as if
an economist were to say that both Senior’s
theory that the whole profit of the capitalist
is obtained from the “last hour” of the worker’s
labour and Marx’s theory are both facts,
and that from the standpoint of science there
is no point in asking which theory expresses
objective truth and which—the prejudice of
the bourgeoisie and the venality of its professors.
The tanner Joseph Dietzgen regarded the scientific,
i.e., the materialist, theory of knowledge
as a “universal weapon against religious
belief” (Kleinere philosophische Schriften [Smaller
Philosophical Essays], S. 55), but for the professor-in-ordinary
Ernst Mach the distinction between the materialist
and the subjective-idealisheories of knowledge
“is devoid of all scientific significance”!
That science is non partisan in the struggle
of materialism against idealism and religion
is a favourite idea not only of Mach but
of all modern bourgeois professors, who are,
as Dietzgen justly expresses it, “graduated
flunkeys who stupefy the people by their
twisted idealism” (op. cit., p. 53
And a twisted professorial idealism it is,
indeed, when the criterion of practice, which
for every one of us distinguishes illusion
from reality, is removed by Mach from the
realm of science, from the realm of the theory
of knowledge. Human practice proves the correctness
of the materialist theory of knowledge, said
Marx and Engels, who dubbed all attempts
to solve the fundamental question of epistemology
without the aid of practice “scholastic”
and “philosophical crotchets.” But for Mach
practice is one thing and the theory of knowledge
another. They can be placed side by side
without making the latter conditional on
the former. In his last work, Knowledge and Error, Mach says: “Knowledge is a biologically useful(förderndes) mental experience” (2nd Germ. ed., p. 115).
“Only success can separate knowledge from
error” (p. 116). “The concept is a physical
working hypothesis” (p. 143). In their astonishing
naïveté our Russian Machian would-be Marxists
regard such phrases of Mach’s as proof that
he comes close to Marxism. But Mach here comes just as close
to Marxism as Bismarck to the labour movement,
or Bishop Eulogius to democracy. With Mach such propositions stand side by side with his idealisheory of knowledge and do
not determine the choice of one or another
definite line of epistemology. Knowledge
can be useful biologically, useful in human
practice, useful for the preservation of
life, for the preservation of the species,
only when it reflects objective truth, truth
which is independent of man. For the materialishe
“success” of human practice proves the correspondence
between our ideas and the objective nature
of the things we perceive. For the solipsist
“success” is everything needed by me in practice, which can be regarded separately from the
theory of knowledge. If we include the criterion
of practice in the foundation of the theory
of knowledge we inevitably arrive at materialism,
says the Marxist. Let practice be materialist,
says Mach, but theory is another matter.
"In practice," Mach writes in the Analysis of Sensations, "we can as little do without the idea
of the self when we perform any act, as we can do without
the idea of a body when we grasp at a thing.
Physiologically we remain egoists and materialists
with the same constancy as we forever see
the sun rising again. but theoretically this
view cannot be adhered to" (284-85).
Egoism is beside the point here, for egoism
is not an epistemological cateogry. The question
of the appartent movement of the sun around
the earth is also beside the point, for in
practice, which serves us as a criterion
in the theory of knowledge, we must include
also the practice of astronomical observations,
discovereies, etc. There remains only Mach's
valuable admission that in their practical
life men are entirely and exclusively guided
by the materialist theory of knowledge; the
attempt to obviate it "theoretically"
is characteristic of Mach'sgelehrte scholastic and twisted idealistic endeavours.
How little of a novelty are these efforts
to eliminate practice--as something unsusceptible
to epistemological treatment--in order to
make room for agnosticism and idealism is
show by the following example from the history
of German classical philosophy. Between Kan
and Fichte stands G. E. Schulze (known in
the history of philosophy as Schulze-Aenesidemus).
He openly advocates the skeptical trend in
philosophy and calls himself a follower of
Hume) and of the ancients Pyrrho and Sextus).
He emphatically rejects every thing-in-itself
and the possibility of objective knowledge,
and emphatically insists that we should not
go beyond “experience,” beyond sensations,
in which connection he anticipates the following
objection from the other camp: “Since the
sceptic when he takes part in the affairs
of life assumes as indubitable the reality
of objective things, behaves accordingly,
and thus admits a criterion of truth, his
own behaviour is the best and clearest refutation
of his scepticism.”—[G. E. Schulze, Aenesidemus oder über die Fundemente der
von dem Herrn Professor Reinhold in Jena
gelieferten Elementarphilosophie [Aenesidemus, or the Fundamentals of the Elementary Philosophy
Propounded by Professor Reinhold in Jena], 1792, S. 253.] “Such proofs,” Schulze indignantly
retorts, “are only valid for the mob (Pöbel).” For “my scepticism does not concern the
requirements of practical life, but remains
within the bounds of philosophy” (pp. 254,
255).
