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INTRODUCTION
Lenin as Philosopher A Critical Examination
of the Philosophical Bases of Leninism
by Anton Pannekoek 1938
Introduction
The Russian Revolution was fought under
the
banner of Marxism. In the years of
propaganda
before the First World War the Bolshevist
Party came forward as the champion
of Marxist
ideas and tactics. It worked along
with the
radical tendencies in the socialist
parties
of Western Europe, which were also
steeped
in Marxian theory, whereas the Menshevist
Party corresponded rather to the reformist
tendencies over here. In theoretical
controversies
the Bolshevist authors, besides the
so-called
Austrian and Dutch schools of Marxism,
came
forward as the defenders of rigid Marxist
doctrines. In the Revolution the Bolshevists,
who now had adopted the name of Communist
Party, could win because they put up
as the
leading principle of their fight the
class
war of the working masses against the
bourgeoisie.
Thus Lenin and his party, in theory
and practice,
stood as the foremost representatives
of
Marxism.
Then, however, a contradiction appeared.
In Russia a system of state-capitalism
consolidated
itself, not by deviating from but by
following
Lenin’s ideas (e. g. in his State and
Revolution).
A new dominating and exploiting class
came
into power over the working class.
But at
the same time Marxism was fostered,
and proclaimed
the fundamental basis of the Russian
state.
In Moscow a “Marx-Engels Institute”
was founded
that collected with care and reverence
all
the well-nigh lost and forgotten works
and
manuscripts of the masters and published
them in excellent editions. Whereas
the Communist
Parties, directed by the Moscow Comintern,
refer to Marxism as their guiding doctrine,
they meet with more and more opposition
from
the most advanced workers in Western
Europe
and America, most radically from the
ranks
of Council-communism. These contradictions,
extending over all important problems
of
life and of the social struggle, can
be cleared
up only by penetrating into the deepest,
i. e. the philosophical, principles
of what
is called Marxism in these different
trends
of thought.
Lenin gave an exposition of his philosophical
ideas in his work Materialism and Empirio-Criticism
that appeared in Russian in 1908, and
was
published in 1927 in German and in
English
translations. Some of the Russian socialist
intellectuals about 1904 had taken
an interest
in modern Western natural philosophy,
especially
in the ideas of Ernst Mach, and tried
to
combine these with Marxism. A kind
of “Machism”,
with Bogdanov, Lenin’s most intimate
collaborator,
and Lunatcharsky as spokesmen, developed
as an influential trend in the socialist
party. After the first revolution the
strife
flared up again, connected as it was
with
all the various tactical and practical
differences
in the socialist movement. Then Lenin
took
a decisive stand against these deviations
and, aided by Plechanov, the ablest
representative
of Marxian theory among the Russians,
soon
succeeded in destroying the influences
of
Machism in the socialist party.
In the Introduction to the German and
English
editions of Lenin’s book, Deborin —
at that
time the official interpreter of Leninism,
but afterwards disgraced — exalts the
importance
of the collaboration of the two foremost
theoretical leaders for the definite
victory
of true Marxism over all anti-marxist,
reformist
trends.
“Lenin’s book is not only an important
contribution
to philosophy, but it is also a remarkable
document of an intra-party struggle
which
was of utmost importance in strengthening
the general philosophical foundations
of
Marxism and Leninism, and which to
a great
degree determined the subsequent growth
of
philosophical thought amongst the Russian
Marxists ... Unfortunately, matters
are different
beyond the borders of the Soviet Union
...
where Kantian scholasticism and positivistic
idealism are in full bloom.” Since
the importance
of Lenin’s book is so strongly emphasised
here, it is necessary to make it the
subject
of a serious critical study. The doctrine
of Party-Communism of the Third International
cannot be judged adequately unless
their
philosophical basis is thoroughly examined.
Marx’s studies on society, which for
a century
now have been dominating and shaping
the
workers’ movement in increased measure,
took
their form from German philosophy.
They cannot
be understood without a study of the
spiritual
and political developments of the European
world. Thus it is with other social
and philosophical
trends and with other schools of materialism
developing besides Marxism. Thus it
is, too,
with the theoretical ideas underlying
the
Russian revolution. Only by comparing
these
different systems of thought as to
their
social origin and their philosophical
contents
can we arrive at a well-founded judgement.
Marxism The evolution of Marx’s ideas
into
what is now called Marxism can be understood
only in connection with the social
and political
developments of the period in which
they
arose. It was the time when industrial
capitalism
made its entry into Germany. This brought
about a growing opposition to the existing
aristocratic absolutism. The ascending
bourgeois
class needed freedom of trade and commerce,
favourable legislation, a government
sympathetic
to its interests, freedom of press
and assembly,
in order to secure its needs and desires
in an unhampered fight. Instead it
found
itself confronted with a hostile regime,
an omnipotent police, and a press censorship
which suppressed every criticism of
the reactionary
government. The struggle between these
forces,
which led to the revolution of 1848,
first
had to be conducted on a theoretical
level,
as a struggle of ideas and a criticism
of
the prevailing system of ideas. The
criticism
of the young bourgeois intelligentsia
was
directed mainly against religion and
Hegelian
philosophy.
Hegelian philosophy in which the self-development
of the “Absolute Idea” creates the
world
and then, as developing world, enters
the
consciousness of man, was the philosophical
guise suited to the Christian world
of the
epoch of the “Restoration” after 1815.
Religion
handed down by past generations served,
as
always, as the theoretical basis and
justification
for the perpetuation of old class relations.
Since an open political fight was still
impossible,
the struggle against the feudal oligarchy
had to be conducted in a veiled form,
as
an attack on religion. This was the
task
of the group of young intellectuals
of 1840
among whom Marx grew up and rose to
a leading
position.
While still a student Marx admitted,
although
reluctantly, the force of the Hegelian
method
of thought, dialectics, and made it
his own.
That he chose for his doctor’s thesis
the
comparison of the two great materialistic
philosophers of ancient Greece, Democritus
and Epicurus, seems to indicate, however,
that in the deep recesses of sub-consciousness
Marx inclined to materialism. Shortly
thereafter
he was called upon to assume the editorship
of a new paper founded by the oppositional
Rheinish bourgeoisie in Cologne. Here
he
was drawn into the practical problems
of
the political and social struggle.
So well
did he conduct the fight that after
a year
of publication the paper was banned
by the
State authorities. It was during this
period
that Feuerbach made his final step
towards
materialism. Feuerbach brushed, away
Hegel’s
fantastic system, turned towards the
simple
experiences of everyday life, and arrived
at the conclusion that religion was
a man-made
product. Forty years later Engels still
spoke
fervently of the liberating effect
that Feuerbach’s
work had on his contemporaries, and
of the
enthusiasm it aroused in Marx, despite
critical
reservations. To Marx it meant that
now instead
of attacking a heavenly image they
had to
come to grips with earthly realities.
Thus
in 1843 in his essay Kritik der Hegelschen
Rechtsphilosophie (A Criticism of the
Hegelian
Philosophy of Law) he wrote:
“As far as Germany is concerned the
criticism
of religion is practically completed;
and
the criticism of religion is the basis
of
all criticism ... The struggle against
religion
is indirectly the struggle against
that world
whose spiritual aroma is religion ...
Religion
is the moan of the oppressed creature,
the
sentiment of a heartless world, as
it is
the spirit of spiritless conditions.
It is
the opium of the people. The abolition
of
religion as the illusory happiness
of the
people is the demand for their real
happiness,
the demand to abandon the illusions
about
their condition is a demand to abandon
a
condition which requires illusions.
The criticism
of religion therefore contains potentially
the criticism of the Vale of Tears
whose
aureole is religion. Criticism has
plucked
the imaginary flowers which adorned
the chain,
not that man should wear his fetters
denuded
of fanciful embellishment, but that
he should
throw off the chain and break the living
flower ... Thus the criticism of heaven
is
transformed into the criticism of earth,
the criticism of religion into the
criticism
of Law, and the criticism of theology
into
the criticism of politics.” The task
confronting
Marx was to investigate the realities
of
social life. In collaboration with
Engels
during their stay in Paris and Brussels,
he made a study of the French Revolution
and French socialism, as well as of
English
economy and the English working-class
movement,
which led towards further elaboration
of
the doctrine known as “Historical Materialism”.
As the theory of social development
by way
of class struggles we find it expounded
in
La misère de la philosophie (written
in 1846
against Proudhon’s Philosophie de le
misère),
in The Communist Manifesto (1848),
and in
the oft-quoted preface to Zur Kritik
der
Politischen Oekonomie (1859).
Marx and Engels themselves refer to
this
system of thought as materialism, in
opposition
to the “idealism” of Hegel and the
Young
Hegelians. What do they understand
by materialism?
Engels, discussing afterwards the fundamental
theoretical problems of Historical
Materialism
in his Anti-Dühring and in his booklet
on
Feuerbach, states in the latter publication:
“The great basic question of all philosophy,
especially of modern philosophy, is
that
concerning the relation of thinking
and being...
Those who asserted the primacy of the
spirit
to nature and, therefore, in the last
instance,
assumed world-creation in some form
or other,
comprised the camp of idealism. The
others,
who regarded nature as primary, belong
to
the various schools of materialism.”
That
not only the human mind is bound up
with
the material organ of the brain, but
that,
also, man with his brain and mind is
intimately
connected with the rest of the animal
kingdom
and the inorganic world, was a self-evident
truth to Marx and Engels. This conception
is common to all “schools of materialism.”
What distinguishes Marxist materialism
from
other schools must be learned from
its various
polemic works dealing with practical
questions
of politics and society. Then we find
that
to Marx materialistic thought was a
working
method. It was meant to explain all
phenomena
by means of the material world, the
existing
realities. In his writings he does
not deal
with philosophy, nor does he formulate
materialism
in a system of philosophy; he is utilising
it as a method for the study of the
world,
and thus demonstrates its validity.
In the
essay quoted above, for example, Marx
does
not demolish the Hegelian philosophy
of Law
by philosophical disputations, but
through
an annihilating criticism of the real
conditions
in Germany.
In the materialist method philosophical
sophistry
and disputations around abstract concepts
are replaced by the study of the real
world.
Let us take a few examples to elucidate
this
point. The statement “Man proposes,
God disposes”
is interpreted by the theologian from
the
point of view of the omnipotence of
God.
The materialist searches for the cause
of
the discrepancy between expectations
and
results, and finds it in the social
effects
of commodity exchange and competition.
The
politician debates the desirability
of freedom
and of socialism; the materialist asks:
from
what individuals or classes do these
demands
spring, what specific content do they
have,
and to what social need do they correspond?
The philosopher, in abstract speculations
about the essence of time, seeks to
establish
whether or not absolute time exists.
The
materialist compares clocks to see
whether
simultaneousness or succession of two
phenomena
can be established unmistakably.
Feuerbach had preceded Marx in using
the
materialist method, insofar as he pointed
out that religious concepts and ideas
are
derived from material conditions. He
saw
in living man the source of all religious
thoughts and concepts. “Der Mensch
ist, was
er isst” (Man is what he eats) is a
well-known
German pun summarising his doctrine.