In similar manner, the subjective idealist
Fichte also hopes to find room within the
bounds of idealistic philosophy for that
“realism which is inevitable (sich aufdringt) for all of us, and even for the most determined
idealist, when it comes to action, i.e.,
the assumption that objects exist quite independently
of us and outside us” (Werke, I, 455).
Mach’s recent positivism has noraveled far
from Schulze and Fichte! Let us note as a
curiosity that on this question too for Bazarov
there is no one but Plekhanov—there is no
beast stronger than the cat. Bazarov ridicules
the “salto vitale philosophy of Plekhanov”(Studies, etc., p. 69), who indeed made the absurd
remark that “belief” in the existence of
the outer world “is an inevitable salto vitale “ (vital leap) of philosophy (Notes on Ludwig Feuerbach, p. III). The word “belief” (taken from Hume),
although put in quotation marks, discloses
a confusion of terms on Plekhanov’s part.
There can be no question about that. But
what has Plekhanov got to do with it? Why
did not Bazarov take some other materialist,
Feuerbach, for instance? Is it only because
he does not know him? But ignorance is no
argument. Feuerbach also, like Marx and Engels,
makes an impermissible—from the point of
view of Schulze, Fichte and Mach—“leap” to
practice in the fundamental problems of epistemology.
Criticising idealism, Feuerbach explains
its essential nature by the following striking
quotation from Fichte, which superbly demolishes
Machism: “ ‘You assume,’ writes Fichte, ‘that
things are real, that they exist outside
of you, only because you see them, hear them
and touch them. But vision, touch and hearing
are only sensations. . . . You perceive,
not the objects, but only your sensations’”
(Feuerbach, Werke, X. Band, S. 185). To which Feuerbach replies
that a human being is not an abstract ego,
but either a man or woman, and the question
whether the world is sensation can be compared
to the question: is the man or woman my sensation,
or do our relations in practical life prove
the contrary? “This is the, fundamental defect
of idealism: it asks and answers the question
of objectivity and subjectivity, of the reality
or unreality of the world, only from the
standpoint of theory” (ibid., p. 189). Feuerbach makes the sum-total
of human practice the basis of the theory
of knowledge. He says that idealists of course
also recognise the reality of the I and the Thou in practical life. For the idealists “this
point of view is valid only for practical
life and not for speculation. But a speculation
which contradicts life, which makes the standpoint
of death, of a soul separated from the body,
the standpoint of truth, is a dead and false
speculation” (p. 192). Before we perceive, we breathe; we cannot exist without air,
food and drink.
“Does this mean that we must deal with questions
of food and drink when examining the problem
of the ideality or reality of the world?—exclaims
the indignant idealist. How vile! What an
offence against good manners soundly to berate
materialism in the scientific sense from
the chair of philosophy and the pulpit of
theology, only to practise materialism with
all one’s heart and soul in the crudest form
at the table d’h(tm)te” (p. 195). And Feuerbach
exclaims that to identify subjective sensation
with the objective world “is to identify
pollution with procreation” (p. 198).
A comment not of the politest order, but
it hits the vital spot of those philosophers
who teach that sense-perception is the reality
existing outside us.
The standpoint of life, of practice, should
be first and fundamental in the theory of
knowledge. And it inevitably leads to materialism,
brushing aside the endless fabrications of
professorial scholasticism. Of course, we
must not forget that the criterion of practice
can never, in the nature of things, either
confirm or refute any human idea completely. This criterion also is sufficiently “indefinite”
not to allow human knowledge to become “absolute,”
but at the same time it is sufficiently definite
to wage a ruthless fight on all varieties
of idealism and agnosticism. If what our
practice confirms is the sole, ultimate and
objective truth, then from this must follow
the recognition that the only path to this
truth is the path of science, which holds
the materialist point of view. For instance,
Bogdanov is prepared to recognise Marx’s
theory of the circulation of money as an
objective truth only for “our time,” and
calls it “dogmatism” to aribute to this theory
a “super-historically objective” truth (Empirio-Monism,Bk. III, p. vii). This is again a muddle.
The correspondence of this theory to practice
cannot be altered by any future circumstances,
for the same simple reason that makes it
an eternal truth that Napoleon died on May 5, 1821.
But inasmuch as the criterion of practice,
i.e., the course of development of all capitalist countries in the last few decades,
proves only the objective truth of Marx’s whole social and economic theory in general, and
not merely of one or other of its parts,
formulations, etc., it is clear that to talk
of the “dogmatism” of the Marxists is to
make an unpardonable concession to bourgeois
economics. The sole conclusion to be drawn
from the opinion of the Marxists that Marx’s
theory is an objective truth is that by following
the pathof Marxist Theory we shall draw closer and
closer to objective truth (without ever exhausting
it); but by following any other path we shall arrive at nothing but confusion
and lies.
Footnotes
[38] bête noire
[39] In preparing the first edition of Materialism
end Empirio-criticism for the
press, A. I.
Ulyanova-Yelizarova altered the
words "a
more honest literary antagonist"
to
"a more principled literary
antagonist".