Whether
his materialism would be valid, however,
depended on whether he would be successful
in presenting a clear and convincing
explanation
of religion. A materialism that leaves
the
problem obscure is insufficient and
will
fall back into idealism. Marx pointed
out
that the mere principle of taking living
man as the starting point is not enough.
In his theses on Feuerbach in 1845
he formulated
the essential difference between his
materialistic
method and Feuerbach’s as follows:
“Feuerbach resolves the religious essence
into the human essence (das menschliche
Wesen).
But the human essence is no abstraction
inherent
in each single individual. In its reality
it is the ensemble of the social relationships”
(Thesis 6). “His work consists in the
dissolution
of the religious world into its secular
basis.
The fact, however, that the secular
foundation
lifts itself above itself and establishes
itself in the clouds as an independent
realm
is only to be explained by the self-cleavage
and self-contradictions of this secular
basis.
The latter itself, therefore, must
first
be understood in its contradictions,
and
then, by the removal of the contradiction,
must be revolutionised in practice”
(Thesis
4). In short, man can be understood
only
as a social being. From the individual
we
must proceed to society, and then the
social
contradictions out of which religion
came
forth, must be dissolved. The real
world,
the material, sensual world, where
all ideology
and consciousness have their origin,
is the
developing human society — with nature
in
the background, of course, as the basis
on
which society rests and of which it
is a
part transformed by man.
A presentation of these ideas may be
found
in the manuscript of Die Deutsche Ideologie
(The German Ideology), written in 1845
but
not published. The part that deals
with Feuerbach
was first published in 1925 by Rjazanov,
then chief of the Marx-Engels Institute
in
Moscow; the complete work was not published
until 1932. Here the theses on Feuerbach
are worked out at greater length. Although
it is manifest that Marx wrote it down
quite
hurriedly, he nevertheless gave a brilliant
presentation of all the essential ideas
concerning
the evolution of society, which later
found
their short expression, practically,
in the
proletarian propaganda pamphlet, The
Communist
Manifesto and, theoretically, in the
preface
to Zur Kritik der Politischen Oekonomie
(Critique
of Political Economy).
The German Ideology is directed first
of
all against the dominant theoretical
view
which regarded consciousness as the
creator,
and ideas developing from ideas as
the determining
factors of human history. They are
treated
here contemptuously as “the phantoms
formed
in the human brain” that are “necessary
sublimates
of their material, empirically verifiable
life process bound to material premises.”
It was essential to put emphasis on
the real
world, the material and empirically-given
world as the source of all ideology.
But
it was also necessary to criticise
the materialist
theories that culminated in Feuerbach.
As
a protest against ideology, the return
to
biological man and his principal needs
is
correct but it is not possible to find
a
solution to the question of how and
why religious
ideas originate if we take the individual
as an abstract isolated being. Human
society
in its historical evolution is the
dominant
reality controlling human life. Only
out
of society can the spiritual life of
man
be explained. Feuerbach, in his attempt
to
find an explanation of religion by
a return
to the “real” man did not find the
real man,
because he searches for him in the
individual,
the human being generally. From his
approach
the world of ideas cannot be explained.
Thus
he was forced to fall back on the ideology
of universal human love. “Insofar as
Feuerbach
is a materialist,” Marx said, “he does
not
deal with history, and insofar as he
considers
history, he is not a materialist.”
What Feuerbach could not accomplish
was accomplished
by the Historical Materialism of Marx:
an
explanation of man’s ideas out of the
material
world. A brilliant survey of the historical
development of society finds its philosophical
summary in the sentence: “Men, developing
their material production and their
material
intercourse along with this, their
real existence,
alter their thinking and the products
of
their thinking.” Thus, as relation
between
reality and thinking, materialism is
in practice
proven to be right. We know reality
only
through the medium of the senses. Philosophy,
as theory of knowledge, then finds
its basis
in this principle: the material, empirically
given world is the reality which determines
thought.
The basic problem in the theory of
knowledge
(epistemology) was always: what truth
can
be attributed to thinking. The term
“criticism
of knowledge” (Erkenntniskritik) used
by
professional philosophers for this
theory
of knowledge, already implies a viewpoint
of doubt. In his second and fifth theses
on Feuerbach Marx refers to this problem
and again points to the practical activity
of man as the essential content of
his life:
“The question whether objective truth
can
be attributed to human thinking is
not a
question of theory but a practical
question.
In practice man must prove the truth,
i.
e. the reality and power, the this-sidedness
of his thinking” (Thesis 2). “Feuerbach,
not satisfied with abstract thinking,
appeals
to sensuous perception (Anschauung),
but
he does not conceive sensuousness (die
Sinnlichkeit)
as a practical human-sensuous activity”
(Thesis
5). Why practical? Because man in the
first
place must live. His bodily structure,
his
faculties and his abilities, and all
his
activity are adapted to this very end.
With
these he must assert himself in the
external
world, i. e. in nature, and as an individual
in society. To these abilities belongs
the
activity of the organ of thought, the
brain,
and the faculty of thinking itself.
Thinking
is a bodily faculty. In every phase
of life
man uses his power of thought to draw
conclusions
from his experiences, on which expectations
and hopes are built, and these conclusions
regulate his behaviour and his actions.
The
correctness of his conclusions, the
truth
of his thinking, is shown by the very
fact
of his existence, since it is a condition
for his survival. Because thinking
is an
efficient adaptation to life, it embodies
truth, not for every conclusion, but
in its
general character. On the basis of
his experiences
man derives generalisations and rules,
natural
laws, on which his expectations are
based.
They are generally correct, as is witnessed
by his survival. Sometimes, however,
false
conclusions may be drawn, with failure
and
destruction in their wake. Life is
a continuous
process of learning, adaptation, development.
Practice is the unsparing test of the
correctness
of thinking.
Let us first consider this in relation
to
natural science. In the practice of
this
science, thought finds its purest and
most
abstract form. This is why philosophical
scientists take this form as the subject
of their deductions and pay little
attention
to its similarity to the thinking of
everybody
in his everyday activity. Yet thinking
in
the study of nature is only a highly
developed
special field in the entire social
labour
process. This labour process demands
an accurate
knowledge of natural phenomena and
its integration
into “laws of nature”, in order to
utilise
them successfully in the field of technics.
The determination of these laws through
observation
of special phenomena is the task of
specialists.
In the study of nature it is generally
accepted
that practice, experiment, is the test
of
truth. Here, too, we find that the
observed
regularities, formulated as laws of
nature,
are generally fairly dependable guides
to
human practice; though they are frequently
not entirely correct and often balk
expectation,
they are improved constantly through
the
progress of science, If, therefore,
man at
times was referred to as the “legislator
of nature” it must be added that nature
often
disregards his laws and summons him
to make
better ones.
The practice of life, however, comprises
much more than the scientific study
of nature.
The relation of the scientist to the
world,
despite his experiments, remains observational.
To him the world is an external thing
to
look at. But in reality man deals with
nature
in his practical life by acting upon
it and
making it part of his existence. Man
does
not stand against nature as to an external
alien world. By the toil of his hands
man
transforms the world, to such an extent
that
the original natural substance is hardly
discernible, and in this process transforms
himself too. Thus man himself builds
his
new world: human society, embedded
in nature
transformed into a technical apparatus.
Man
is the creator of this world. What
meaning,
then, has the question of whether his
thinking
embodies truth? The object of his thinking
is what he himself produces by his
physical
and mental activities, and which he
controls
through his brain.
This is not a question of partial truths.
Engels in his booklet on Feuerbach
referred
to the synthesising of the natural
dye alizarin
(contained in madder) as a proof of
the truth
of human thinking. This, however, proves
only the validity of the chemical formula
employed; it cannot prove the validity
of
materialism as against Kant’s “Thing-in-itself.”
This concept, as may be seen from Kant’s
preface to his Criticism of Pure Reason,
results from the incapacity of bourgeois
philosophy to understand the earthly
origin
of moral law. The “Thing-in-itself”
is not
refuted by chemical industry but by
Historical
Materialism explaining moral law through
society. It was Historical Materialism
that
enabled Engels to see the fallacy of
Kant’s
philosophy, to prove the fallaciousness
of
which he then offered other arguments.
Thus,
to repeat, it is not a question of
partial
truths in a specific field of knowledge,
where the practical outcome affirms
or refutes
them. The point in question is a philosophical
one, namely, whether human thought
is capable
of grasping the deepest truth of the
world.
That the philosopher in his secluded
study,
who handles exclusively abstract philosophical
concepts, which are derived in turn
from
abstract scientific concepts themselves
formulated
outside of practical life — that he,
in the
midst of this world of shadows, should
have
his doubts, is easily understood. But
for
human beings, who live and act in the
practical
everyday world, the question cannot
have
any meaning. The truth of thought,
says Marx,
is nothing but the power and mastery
over
the real world.
Of course this statement implies its
counterpart:
thinking cannot embody truth where
the human
mind does not master the world. When
the
products of man’s hand — as Marx expounded
in Das Kapital — grow into a power
over him,
which he no longer controls and which
in
the form of commodity exchange and
capital
confronts him as an independent social
being,
mastering man and even threatening
to destroy
him, then his mind submits to the mysticism
of supernatural beings and he doubts
the
ability of his thinking to distinguish
truth.
Thus in the course of past centuries
the
myth of supernatural heavenly truth
unknowable
to man overshadowed the materialistic
practice
of daily experiences. Not until society
has
evolved to a state where man will be
able
to comprehend all social forces and
will
have learned to master them — in communist
society in short — will his thinking
entirely
correspond to the world. But already
before,
when the nature of social production
as a
fundamental basis of life and future
development
has become clear to man, when the mind
—
be it only theoretically at first —
actually
masters the world, our thinking will
be fully
true. That means that by the science
of society
as formulated by Marx, because now
his thesis
is fulfilled, materialism gains permanent
mastery and becomes the only comformable
philosophy. Thus Marxian theory of
society
in principle means a transformation
of philosophy.
Marx, however, was not concerned with
pure
philosophy. “Philosophers have interpreted
the world differently, but what matters
is
to change it,” he says in his last
thesis
on Feuerbach. The world situation pressed
for practical action. At first inspired
by
the rising bourgeois opposition to
absolutism,
then strengthened by the new forces
that
emanated from the struggle of the English
and French working class against the
bourgeoisie,
Marx and Engels, through their study
of social
realities, arrived at the conclusion
that
the proletarian revolution following
on the
heels of the bourgeois revolution would
bring
the final liberation of mankind. From
now
onward their activity was devoted to
this
revolution, and in “The Communist Manifesto”
they laid down the first directions
for the
workers’ class struggle.
Marxism has since been inseparably
connected
with the class fight of the proletariat.
If we ask what Marxism is, we must
first
of all understand that it does not
encompass
every thing Marx ever thought and wrote.
The views of his earlier years, for
instance,
such as quoted above, are representative
only in part; they are phases in a
development
leading toward Marxism. Neither was
it complete
at once; whereas the role of the proletarian
class struggle and the aim of communism
is
already outlined in The Communist Manifesto,
the theory of capitalism and surplus
value
is developed much later. Moreover,
Marx’s
ideas themselves, developed with the
change
of social and political conditions.
The character
of the revolution and the part played
by
the State in 1848, when the proletariat
had
only begun to appear, differed in aspect
from that of later years at the end
of the
century, or today. Essential, however,
are
Marx’s new contributions to science.
There
is first of all the doctrine of Historical
Materialism, the theory of the determination
of all political and ideological phenomena,
of spiritual life in general, by the
productive
forces and relations. The system of
production,
itself based on the state of productive
forces,
determines the development of society,
especially
through the force of the class struggle.
There is, furthermore, the presentation
of
capitalism as a temporary historical
phenomenon,
the analysis of its structure by the
theory
of value and surplus value, and the
explanation
of its revolutionary tendencies through
the
proletarian revolution towards communism.
With these theories Marx has enriched
human
knowledge permanently. They constitute
the
solid foundation of Marxism as a system
of
thought. From them further conclusions
may
be drawn under new and changed circumstances.
Because of this scientific basis, however,
Marxism is more than a mere science.
It is
a new way of looking at the past and
the
future, at the meaning of life, of
the world,
of thought; it is a spiritual revolution,
it is a new world-view, a new life-system.
As a system of life Marxism is real
and living
only through the class that adheres
to it.
The workers who are imbued with this
new
outlook, become aware of themselves
as the
class of the future, growing in number
and
strength and consciousness, striving
to take
production into their own hands and
through
the revolution to become masters of
their
own fate. Hence Marxism as the theory
of
proletarian revolution is a reality,
and
at the same time a living power, only
in
the minds and hearts of the revolutionary
working class.
Thus Marxism is not an inflexible doctrine
or a sterile dogma of imposed truths.
Society
changes, the proletariat grows, science
develops.
New forms and phenomena arise in capitalism,
in politics, in science, which Marx
and Engels
could not have foreseen or surmised.
Forms
of thought and struggle, that under
former
conditions were necessary must under
later
conditions give way to other ones.
But the
method of research which they framed
remains
up to this day an excellent guide and
tool
towards the understanding and interpretation
of new events. The working class, enormously
increased under capitalism, today stands
only at the threshold of its revolution
and,
hence, of its Marxist development;
Marxism
only now begins to get its full significance
as a living force in the working class.
Thus
Marxism itself is a living theory which
grows,
with the increase of the proletariat
and
with the tasks and aims of its fight.
Middle-Class (ed: "Bourgeois")
Materialism Returning now to the political
scene out of which Marxism emerged,
it must
be noted that the German revolution
of 1848
did not bring full political power
to the
bourgeoisie. But after 1850 capitalism
developed
strongly in France and Germany. In
Prussia
the Progressive Party began its fight
for
parliamentarism, whose inner weakness
became
evident later when the government through
military actions met the demands of
the bourgeoisie
for a strong national State. Movements
for
national unity dominated the political
scene
of Central Europe. Everywhere, with
the exception
of England where it already held power,
the
rising bourgeoisie struggled against
the
feudal absolutist conditions.
The struggle of a new class for power
in
State and society is at the same time
always
a spiritual struggle for a new world
view.
The old powers can be defeated only
when
the masses rise up against them or,
at least,
do not follow them any longer. Therefore
it was necessary for the bourgeoisie
to make
the working masses its followers and
win
their adherence to capitalist society.
For
this purpose the old ideas of the petty
bourgeoisie
and the peasants had to be destroyed
and
supplanted with new bourgeois ideologies.
Capitalism itself furnished the means
to
this end.
The natural sciences are the spiritual
basis
of capitalism. On the development of
these
sciences depends the technical progress
that
drives capitalism forward. Science,
therefore,
was held in high esteem by the rising
bourgeois
class. At the same time this science
freed
them from the conventional dogmas embodying
the rule of feudalism. A new outlook
on life
and on the world sprang up out of the
scientific
discoveries, and supplied the bourgeoisie
with the necessary arguments to defy
the
pretensions of the old powers. This
new world
outlook it disseminated among the masses.
To the peasant farm and the artisan
workshop
belong the inherited biblical faith.
But
as soon as the sons of the peasants
or the
impoverished artisans become industrial
workers
their mind is captured by capitalist
development.
Even those who remain in pre-capitalistic
conditions are lured by the more liberal
outlook of capitalist progress and
become
susceptible to the propaganda of new
ideas.
The spiritual fight was primarily a
struggle
against religion. The religious creed
is
the ideology of past conditions; it
is the
inherited tradition which keeps the
masses
in submission to the old powers and
which
had to be defeated. The struggle against
religion was imposed by the conditions
of
society; hence it had to take on varying
forms with varying conditions. In those
countries
where the bourgeoisie had already attained
full power, as for instance in England,
the
struggle was no longer necessary and
the
bourgeoisie paid homage to the established
church. Only among the lower middle
class
and among the workers did more radical
trends
of thought find some adherence. In
countries
where industry and the bourgeoisie
had to
fight for emancipation they proclaimed
a
liberal, ethical Christianity in opposition
to the orthodox faith. And where the
struggle
against a still powerful royal and
aristocratic
class was difficult, and required the
utmost
strength and exertion, the new world
view
had to assume extreme forms of radicalism
and gave rise to middle-class materialism.
This was so to a great extent in Central
Europe; so it is natural that most
of the
popular propaganda for materialism
(Moleschott, Vogt, Büchner), originated
here,
though it found an echo in other countries.
In addition to these radical pamphlets,
a
rich literature popularising the modern
scientific
discoveries appeared, supplying valuable
weapons in the struggle to free the
masses
of the citizens, the workers, and the
peasants,
from the spiritual fetters of tradition,
and to turn them into followers of
the progressive
bourgeoisie. The middle-class intelligentsia
— professors, engineers, doctors —
were the
most zealous propagandists of the new
enlightenment.
The essence of natural science was
the discovery
of laws operating in nature. A careful
study
of natural phenomena disclosed recurring
regularities which allowed for scientific
predictions. The 17th century had already
known the Galilean law of falling bodies
and gravity, Kepler’s laws of the planetary
motions, Snell’s law of the refraction
of
light, and Boyle’s law of the gas pressure.
Towards the end of the century came
the discovery
of the law of gravitation by Newton,
which
more than all preceding discoveries
exerted
a tremendous influence in the philosophical
thought of the 18th and 19th centuries.
Whereas
the others were rules that were not
absolutely
correct, Newton’s law of gravitation
proved
to be the first real exact law strictly
dominating
the motions of the heavenly bodies,
which
made possible predictions of the phenomena
with the same precision with which
they could
be observed. From this the conception
developed
that all natural phenomena follow entirely
rigid definite laws. In nature causality
rules : gravity is the cause of bodies
falling,
gravitation causes the movements of
the planets.
All occurring phenomena are effects
totally
determined by their causes, allowing
for
neither free will, nor chance nor caprice.
This fixed order of nature disclosed
by science
was in direct contrast to the traditional
religious doctrines in which God as
a despotic
sovereign arbitrarily rules the world
and
deals out fortune and misfortune as
he sees
fit, strikes his enemies with thunderbolts
and pestilence and rewards others with
miracles.
Miracles are contradictory to the fixed
order
of nature; miracles are impossible,
and all
reports about them in the Bible are
fables.
The biblical and religious interpretations
of nature belong to an epoch in which
primitive
agriculture prevailed under the overlordship
of absolute despots. The natural philosophy
of the rising bourgeoisie, with its
natural
laws controlling all phenomena, belongs
to
a new order of state and society where
the
arbitrary rule of the despot is replaced
by laws valid for all.
The natural philosophy of the Bible,
which
theology asserts to be absolute, divine,
truth is the natural philosophy of
ignorance
that has been deceived by outward appearances,
that saw an immovable earth as the
centre
of the universe, and held that all
matter
was created and was perishable. Scientific
experience showed, on the contrary,
that
matter which apparently disappeared
(as for
instance in burning) actually changes
into
invisible gaseous forms. Scales demonstrated
that a reduction of the total weight
did
not occur in this process and that,
therefore,
no matter disappeared. This discovery
was
generalised into a new principle; matter
cannot be destroyed, its quantity always
remains constant, only its forms and
combinations
change. This holds good for each chemical
element; its atoms constitute the building
stones of all bodies. Thus science
with its
theory of the conservation of matter,
of
the eternity of nature, opposed the
theological
dogma of the creation of the world
some 6,000
years ago.
Matter is not the only persistent substance
science discovered in the transient
phenomena.
Since the middle of the 19th century
the
law known as the conservation of energy
came
to be regarded as the fundamental axiom
of
physics. Here, too, a fixed and far
reaching
order of nature was observed; in all
phenomena
changes of the form of energy take
place:
heat and motion, tension and attraction,
electrical and chemical energy; but
the total
quantity never changes. This principle
led
to an understanding of the development
of
cosmic bodies, the sun and the earth,
in
the light of which all the assertions
of
theology appeared like the talk of
a stuttering
child.
Of even greater consequence were the
scientific
discoveries concerning man’s place
in the
world. Darwin’s theory of the origin
of species,
which showed the evolution of man from
the
animal kingdom, was in complete contradiction
to all religious doctrines. But even
before
Darwin, discoveries in biology and
chemistry
revealed the organic identity of all
human
and living creatures with non-organic
nature.
The protoplasm, the albuminous substance
of which the cells of all living beings
are
composed and to which all life is bound,
consists of the same atoms as all other
matter.
The human mind, which was elevated
into a
part of divinity by the theological
doctrine
of the immortal soul, is closely bound
up
with the physical properties of the
brain;
all spiritual phenomena are the accompaniment
to or the effect of material occurrences
in the brain cells.
Middle-class materialism drew the most
radical
conclusions from these scientific discoveries.
Everything spiritual is merely the
product
of material processes; ideas are the
secretion
of the brain, just as bile is the secretion
of the liver. Let religion — said Buchner
— go on talking about the fugacity
of matter
and the immortality of the mind; in
reality
it is the other way around. With the
least
injury of the brain everything spiritual
disappears; nothing at all remains
of the
mind when the brain is destroyed, whereas
the matter, its carrier, is eternal
and indestructible.
All phenomena of life, including human
ideas,
have their origin in the chemical and
physical
processes of the cellular substance;
they
differ from non-living matter only
in their
greater complexity. Ultimately all
their
processes must be explained by the
dynamics
and movements of the atoms.
These conclusions of natural-science
materialism,
however, could not be upheld to their
utmost
consequences. After all, ideas are
different
from bile and similar bodily secretions;
mind cannot be considered as a form
of force
or energy, and belongs in a quite different
category. If mind is a product of the
brain
which differs from other tissues and
cells
only in degree of complexity, then,
fundamentally,
it must be concluded that something
of mind,
some sensation, is to be found in every
animal
cell. And because the cellular substance
is only an aggregate of atoms, more
complex
but in substance not different from
other
matter, the conclusion must be that
something
of what we call mind is already present
in
the atom: in every smallest particle
of matter
there must be a particle of the “spiritual
substance.” This theory of the “atom-soul”
we find in the works of the prominent
zoologist
Ernst Haeckel, energetic propagandist
of
Darwinism and courageous combater of
religious
dogmatism. Haeckel did not consider
his philosophical
views as materialism but called them
monism
— strangely enough since he extends
the duality
of mind-matter down to the smallest
elements
of the world.