Lenin objected to this correction
and on
February 27 (March 12), 1909,
he wrote to
his sister: "Please do not
tone down
anything in the passages against
Bogdanov,
Lenaeharsky and C0. Toning down
is impossible.
You have done away with the statement
that
Cheraov is a 'more honest' antagonishan
they
are, and that is a great pity.
That shade
is not brought out. It is not
in accord with
the whole nature of my accusations.
The crux
of the matter is that our Machists
are dishonest,
basely craven enemies of Marxism
in philosophy"
(Collected Works, present edition,
Volume
37., p. 416).
[40] See K. Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, pp. 369-71.
[41] Lenin is referring to Voroshilov, a character
depicted by I. S. Turgenevirs
his novel Smoke,
as the type of a pseudo-learned
dogmatist.
Lenin gave a description of him
in his work
"The Agrarian Question and
the 'Critics
of Marx'" (see present edition,
Vol.
5, p. 151).
[42] See F. Engels, Luduwig Feuerbach end the
End of Classical German Philosophy
(K. Marx
and F. Engels, Selected Works, Volume 11, Moscow, 1958, p. 371).
[43] K. Marx, "Theses on Feuerbach"
(K. Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, p. 403). 44. See K.
Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow,1958, p. 100.
[44] See K. Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, pp. 100
[45] F. Engels, "Special Introduction to
the English Edition of 1892"
of his
work Socialism: Utopian and Scientific (see K. Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, p. 100).
[46] See F. Engels, Anti-Dühring , Moscow, 1959, p. 65.
[47] Beltov, N.-a pseudonym of G. V. Plekhanov.
[48] See F. Engels, Luduwig Feuerbach and the End of Classical
German Philosophy (K. Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Volume II, Moscow, 1958, p. 371).
[49] Scepticism-a philosophical trend that casts doubt on
the possibility of knowing objective
reality.
It arose in ancient Greece as
early as the
4th to 3rd centuries B. C. (Pyrrho,
Aenesidemus,
Sextus Empiricus). The adherents
of ancient
scepticism drew agnostic conclusions
from
the premises of sensationalism,
Making the
subjectivity of sensation into
an absolute,
the sceptics insisted on the
need to refrain
from any definite judgments about
things.
They considered that ,man cannot
go beyond
his sensations and determine
their truth.
During the period of the Renaissance,
the
French philosophers Michel Montaigne,
Pierre
Charron and Pierre Bayle made
use of scepticism
for combating medieval scholasticism
and
the Church.
In the eighteenth century scepticism was
revived in the agnosticism of
I-fume and
Kant, and an attempt to modernise
ancient
scepticism was made by Gottlieb
Schulze (Aenesideinus).
The arguments of scepticism were
used by
the Machists, neo-Kantians and
other idealist
philosophical schools from the
middle of
the nineteenth to the beginning
of the twentieth
century.
Epicureanism the doctrine of the ancient Greek philosopher
Epicurus of the 4th to 3rd centuries
B. C.
and his successors. The aim of
philosophy,
according to this doctrine, was
man's happiness;
freeing him from suffering and
enabling him
to attain a state of bliss. Iaughhat
philosophy
was called upon to over come
obstacles to
happiness: the fear of death
due to ignorance
of the laws of nature and giving
rise therefore
to belief in super natural, divine
forces.
As regards the theory of knowledge, Epicurus
was a sensationalist. He supposed
that very
subtle images proceed from things
and penetrate
the human soul through the sense-organs.
Conceptions of things are formed
on the basis
of the sensuous perceptions of
the soul,
in which memory preserves only
the general
features of images. Epicurus
regarded sense-perceptions
themselves as the criterion of
truth, and
he considered that the source
of errors lay
in the accidental character of
individual
sensations or in the over-hasty
formation
of judgments.
The idealists, who distorted the teaching
of this great materialist of
ancient Greece,
made more attacks on Epicureanism
than on
the other philosophical theories
of antiquity.
In the definition of sensationalism quoted
by Lenin, Franck rightly regards
Epicureanism
as a variety of it, but he draws
an incorrect
distinction between Epicureanism
and objective
materialist sensationalism.
[50] See F. Engels, Anti-Dühring , Moscow, 1959, pp. 120-22.
[51] See F. Engels, Anti-Dühring , Moscow, 1959, p. 127. p. 135
[52] See the letter of K. Marx to L. Kugelmann
of December 5, 1868 (K. Marx, Briefe en Kugelraenn, Inoizdat, 1940).
[53] Lenin is referring to Marx's "Theses
on Feuerbach" (1845) and
to the works
by F. Engels:Ludwig Feuerbach end the End of Classical
German Philosophy (1388) and the "Special Introduction
to the English Edition of 1892"
of his Socielism: Utopian and Scientific (see K. Marx and F. Bagels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, pp. 403-05, 358-403,
93-115).
[54] See K. Marx and F. Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, pp. 403, 101.
[55] Bishop Eulogius member of the State Duma, a monarchist and
extreme reactionary.
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