Materialism could dominate the ideology
of
the bourgeois class only for a short
time.
Only so long as the bourgeoisie could
believe
that its society of private property,
personal
liberty, and free competition, through
the
development of industry, science and
technique,
could solve the life problems of all
mankind
— only so long could the bourgeoisie
assume
that the theoretical problems could
be solved
by science, without the need to assume
supernatural
and spiritual powers. As soon, however,
as
it became evident that capitalism could
not
solve the life problems of the masses,
as
was shown by the rise of the proletarian
class struggle, the confident materialist
philosophy disappeared. The world was
seen
again full of insoluble contradictions
and
uncertainties, full of sinister forces
threatening
civilisation. So the bourgeoisie turned
to
various kinds of religious creeds,
and the
bourgeois intellectuals and scientists
submitted
to the influence of mystical tendencies.
Before long they were quick to discover
the
weaknesses and shortcomings of materialist
philosophy, and to make speeches on
the “limitations
of science” and the insoluble “world-riddles.”
Only a small number of the more radical
members
of the lower and middle classes, who
clung
to the old political slogans of early
capitalism,
continued to hold materialism in respect.
Among the working class it found a
fertile
ground. The adherents of anarchism
always
were its most convinced followers.
Socialist
workers embraced the social doctrines
of
Marx and the materialism of natural
science
with equal interest The practice of
labour
under capitalism, their daily experience
and their awakening understanding of
social
forces contributed greatly towards
undermining
traditional religion. Then, to solve
their
doubts, the need for scientific knowledge
grew, and the workers became the most
zealous
readers of the works of Bachmer and
Haeckel.
Whilst Marxist doctrine determined
the practical,
political and social ideology of the
workers,
a deeper understanding asserted itself
only
gradually; few became aware of the
fact that
middle-class materialism had long since
been
outdated and surpassed by Historical
Materialism.
This, by the way, concurs with the
fact that
the working-class movement had not
yet reached
beyond capitalism, that in practice
the class
struggle only tended to secure its
place
within capitalist society, and that
the democratic
solutions of the early middle class
movements
were accepted as valid for the working
class
also. The full comprehension of revolutionary
Marxist theory is possible only in
connection
with revolutionary practice.
Wherein then, do middle-class materialism
and Historical Materialism stand opposed
to one another?
Both agree insofar as they are materialist
philosophies, that is, both recognise
the
primacy of the experienced material
world;
both recognise that spiritual phenomena,
sensation, consciousness, ideas, are
derived
from the former. They are opposite
in that
middle-class materialism bases itself
upon
natural science, whereas Historical
Materialism
is primarily the science of society.
Bourgeois
scientists observe man only as an object
of nature, the highest of the animals,
determined
by natural Laws. For an explanation
of man’s
life and action, they have only general
biological
Laws, and in a wider sense, the laws
of chemistry,
physics, and mechanics. With these
means
little can be accomplished in the way
of
understanding social phenomena and
ideas.
Historical Materialism, on the other
hand,
lays bare the specific evolutionary
laws
of human society and shows the interconnection
between ideas and society.
The axiom of materialism that the spiritual
is determined by the material world,
has
therefore entirely different meanings
for
the two doctrines. For middle-class
materialism
it means that ideas are products of
the brain,
are to be explained out of the structure
and the changes of the brain substance,
finally
out of the dynamics of the atoms of
the brain.
For Historical Materialism, it means
that
the ideas of man are determined by
his social
conditions; society is his environment
which
acts upon him through his sense organs.
This
postulates an entirely different kind
of
problem, a different approach, a different
line of thought, hence, also a different
theory of knowledge.
For middle class materialism the problem
of the meaning of knowledge is a question
of the relationship of spiritual phenomena
to the physico-chemical-biological
phenomena
of the brain matter. For Historical
Materialism
it is a question of the relationship
of our
thoughts to the phenomena which we
experience
as the external world. Now man’s position
in society is not simply that of an
observing
being: he is a dynamic force which
reacts
upon his environment and changes it.
Society
is nature transformed through labour.
To
the scientist, nature is the objectively
given reality which he observes, which
acts
on him through the medium of his senses.
To him the external world is the active
and
dynamic element, whilst the mind is
the receptive
element. Thus it is emphasised that
the mind
is only a reflection, an image of the
external
world, as Engels expressed it when
he pointed
out the contradiction between the materialist
and idealist philosophies. But the
science
of the scientist is only part of the
whole
of human activity, only a means to
a greater
end. It is the preceding, passive part
of
his activity which is followed by the
active
part; the technical elaboration, the
production,
the transformation of the world by
man.
Man is in the first place an active
being.
In the Labour process he utilises his
organs
and aptitudes in order to constantly
build
and remake his environment. In this
procedure
he not only invented the artificial
organs
we call tools, but also trained his
physical
and mental aptitudes so that they might
react
effectively to his natural environment
as
instruments in the preservation of
life.
His main organ is the brain whose function,
thinking, is as good a physical activity
as any other. The most important product
of brain activity, of the efficient
action
of the mind upon the world is science,
which
stands as a mental tool next to the
material
tools and, itself a productive power,
constitutes
the basis of technology and so an essential
part of the productive apparatus.
Hence Historical Materialism looks
upon the
works of science, the concepts, substances,
natural Laws, and forces, although
formed
out of the stuff of nature, primarily
as
the creations of the mental Labour
of man.
Middle-class materialism, on the other
hand,
from the point of view of the scientific
investigator, sees all this as an element
of nature itself which has been discovered
and brought to light by science. Natural
scientists consider the immutable substances,
matter, energy, electricity, gravity,
the
Law of entropy, etc., as the basic
elements
of the world, as the reality that has
to
be discovered. From the viewpoint of
Historical
Materialism they are products which
creative
mental activity forms out of the substance
of natural phenomena.
This is one fundamental difference
in the
method of thinking. Another difference
lies
in dialectics which Historical Materialism
inherited from Hegel. Engels has pointed
out that the materialist philosophy
of the
18th-century disregarded evolution;
it is
evolution that makes dialectic thinking
indispensable.
Evolution and dialectics since have
often
been regarded as synonymous; and the
dialectic
character of Historical Materialism
is supposed
to be rendered by saying that it is
the theory
of evolution. Evolution, however, was
well
known in the natural science of the
19th
century. Scientists were well acquainted
with the growth of the cell into a
complete
organism, with the evolution of animal
species
as expressed in Darwinism, and with
the theory
of evolution of the physical world
known
as the law of entropy. Yet their method
of
reasoning was undialectic. They believed
the concepts they handled to be fixed
objects,
and considered their identities and
opposites
as absolutes. So the evolution of the
world
as well as the progress of science
brought
out contradictions, of which many examples
have been quoted by Engels in his Anti-Dühring.
Understanding in general and science
in particular
segregate and systematise into fixed
concepts
and rigid laws what in the real world
of
phenomena occurs in all degrees of
flux and
transition. Because language separates
and
defines groups of phenomena by means
of names,
all items falling into a group, as
specimens
of the concept, are considered similar
and
unchangeable. As abstract concepts,
they
differ sharply, whereas in reality
they transform
and merge into one another. The colours
blue
and green are distinct from each other
but
in the intermediary nuances no one
can say
where one colour ends and the other
begins.
It cannot be stated at what point during
its life cycle a flower begins or ceases
to be a flower. That in practical life
good
and evil are not absolute opposites
is acknowledged
every day, just as that extreme justice
may
become extreme injustice. Judicial
freedom
in capitalist development manifests
itself
as actual slavery. Dialectic thinking
is
adequate to reality in that in handling
the
concepts it is aware that the finite
cannot
fully render the infinite, nor the
static
the dynamic, and that every concept
has to
develop into new concepts, even into
its
opposite. Metaphysical, undialectical
thinking,
on the other hand, leads to dogmatic
assertions
and contradictions because it views
conceptions
formulated by thought as fixed, independent
entities that make up the reality of
the
world. Natural science proper, surely,
does
not suffer much from this shortcoming.
It
surmounts difficulties and contradictions
in practice insofar as it continually
revises
its formulations, increases their richness
by going into finer details, improves
the
qualitative distinctions by mathematical
formulas, completes them by additions
and
corrections, thereby bringing the picture
ever closer to the original, the world
of
phenomena. The lack of dialectic reasoning
becomes disturbing only when the scientist
passes from his special field of knowledge
towards general philosophical reasonings,
as is the case with middle-class materialism.
Thus, for instance, the theory of the
origin
of species often leads to the notion
that
the human mind, having evolved from
the animal
mind, is qualitatively identical with
the
latter and has only increased in quantity.
On the other hand, the qualitative
difference
between the human and the animal mind,
a
fact of common experience, was raised
by
theological doctrine, in enunciating
the
immortality of the soul, into an absolute
anti-thesis. In both cases there is
a lack
of dialectic thinking according to
which
a similarity in original character,
when
through the process of growth the increasing
quantitative difference turns into
qualitative
difference — the so-called inversion
of quantity
into quality — requires new names and
characteristics,
without leading to complete antithesis
and
loss of affinity.
It is the same metaphysical, non dialectic
thinking to compare thought, because
it is
the product of brain processes with
such
products of other organs as bile; or
to assume
that mind, because it is a quality
of some
material substance, must be a characteristic
quality of all matter. And especially,
to
think that because mind is something
other
than matter, it must belong to an absolutely
and totally different world without
any transition,
so that a dualism of mind and matter,
reaching
down to the atoms, remains sharp and
unbridgeable.
To dialectic thinking mind simply is
a concept
incorporating all those phenomena we
call
spiritual, which, thus, cannot reach
beyond
their actual appearance in the lowest
living
animals. There the term mind becomes
questionable,
because the spiritual phenomena disappear
gradually into mere sensibility, into
the
more simple forms of life. “Mind” as
a characteristic
existing quality, a separate something,
which
either is or is not there, does not
exist
in nature; mind is just a name we attach
to a number of definite phenomena,
some perceived
clearly, others uncertainly, as spiritual.
Life itself offers a close analogy.
Proceeding
from the smallest microscopic organisms
to
still smaller invisible bacteria and
viruses,
we finally come to highly complicated
albuminous
molecules that fall within the sphere
of
chemistry. Where in this succession
living
matter ceases to exist and dead matter
begins
cannot be determined; phenomena change
gradually,
become simplified, are still analogous
and
yet already different. This does not
mean
that we are unable to ascertain demarcation
lines; it is simply the fact that nature
knows of no boundaries. A condition
of quality
“life”, which either is or is not present,
does not exist in nature: again life
is a
mere name, a concept we form in order
to
comprehend the endless variety of gradations
in life phenomena. Because middle-class
materialism
deals with life and death, matter and
mind,
as if they were genuine realities existing
in themselves, it is compelled to work
with
hard and sharp opposites, whereas nature
offers an immense variety of more or
less
gradual transitions.
Thus the difference between middle-class
materialism and Historical Materialism
reaches
down to basic philosophical views.
The former,
in contradiction to the comprehensive
and
perfectly realistic Historical Materialism
is illusionary and imperfect — just
as the
bourgeois class movement, of which
it was
the theory, represented an imperfect
and
illusionary emancipation, in contrast
to
the complete and real emancipation
by way
of the proletarian class struggle.
The difference between the two systems
of
thought shows itself practically in
their
position towards religion. Middle-class
materialism
intended to overcome religion. However,
a
certain view arisen out of social life
cannot
be vanquished and destroyed merely
by refuting
it with argumentation; this means posing
one point of view against another:
and every
argument finds a counter-argument.
Only when
it is shown why, and under what circumstances
such a view was necessary, can it be
defeated
by establishing the transient character
of
these conditions. Thus the disproof
of religion
by natural science was effective only
insofar
as the primitive religious beliefs
were concerned,
where ignorance about natural laws,
about
thunder and lightning, about matter
and energy,
led to all kinds of superstition. The
theory
of bourgeois society was able to destroy
the ideologies of primitive agricultural
economy. But religion in bourgeois
society
is anchored in its unknown and uncontrollable
social forces; middle-class materialism
was
unable to deal with them. Only the
theory
of the workers’ revolution can destroy
the
ideologies of bourgeois economy. Historical
Materialism explains the social basis
of
religion and shows why for certain
times
and classes it was a necessary way
of thought.
Only thus was its spell broken. Historical
Materialism does not fight religion
directly;
from its higher vantage point it understands
and explains religion as a natural
phenomenon
under definite conditions. But through
this
very insight it undermines religion
and foresees
that with the rise of a new society
religion
will disappear. In the same way Historical
Materialism is able to explain the
temporary
appearance of materialist thought among
the
bourgeoisie, as well as the relapse
of this
class into mysticism and religious
trends.
In the same way, too, it explains the
growth
of materialist thought among the working
class as being not due to any anti-religious
argument but to the growing recognition
of
the real forces in capitalist society.
Dietzgen Middle-class materialism,
when it
came up in Western Europe in connection
with
the fight of the middle class for emancipation,
was inevitable in practice; but as
theory
it was a retrogression compared with
Historical
Materialism. Marx and Engels were so
far
ahead that they saw it only as a backsliding
into obsolete ideas of the 18th-century
enlightenment.
Because they saw so very clearly the
weaknesses
of the bourgeois political fight in
Germany
— while underrating the vitality of
the capitalist
system — they did not give much attention
to the accompanying theory. Only occasionally
they directed at it some contemptuous
words,
to refute any identification of the
two kinds
of materialism. During their entire
lifetime
their attention was concentrated upon
the
antithesis of their theory to the idealist
systems of German philosophy, especially
Hegel. Middle-class materialism [c1],
however,
was somewhat more than a mere repetition
of 18th-century ideas; the enormous
progress
of the science of nature in the 19th
century
was its basis and was a source of vigour.
A criticism of its foundations had
to tackle
problems quite different from those
of post-Hegelian
philosophy. What was needed was a critical
examination of the fundamental ideas
and
axioms which were universally accepted
as
the results of natural science and
which
were in part accepted by Marx and Engels
too.
Here lies the importance of the writings
of Joseph Dietzgen. Dietzgen, an artisan,
a tanner living in Rhineland, who afterwards
went to America and there took some
part
in the working-class movement, was
a self-made
socialist philosopher and author. In
social
and economic matters he considered
himself
a pupil of Marx, whose theory of value
and
capital he entirely comprehended. In
philosophy
he was an independent original thinker,
who
set forth the philosophical consequences
of the new world view. Marx and Engels,
though
they honourably mentioned him as “the
philosopher
of the proletariat” did not agree with
everything
he wrote; they blamed his repetitions,
often
judged him confused, and it is doubtful
whether
they ever understood the essence of
his arguments,
far removed from their own mode of
thinking.
Indeed, whereas Marx expresses the
new truth
of his views as precise statements
and sharp
logical arguments, Dietzgen sees his
chief
aim in stimulating his readers to think
for
themselves on the problem of thinking.
For
this purpose he repeats his arguments
in
many forms, exposes the reverse of
what he
stated before, and assigns to every
truth
the limits of its truth, fearing above
all
that the reader should accept any statement
as a dogma. Thus he teaches practical
dialectics.
Whereas in his later writings he is
often
vague, his first work The nature of
human
brain work(1869). and his later A socialist’s
excursions into the field of epistemology
(1877), as well as some smaller pamphlets
are brilliant contributions to the
theory
of knowledge. They form an essential
part
in the entirety of the world-view that
we
denote by the name of Marxism. The
first
problem in the science of human knowledge:
the origin of ideas, was answered by
Marx
in the demonstration that they are
produced
by the surrounding world. The second,
adjoining
problem, how the impressions of the
surrounding
world are transformed into ideas, was
answered
by Dietzgen. Marx stated what realities
determine
thought; Dietzgen established the relation
between reality and thought. Or, in
the words
of Herman Gorter, Marx pointed out
what the
world does to the mind, Dietzgen pointed
out what the mind does itself.
Dietzgen proceeds from the experiences
of
daily life, and especially from the
practice
of natural science. “Systematisation
is the
essence, is the general expression
of all
activity of science. Science seeks
only by
our understanding to bring the objects
of
the world into order and system.” Human
mind
takes from a group of phenomena what
is common
to them (e. g. from a rose, a cherry,
a setting
sun their colour), leaves out their
specific
differences, and fixes their general
character
(red) in a concept; or it expresses
as a
rule what repeats itself (e. g. stones
fall
to the earth). The object is concrete,
the
spiritual concept is abstract. “By
means
of our thinking we have, potentially,
the
world twofold, outside as reality,
inside,
in our head, as thoughts, as ideas,
as an
image. Our brains do not grasp the
things
themselves but only their concept,
their
general image. The endless variety
of things,
the infinite wealth of their characters,
finds no room in our mind”. For our
practical
life indeed, in order to foresee events
and
make predictions, we do not want all
the
special cases but only the general
rule.
The antithesis of mind and matter,
of thought
and reality, of spiritual and material,
is
the antithesis of abstract and concrete,
of general and special.
This, however, is not an absolute antithesis.
The entire world, the spiritual as
well as
the visible and tangible world, is
object
to our thinking. Things spiritual do
exist,
they too are really existing, as thoughts;
thus they too are materials for our
brain
activity of forming concepts. The spiritual
phenomena are assembled in the concept
of
mind. The spiritual and the material
phenomena,
mind and matter together, constitute
the
entire real world, a coherent entity
in which
matter determines mind and mind, through
human activity, determines matter.
That we
call this total world a unity means
that
each part exists only as a part of
the whole,
is entirely determined by the action
of the
whole, that, hence, its qualities and
its
special character consists in its relations
to the rest of the world. Thus also
mind,
i. e. all things spiritual, is a part
of
the world’s totality, and its nature
consists
in the totality of its relations to
the world’s
whole, which we then, as the object
of thinking,
oppose to it under the name material,
outer,
or real world. If now we call this
material
world primary and the mind dependent,
it
means for Dietzgen simply that the
entirety
is primary and the part secondary.
Such a
doctrine where spiritual and material
things,
entirely interdependent, form one united
world, may rightly be called monism.
This distinction between the real world
of
phenomena and the spiritual world of
concepts
produced by our thinking is especially
suitable
to clear up the nature of scientific
conceptions.
Physics has discovered that the phenomena
of light can be explained by rapid
vibrations
propagated through space, or, as the
physicists
said, through space-filling ether.
Dietzgen
quotes a physicist stating that these
waves
are the real nature of light whereas
all
that we see as light and colour is
only an
appearance. “The superstition of philosophical
speculation here” Dietzgen remarks
“has led
us astray from the path of scientific
induction,
in that waves rushing through the ether
with
a velocity of 40,000 (German) miles
per second,
and constituting the true nature of
light
are opposed to the real phenomena of
light
and colour. The perversion becomes
manifest
where the visible world is denoted
as a product
of the human mind, and the ether vibrations,
disclosed by the intellect of the most
acute
thinkers, as the corporeal reality.”
It is
quite the reverse, Dietzgen says: the
coloured
world of phenomena is the real world,
and
the ether waves are the picture constructed
by the human mind out of these phenomena.
It is clear that in this antagonism
we have
to do with different meanings about
the terms
truth and reality. The only test to
decide
whether our thoughts are truth is always
found in experiment, practice, experience.
The most direct of experiences is experience
itself; the experienced world of phenomena
is the surest of all things, the most
indubitable
reality. Surely we know phenomena that
are
only appearances. This means that the
evidences
of different senses are not in accordance
and have to be fitted in a different
way
in order to get a harmonious world-picture.
Should we assume the image behind the
mirror,
which we can see but cannot touch,
as a common
reality, then such a confused knowledge
would
bring practical failure. The idea that
the
entire world of phenomena should be
nothing
but appearance could make sense only
if we
assumed another source of knowledge
— e.
g. a divine voice speaking in us —
to be
brought in harmony with the other experiences.
Applying now the same test of practice
to
the physicist we see that his thinking
is
correct also. By means of his vibrating
ether
he not only explained known phenomena
but
even predicted in the right way a number
of unsuspected new phenomena. So his
theory
is a good, a true theory. It is truth
because
it expresses what is common to all
these
experiences in a short formula that
allows
of easy deduction of their endless
diversity.
Thus the ether ways must be considered
a
true picture of reality. The ether
itself
of course cannot be observed in any
way;
observation shows only phenomena of
light.
How is it then, that the physicists
spoke
of the ether and its vibrations as
a reality?
Firstly as a model, conceived by analogy.
From experience we know of waves in
water
and in the air. If now we assume such
waves
in another, finer substance filling
the universe,
we may transfer to it a number of well-known
wave phenomena, and we find these confirmed.
So we find our world of reality growing
wider.
With our spiritual eyes we see new
substances,
new particles moving, invisibly because
they
are beyond the power of our best microscopes,
but conceivable after the model of
our visible
coarser substances and particles.
In this way, however, with ether as
a new
invisible reality, the physicists landed
into difficulties. The analogy was
not perfect:
the world-filling ether had to be assigned
qualities entirely different from water
or
air; though called a substance it deviated
so completely from all known substances
that
an English physicist once compared
it somehow
to pitch. When it was discovered that
light
waves were electromagnetic vibrations,
it
ensued that the ether had to transmit
electric
and magnetic phenomena too. For this
role,
a complicated structure had to be devised,
a system of moving, straining, and
spinning
contrivances, that might be used as
a coarse
model, but which nobody would call
the true
reality of this finest of fluids filling
space between the atoms. The thing
became
worse when in the beginning of the
20th century
the theory of relativity came up and
denied
the existence of ether altogether.
Physicists
then grew accustomed to deal with a
void
space, equipped however with qualities
expressed
in mathematical formulas and equations.
With
the formulas the phenomena could be
computed
in the right way; the mathematical
symbols
were the only thing remaining. The
models
and images were non-essential, and
the truth
of a theory does not mean anything
more than
that the formulas are exact.
Things became worse still when phenomena
were discovered that could be represented
only by light consisting of a stream
of so
called quanta, separated particles
hurrying
through space. At the same time the
theory
of vibrations held the field too, so
that
according to needs one theory or the
other
had to be applied. Thus two strictly
contradictory
theories both were true, each to be
used
within its group of phenomena. Now
at last
physicists began to suspect that their
physical
entities, formerly considered the reality
behind the phenomena, were only images,
abstract
concepts, models more easily to comprehend
the phenomena. When Dietzgen half a
century
before wrote down his views which were
simply
a consequence of Historical Materialism,
there was no physicist who did not
firmly
believe in the reality of world ether.
The
voice of a socialist artisan did not
penetrate
into the university lecture rooms.
Nowadays
it is precisely the physicists who
assert
that they are dealing with models and
images
only, who are continually discussing
the
philosophical basis of their science,
and
who emphasise that science aims solely
at
relations and formulas through which
future
phenomena may be predicted from former
ones.
In the word phenomenon “that which
appears”,
there is contained an oppositeness
to the
reality of things; if we speak of “appearings”
there must be something else that appears.
Not at all, says Dietzgen; phenomena
appear
(or occur), that is all. In this play
of
words we must not think, of course,
of what
appears to me or to another observer;
all
that happens, whether man sees it or
not,
is a phenomenon, and all these happenings
form the totality of the world, the
real
world of phenomena. “Sense perception
shows
an endless transformation of matter
... The
sensual world, the universe at any
place
and any time is a new thing that did
not
exist before. It arises and passes
away,
passes and arises under our hands.
Nothing
remains the same, lasting is only perpetual
change, and even the change varies
... The
(middle class) materialist, surely,
asserts
the permanency, eternity, indestructibility
of matter ... Where do we find such
eternal,
imperishable formless matter? In the
real
world of phenomena we meet only with
forms
of perishable matter ... Eternal and
imperishable
matter exists practically, in reality,
only
as the sum total of its perishable
phenomena.”
In short, matter is an abstraction.
Whereas philosophers spoke of the essence
of things, physicists spoke of matter,
the
lasting background behind the changing
phenomena.
Reality, they say, is matter; the world
is
the totality of matter. This matter
consists
of atoms, the invariable ultimate building
stones of the universe, that by their
various
combinations impose the impression
of endless
change. On the model of surrounding
hard
objects, as an extension of the visible
world
of stones, grams, and dust, these still
smaller
particles were assumed to be the constituents
of the entire world, of the fluid water
as
well as of the formless air. The truth
of
the atomic theory has stood the test
of a
century of experience, in an endless
number
of good explanations and successful
predictions.
Atoms of course are not observed phenomena
themselves: they are inferences of
our thinking.
As such they share the nature of all
products
of our thinking their sharp limitation
and
distinction, their precise equality
belongs
to their abstract character. As abstractions
they express what is general and common
in
the phenomena, what is necessary for
predictions.
To the physicist, of course, atoms
were no
abstractions but real small invisible
particles,
sharply limited, exactly alike for
every
chemical element, with precise qualities
and precise mass. But modern science
destroyed
also this illusion. Atoms, firstly,
have
been dissolved into still smaller particles,
electrons, protons, neutrons, forming
complicated
systems, some of them inaccessible
to any
experiment, mere products of the application
of logic. And these smallest elements
of
the world cannot be considered as precisely
defined particles finding themselves
at definite
points in space. Modern physical theory
assigns
to each of them the character of a
wave motion
extending over infinite space. When
you ask
the physicist what it is that moves
in such
waves his answer consists in pointing
to
a mathematical equation. The waves
are no
waves of matter, of course; that which
moves
cannot even be called a substance,
but is
rendered most truly by the concept
of probability;
the electrons are probability-waves.
Formerly
a particle of matter in its invariable
weight
presented a precisely defined quantity,
its
mass. Now mass changes with the state
of
motion and cannot be separated accurately
from energy; energy and mass change
into
one another. Whereas formerly these
concepts
were neatly separated and the physical
world
was a clear system without contradiction,
proudly proclaimed the real world,
physics
nowadays, when it assumes its fundamental
concepts matter, mass, energy as fixed,
well
separated entities, is plunged into
a crowd
of unsolvable contradictions. The contradiction
is cleared up when we simply consider
them
as what they are: abstractions serviceable
to render the ever extending world
of phenomena.
The same holds for the forces and laws
of
nature. Here Dietzgen’s expositions
are not
adequate and somewhat confused, probably
because at the time the German physicists
used the word “Kraft” indiscriminately
for
force and for energy. A simple practical
case, such as gravity, may easily clear
up
the matter. Gravity, physicists said,
is
the cause of falling. Here cause is
not something
preceding the effects and different
from
it; cause and effect are simultaneous
and
express the same thing in different
words.
Gravity is a name that does not contain
anything
more than the phenomena themselves;
in denoting
them by this word we express the general,
the common character of all the phenomena
of falling bodies. More essential than
the
name is the law; in all free movements
on
earth there is a constant downward
acceleration.
Writing the law as a mathematical formula
we are able to compute the motions
of all
falling or thrown bodies It is not
necessary
now to keep the phenomena all in our
head;
to know future cases it is sufficient
to
know the law, the formula. The law
is the
abstract concept our mind constructed
out
of the phenomena. As a law it is a
precise
statement that is assumed to hold good
absolutely
and universally, whereas the phenomena
are
diversified and always show deviations
which
we then ascribe to other, accessory,
causes.
Newton extended the law of gravity
to the
celestial motions. The orbit of the
moon
was “explained” by showing that it
was pulled
by the same force that made stones
fall onto
earth; so the unknown was reduced to
the
known. His law of universal gravitation
is
expressed by a mathematical formula
through
which astronomers are able to compute
and
predict the celestial phenomena; and
the
result of countless predictions shows
the
truth of the law. Scientists now called
the
gravitation the “cause” of all these
motions;
they saw it as a reality floating in
space,
a kind of mysterious imp, a spiritual
being
called a “force” directing the planets
in
their course; the law was a command
somehow
present in nature which the bodies
had to
obey. In reality there is nothing of
the
sort; “cause” means the short summary
or
compendium, “effect” means the diverse
multitude
of phenomena. The formula binding the
acceleration
of each particle to its distance from
the
other ones, expresses in a short form
exactly
the same course of things as does a
lengthy
description of the actual motions.
Gravitation
as a separate something pulling and
steering
the bodies does not exist in nature
but only
in our head. As a mysterious command
permeating
space it has no more real existence
than
has Snell’s law of refraction as a
command
to the light rays on how they have
to go.
The course of the light rays is a direct
mathematical consequence of the different
velocity of light in different substances;
instead of by the command of a law
it can
equally well be represented by the
principle
that light, as it were an intelligent
being,
chooses the quickest route to reach
the aim.
Modern science, in an analogous way,
in the
theory of relativity renders the motions
in space not by gravitational force,
but
by prescribing the shortest road (the
“geodesic”)
in the distorted four-dimensional space-time.
Now again physicists came to consider
this
warped space as a “reality” behind
the phenomena.
And again it must be stated that, like
Newton’s
gravitation, it is only a mental abstraction,
a set of formulas, better than the
former,
hence more true, because it represents
more
phenomena which the old law could not
explain.
What is called “causality” in nature,
the
reign of natural laws-sometimes one
even
speaks of the “law of causality,” i.
e. in
nature the law holds that laws hold
— simply
comes down to the fact that the regularities
we find in the phenomena are expressed
in
the form of prescripts absolutely valid.
If there are limitations, exceptions,
conditions,
they are expressly stated as such,
and we
try to represent them by correcting
the law;
this shows that its character is meant
to
be absolute. We are confident that
it holds
for future use; and if it fails, as
often
happens, or does not hold precisely,
we represent
this by additional “causes.”
We often speak of the inexorable course
of
events, or of the necessity in nature;
or
we speak of “determinism,” as if this
course
had been determined and fixed by somebody
in advance. All these human names chosen
to express the antithesis to the arbitrariness
and free choice in human actions, denoting
a kind of compulsion, are a source
of much
confusion and cannot render exactly
the character
of nature. Rather we say that the entire
nature at this moment depends entirely
on
what it was a moment before. Or perhaps
better
still: that nature in its totality
and history
is a unity, remaining identically itself
in all its variations. All parts are
interrelated
as parts of one whole. and the laws
of nature
are the humanly imperfect expressions
of
these interrelations. Necessity can
be ascribed
to them solely in a partial imperfect
degree;
absolute necessity may be affirmed
for the
entirety of nature only. Phenomena
may be
imperfectly rendered by our laws; but
we
are convinced that they go on in a
way which
can be ultimately reduced to simple
description,
and could not be otherwise than they
are.
The significance of Marxism is often
expressed,
by saying that it presents, for the
first
time, a natural science of society.
Hence
society, just as nature, is determined
by
natural laws; society develops not
by chance
or incidentally but according to an
overall
necessity. And since society is human
activity,
then human action and choice and will
are
not arbitrary, not chance, but determined
by social causes. What this means will
now
be clear. The totality of the world,
consisting
of nature and society, is a unity,
at any
moment determined by what it was before,
each part entirely determined by the
action
of the rest. It remains the same identical
world, in which the happenings of one
part,
of mankind or part of it, depend entirely
on the surrounding world, nature and
society
together. Here too we try to find regularities,
rules and laws, and we devise names
and concepts;
but seldom do we ascribe to them a
separate
reality. Whereas a physicist easily
believes
in gravitation as a real something
floating
in space around the sun and the planets,
it is more difficult to believe in
“progress”
or “liberty” hovering round us and
floating
over society as real beings that conduct
man like a ruling fate. They too are
abstractions
constructed by the mind out of partial
relations
and dependencies. With their “necessity”
it is as with all necessity in nature.
Its
basis is the necessity that man must
eat
to live. In this popular saying the
fundamental
connection of man with the entirety
of the
world is expressed.
Through the immense complication of
social
relations “laws” of society are much
more
difficult to discern, and they cannot
now
be put into the form of exact formulas.
Still
more than in nature they may be said
to express
not the future but our expectation
about
the future. It is already a great thing
that,
whereas former thinkers were groping
in the
dark, now some main lines of development
have been discovered. The importance
of Marxism
as a science of society is not so much
the
truth of the rules and expectations
it formulated,
but rather what is called its method:
the
fundamental conviction that everything
in
the world of mankind is directly connected
with the rest. Hence for every social
phenomenon
we have to look for the material and
social
factors of reality on which it depends.
Mach In the later part of the 19th
century,
middle-class society turned away more
and
more from materialism. The bourgeoisie,
through
the development of capitalism, asserted
its
social mastery; but the rise of the
working-class
movements proclaiming as its aim the
annihilation
of capitalism, led to misgivings as
to the
durability of the existing social system.
World and future appeared full of unsolvable
problems. Since the visible, material
forces
threatened mischief, the ruling class,
to
quiet its apprehensions and assure
its self-reliance,
turned to the belief in the superior
rule
of spiritual powers. Mysticism and
religion
gained the upper hand, and still more
so
in the 20th century, after the First
World
War.
Natural scientists form a part of middle-class
society; they are in continual contact
with
the bourgeoisie and are influenced
by its
spiritual trends. At the same time,
through
the progress of science, they have
to deal
with new problems and contradictions
appearing
in their concepts. It is not clear
philosophical
insight that inspires the criticism
of their
theories, but rather the immediate
needs
of their practical study of nature.
This
criticism then takes its form and colour
from the anti-materialist trends in
the ruling
class. Thus modern natural philosophy
exhibits
two characters: critical reflection
over
the principles of science, and a critical
mood towards materialism. Just as in
the
time of Hegel, valuable progress in
the theory
of knowledge is garbed in mystical
and idealistic
forms.
Critics of the prevailing theories
came forward,
in the last part of the 19th century,
in
different countries: e. g. Karl Pearson
in
England, Gustav Kirchhoff and Ernst
Mach
in Germany, Henri Poincaré in France,
all
exhibiting, though in different ways,
the
same general trend of thought. Among
them
the writings of Mach have doubtless
exerted
the greatest influence upon the ideas
of
the next generation.
Physics, he says, should not proceed
from
matter, from the atoms, from the objects;
these are all derived concepts. The
only
thing we know directly is experience,
and
all experience consists in sensations,
sense
impressions (Empfindungen). By means
of our
world of concepts, in consequence of
education
and intuitive custom, we express every
sensation
as the action of an object upon ourselves
as subject: I see a stone. But freeing
ourselves
from this custom we perceive that a
sensation
is a unit in itself, given directly
without
the distinction of subject and object.
Through
a number of similar sensations I come
to
the distinction of an object, and I
know
of myself too only by a totality of
such
sensations. Since object and subject
are
built up of sensations it is better
not to
use a name that points to a person
experiencing
them. So we prefer the neutral name
of “elements”,
as the simplest basis of all knowledge.
Ordinary thinking here finds the paradox
that the hard immutable stone, the
prototype
of the solid “thing” should be formed
by,
should “consist of” such transient
subjective
stuff as sensations. On closer examination,
however, we see that what constitutes
the
thing, its qualities, are simply this
and
nothing else. First its hardness is
nothing
but the totality of a number of often
painful
sensations; and secondly its immutability
is the sum total of our experiences
that
on our returning to the same spot the
same
sensations repeat themselves. So we
expect
them as a fixed interconnection in
our sensations.
In our knowledge of the thing there
is nothing
that has not somehow the character
of a sensation.
The object is the sum total of all
sensations
at different times that, through a
certain
constancy of place and surroundings
considered
as related, are combined and denoted
by a
name. It is no more; there is no reason
to
assume with Kant a “thing in itself”
(Ding
an sich) beyond this sensation-mass;
we cannot
even express in words what we would
have
to think of it. So the object is formed
entirely
by sensations; it consists merely of
sensations.
Mach opposes his views to the current
physical
theory by the words:
“Not bodies produce sensations, but
element-complexes
(sensation-complexes) constitute the
bodies.
When the physicist considers the bodies
as
the permanent reality, the ‘elements’
as
the transient appearance, he does not
realise
that all ‘bodies’ are only mental symbols
for element-complexes (sensation-complexes)”
(Analyse der Empfindungen, page 23).
The
same holds for the subject. What we
denote
by “I myself” is a complex of recollections
and feelings, former and present sensations
and thoughts connected by continuity
of memory,
bound to a special body, but only partly
permanent.
“What is primary is not myself but
the elements
... The elements constitute the myself
...
The elements of consciousness of one
person
are strongly connected, those of different
persons are only weakly and passingly
connected.
Hence everybody thinks he knows only
of himself
as an indivisible and independent unity”
(Analyse der Empfindungen, page 19).
In his
work Die Mechanik in ihrer Entwicklung
(1883)
(The Development of Mechanics) he writes
along the same lines:
“Nature consists of the elements given
by
the senses. Primitive man first takes
out
of them certain complexes of these
elements
that present themselves with a certain
stability
and are most important to him. The
first
and oldest words are names for ‘things’.
Here abstraction is made from the surroundings,
from the continual small changes of
these
complexes, which are not heeded because
they
are not important. In nature there
is no
invariable thing. The thing is an abstraction,
the name is a symbol for a complex
of elements
of which we neglect the changes. That
we
denote the entire complex by one word,
one
symbol, is done because we want to
awaken
at once all impressions that belong
together....
The sensations are no ‘symbols of things’.
On the contrary the ‘thing’ is a mental
symbol
for a sensation-complex of relative
stability.
Not the things, the bodies, but colours,
sounds, pressures, times (what we usually
call sensations) are the true elements
of
the world. The entire process has an
economical
meaning. In picturing facts we begin
with
the ordinary more stable and habitual
complexes,
and afterwards for correction add what
is
unusual” (page 454). In this treatment
of
the historical development of the science
of mechanics he comes close to the
method
of Historical Materialism. To him the
history
of science is not a sequence of geniuses
producing marvellous discoveries. He
shows
how the practical problems are first
solved
by the mental methods of common life,
until
at last they acquire their most simple
and
adequate theoretical expression. Ever
again
the economic function of science is
emphasised.
“The aim of all science is to substitute
and to save experiences through the
picturing
and the forecastings of facts by thoughts,
because these pictures are more easily
at
hand than the experiences themselves
and
in many respects may stand for them”
(page
452). “When we depict facts by thoughts
we
never imitate them exactly, but only
figure
those sides that are important for
us; we
have an aim that directly or indirectly
arose
out of practical interests. Our pictures
are always abstractions. This again
shows
am economic trend” (page 454). Here
we see
science, specialised as well as common
knowledge,
connected with the necessities of life,
as
an implement of existence.
“The biological task of science is
to offer
a most perfect orientation to man in
the
full possession of his senses” (Analyse
der
Empfindungen, page 29). For man, in
order
to react efficiently to the impressions
of
his surroundings in each situation,
it is
not necessary to remember all former
cases
of analogous situations with their
results.
He has only to know what results generally,
as a rule, and this determines his
actions.
The rule, the abstract concept is the
instrument
ready at hand that saves the mental
consideration
of all former cases. What natural law
states
is not what will happen and must happen
in
nature, but what we expect will happen;
and
that is the very purpose they have
to serve.
The formation of abstract concepts,
of rules
and laws of nature, in common life
as well
as in science, is an intuitive process,
intended
to save brain work, aiming at economy
of
thinking. Mach shows in a number of
examples
in the history of science how every
progress
consists in greater economy, in that
a larger
field of experiences is compiled in
a shorter
way, so that in the predictions a repetition
of the same brain operations is avoided.
“With the short lifetime of man and
ms limited
memory, notably knowledge is only attainable
by the utmost economy of thinking.”
So the
task of science consists in “representing
facts as completely as possible by
a minimum
of brainwork” (Die Mechanik in ihrer
Entwicklung,
page 461).
According to Mach the principle of
economy
of thinking determines the character
of scientific
investigation. What science states
as properties
of things and laws about atoms are
in reality
relations between sensations. The phenomena
between which the law of gravitation
establishes
relations, consist in a number of visual
auditory or tactile impressions; the
law
says that they occur not by chance,
and predicts
how we may expect them. Of course we
cannot
express the law in this form; it would
be
inappropriate, unsuitable to practice
because
of its complexity. But as a principle,
it
is important to state that every law
of nature
deals with relations between phenomena.
If
now contradictions appear in our conceptions
about atoms and world ether, they lie
not
in nature but in the forms we choose
for
our abstractions in order to have them
available
in the most tractable way. The contradiction
disappears when we express the results
of
our research as relations between observed
quantities, ultimately between sensations.
The unconcerned scientific view is
easily
obscured if a point of view fit for
a limited
aim is made the basis of all considerations.
This is the case, says Mach, “when
all experiences
are considered as the effects of an
outer
world upon our consciousness. An apparently
inextricable tangle of metaphysical
difficulties
results. The phantom disappears directly
if we take matters in their mathematical
form, and make it clear to ourselves
that
the establishment of functions and
relations
alone avails, and that the mutual dependence
of experiences is the only thing we
wish
to know” (Analyse der Empfindungen,
page
28). It might seem that Mach here expresses
some doubts about the existence of
an outer
world independent of man. In countless
other
sentences, however, he speaks in a
clear
way of surrounding nature in which
we have
to live and which we have to investigate.
It means that such an outer world as
is accepted
by physics and by ordinary opinion,
the world
of matter and forces as producing the
phenomena,
leads us into contradictions. The contradictions
can be removed only if we return to
the phenomena
and instead of speaking words and abstract
terms express our results as relations
between
observations. This is what was afterwards
called Mach’s principle: if we ask
whether
a statement has a meaning and what
is its
meaning, we have to look for what experiments
may test it. It has shown its importance
in modem times, first in discussions
on time
and space in the theory of relativity,
and
then in the understanding of atomic
and radiation
phenomena. Mach’s aim was to find a
broader
field of interpretation for physical
phenomena.
In daily life the solid bodies are
most adequate
sensation-complexes, and mechanics,
the science
of their motions, was the first well
developed
part of physics. But this reason does
not
justify our establishing the form and
science
of atoms as the pattern for the entire
world.
Instead of explaining heat, light,
electricity,
chemistry, biology, all in terms of
such
small particles, every realm should
develop
its own adequate concepts.
Yet there is a certain ambiguity in
Mach’s
expressions on the outer world, revealing
a manifest propensity towards subjectivism,
corresponding to the general mystical
trend
in the capitalist world. Especially
in later
years he liked to discover cognate
trends
everywhere, and gave praise to idealistic
philosophies that deny the reality
of matter.
Mach did not elaborate his views into
a concise
coherent system of philosophy with
all consequences
well developed. His aim was to give
critical
thoughts, to stimulate new ideas, often
in
paradoxes sharply pointed against prevailing
opinions, without caring whether all
his
statements were mutually consistent
and all
problems solved. His was not a philosopher’s
mind constructing a system, but a scientist’s
mind, presenting his ideas as a partial
contribution
to the whole, feeling as part of a
collectivity
of investigators, sure that others
will correct
his errors and will complete what he
left
unachieved. “The supreme philosophy
of a
natural scientist” he says elsewhere
“is
to be content with an incomplete world
view
and to prefer it to an apparently complete
but unsatisfactory system” (Die Mechanik
in ihrer Entwicklung, page
437).
Mach’s tendency to emphasise the subjective
side of experience appears in that
the immediately
given elements of the world, which
we call
phenomena, are denoted as sensations.
Surely
this means at the same time a deeper
analysis
of the phenomena; in the phenomenon
that
a stone falls are contained a number
of visual
sensations combined with the memory
of former
visual and spatial sensations. Mach’s
elements,
the sensations, may be called the simplest
constituents of the phenomena. But
when he
says: “Thus it is true that the world
consists
of our sensations” (Analyse der Empfindungen,
page 10) he means to point to the subjective
character of the elements of the world.
He
does not say “my” sensations; solipsism
(the
doctrine that I myself only am existing)
is entirely foreign to him and is expressly
refuted; “I myself” is itself a complex
of
sensations. But where he speaks of
fellow-men
in relation to the world of sensations,
he
is not entirely clear.
“Just as little as I consider red and
green
as belonging to an individual body,
so little
I make an essential difference — from
this
point of view of general orientation
— between
my sensations and another’s sensations.
The
same elements are mutually connected
in many
‘myselfs’ as their nodal points. These
nodal
points, however, are nothing perennial,
they
arise and disappear and change continually”
(Analyse der Empfindungen, page 294).
Here it must be objected that “red”
and “green”
as belonging to more bodies are not
the simple
sensational elements of experience,
but themselves
already abstract concepts. It seems
that
Mach here replaces the abstract concepts
body and matter by other abstract concepts,
qualities and colours, that as realities
appear in my and in another’s sensations.
And when he calls my sensation and
another’s
analogous sensation the same element,
this
word is taken in another sense.
Mach’s thesis that the world consists
of
our sensations, expresses the truth
that
we knew of the world only through our
sensations;
they are the materials out of which
we build
our world; in this sense the world,
including
myself, “consists” of sensations only.
At
the same time, the emphasis upon the
subjective
character of sensations reveals the
same
middle-class trend of thought that
we mind
in other contemporary philosophies.
It is
even more evident when he points out
that
these views may tend to overcome dualism,
this eternal philosophical antithesis
of
the two worlds of matter and mind.
The physical
and the psychical world for Mach consist
of the same elements, only in a different
arrangement. The sensation green in
seeing
a leaf, with other sensations is an
element
of the material leaf; the same sensation,
with others of my body, my eye, my
reminiscences,
is an element of “myself,” of my psyche.
“Thus I see no antithesis of the physical
and the psychical, but I see a simple
identity
relative to these elements. In the
sensual
realm of my consciousness every object
is
physical and psychical at the same
time”
(Analyse der Empfindungen, p36). “Not
the
stuff is different in both realms,
but the
tendency of the research” (page 14).
Thus dualism has disappeared; the entire
world is a unity, consisting of the
self-same
elements; and these elements are not
atoms
but sensations. And inErkenntnis und
Irrtum
he adds in a footnote:
“There is no difficulty in building
up every
physical happening out of sensations,
i.
e. psychical elements; but there is
no possibility
of seeing how out of the usual physical
elements,
masses and motions, any psychical happening
might be constructed ... We have to
consider
that nothing can be object of experience
or science that cannot be in some way
a part
of consciousness” (page 12). Here,
in this
footnote added later, in 1905, the
well considered
equivalence of both worlds, physical
and
psychical, the careful neutral characterising
of the elements, is given up by calling
them
psychical, and the anti-materialistic
spirit
of the bourgeoisie breaks through.
Since
it is not our aim to criticise and
to contest
but only to set forth Mach’s views
we shall
not enter into the tautology of the
last
sentence, that only what is in consciousness
can be conscious and that hence the
world
is spiritual.
The new insight that the world is built
up
out of sensations as its elements,
meets
with difficulties, Mach says, because
in
our uncritical youth we took over a
world
view that had grown intuitively in
the thousands
of years of human development. We may
break
its spell by critically repeating the
process
through conscious philosophic reasoning.
Starting with the most simple experiences,
the elementary sensations, we construct
the
world step by step: ourselves, the
outer
world, our body as part of the outer
world,
connected with our own feeling, actions
and
reminiscences. Thus, by analogy, we
recognise
fellow-men as kindred, and so their
sensations,
disclosed by their sayings, may be
used as
additional material in constructing
the world.
Here Mach stops; further steps toward
an
objective world are not made.
That this is no accidental incompleteness
is shown by the fact that we find the
same
thing with Carnap, one of the leading
thinkers
in modern philosophy of science. In
his work
Der logische Aufbau der Welt (The logical
construction of the world) he sets
himself
the same task, but more thoroughly:
if we
start with knowing nothing, having
however
our full capacity of thinking, how
can we
establish (“constitute”) the world
with all
its contents? I start with “my sensations”
and make them into a system of “sayings”
and “objects” (“object” is the name
given
to everything about which we may utter
a
saying); thus I establish physical
and psychical
“objects” and construct “the world”
as an
ordered system of my sensations. The
problem
of dualism of body and mind, of material
and spiritual, finds here the same
answer
as with Mach: both consist of the same
materials,
the sensations, only ordered in a different
way. The sensations of fellow-men,
according
to their statements, lead to a physical
world
exactly corresponding to mine. So we
call
it the “intersubjective world,” common
to
all subjects; this is the world of
natural
science. Here Carnap stops, satisfied
that
dualism has been removed, and that
any quest
about the reality of the world is now
shown
to be meaningless, because “reality”
cannot
be tested in another way than by our
experience,
our sensations. So the chain of progressive
constitutings is broken off here.
It is easy to see the limitedness of
this
world structure. It is not finished.
The
world thus constituted by Mach and
by Carnap
is a momentary world supposed unchanging.
The fact that the world is in continuous
evolution is disregarded. So we must
go on
past where Carnap stopped. According
to our
experience people are born and die;
their
sensations arise and disappear, but
the world
remains. When my sensations out of
which
the world was constituted, cease with
my
death, the world continues to exist.
From
acknowledged scientific facts I know
that
long ago there was a world without
man, without
any living being. The facts of evolution,
founded on our sensations condensed
into
science, establish a previous world
without
any sensations. Thus from an intersubjective
world common to all mankind, constituted
as a world of phenomena by science,
we proceed
to the constitution of an objective
world.
Then the entire world view changes.
Once
the objective world is constituted,
all phenomena
become independent of observing man,
as relations
between parts of the world, The world
is
the totality of an infinite number
of parts
acting upon another; every part consists
in the totality of its actions and
reactions
with the rest, and all these mutual
actions
are the phenomena, the object of science.
Man also is part of the world; we too
are
the totality of our mutual interactions
with
the rest, the outer world. Our sensations
are now seen in a new light; they are
the
actions of the world upon us, only
a small
part of all happenings in the world
but,
of course, the only ones immediately
given
to us. When now man is building up
the world
out of his sensations, it is a reconstruction
in the mind of an already objectively
existing
world. Again we have the world twofold,
with
all the problems of epistemology, the
theory
of knowledge. How they may be solved
without
metaphysics is shown by Historical
Materialism.
If one asks why two such prominent
philosophers
of science omitted this obvious step
toward
the constitution of an objective world,
the
answer can only be found in their middle-class
world view. Their instinctive tenet
is anti-materialistic.
By adhering to the intersubjective
world
they have won a monistic world system,
the
physical world consisting of psychical
elements,
so that materialism is refuted. We
have here
an instructive example how class views
determine
science and philosophy.
Summarising Mach’s ideas we distinguish
two
steps. First the phenomena are reduced
to
sensations expressing their subjective
character.
Through the desire to find direct reality
only in the sensations as psychical
entities,
he does not proceed by precise deductions
to an objective world that obviously
is matter
of fact, though in a mystical vague
way.
Then comes a second step from the world
of
phenomena to the physical world. What
physics,
and by the popular dispersion of science
also common opinion, assumes as the
reality
of the world — matter, atoms, energy,
natural
laws, the forms of space and time.
myself
— are all abstractions from groups
of phenomena.
Mach combines both steps into one by
saying
that things are sensation-complexes.
The second step corresponds to Dietzgen;
the similarity here is manifest. The
differences
are accounted for by their different
class
views. Dietzgen stood on the basis
of dialectic
materialism, and his expositions were
a direct
consequence of Marxism. Mach, borne
by the
incipient reaction of the bourgeoisie,
saw
his task in a fundamental criticism
of physical
materialism by asserting dominance
to some
spiritual principle. There is a difference,
moreover, in personality and aims.
Dietzgen
was a comprehensive philosopher, eager
to
find out how our brains work; the practice
of life and science was to him material
for
the knowledge of knowledge. Mach was
a physicist
who by his criticisms tries to improve
the
ways in which brains worked in scientific
investigations. Dietzgen’s aim was
to give
clear insight into the role of knowledge
in social development, for the use
of the
proletarian struggle. Mach’s aim was
an amelioration
of the practice of physical research,
for
the use of natural science.
Speaking of practice, Mach expresses
himself
in different ways. At one time he sees
no
utility in employing the ordinary abstractions:
“We know only of sensations, and the
assumption
of those nuclei (particles of matter)
and
their mutual actions as the assigned
origins
of sensations, shows itself entirely
futile
and superfluous” (Analyse der Empfindungen,
page 10). Another time he does not
wish to
discredit the common view of unsophisticated
“naive realism,” because it renders
great
services to mankind in their common
life.
It has grown as a product of nature,
whereas
every philosophical system is an ephemeral
product of art, for temporary aims.
So we
have to see “why and to what purposes
we
usually take one point of view, and
why and
to what purpose we temporarily give
it up.
No point of view holds absolutely;
each imports
for special aims only” (Analyse der
Empfindungen,
page 30).
In the practical application of his
views
upon physics Mach met with little success.
His campaign was chiefly directed against
matter and atoms dominating physical
science.
Not simply because they are and should
be
acknowledged as abstractions: “Atoms
we can
observe nowhere, they are as every
substance
products of thought”
(Die Mechanik in ihrer Entwicklung,
page
463). But because they are impractical
abstractions.
They mean an attempt to reduce all
physics
to mechanics, to the motion of small
particles,
“and it is easy to see that by mechanical
hypotheses a real economy of scientific
thought
cannot be achieved” (Die Mechanik in
ihrer
Entwicklung, page
469). But his criticism of heat as
a form
of motion of small particles, already
in
1873, and of electricity as a streaming
fluid,
found no echo among physicists. On
the contrary
these explanations developed in ever
wider
applications, and their consequences
were
confirmed ever again; atomic theory
could
boast of ever more results and was
extended
even to electricity in the theory of
electrons.
Hence the generation of physicists
that followed
him, while sympathising with his general
views and accepting them, did not follow
him in ms special applications. Only
in the
new century, when atomic and electronic
theory
had progressed in a brilliant display,
and
when the theory of relativity arose,
there
appeared a host of glaring contradictions
in which Mach’s principles showed themselves
the best guides in clearing up the
difficulties.
Avenarius The title of Lenin’s work
Materialism
and Empirio-Criticism imposes the necessity
to treat here the Zürich philosopher
Richard
Avenarius, because empirio-criticism
was
the name he gave to his doctrine, in
many
parts touching upon Mach’s views. In
his
chief work Kritik der reinen Erfahrung
(Criticism
of pure experience) he starts from
simple
experience, considers carefully what
is certain
about it. and then tests critically
what
man derived and assumed about the world
and
himself, what is tenable and justifiable
in it and what is not.
In the natural world view, he explains,
I
find the following things. I find myself
with thoughts and feelings within a
surrounding
world; to these surroundings belong
fellow-men
acting and speaking as I do, whom therefore
I assume to be similar to myself. Strictly
speaking, the interpretation of the
movements
and sounds connected with fellow-man
as having
a meaning just as mine is an assumption,
not a real experience. But it is a
necessary
assumption without which a reasonable
world
view would be impossible: “the empiriocritical
basic assumption of human equality.”
Then
this is my world: first my own statements,
e. g. “I see (or touch) a tree” (I
call this
an observation); I find it, repeatedly,
back
at the same spot, I describe it as
an object
in space; I call it “world,” distinct
from
myself, or “outer world.” Moreover
I have
remembrances (I call them ideas), somehow
analogous to observations. Secondly
there
are fellow-men as part of the world.
Thirdly
there are statements of the fellow-men
dealing
with the same world; he speaks to me
of the
tree he, too, is seeing; what he says
clearly
depends on the “world.” So far all
is simple
and natural, there is nothing more
to have
thoughts about, nothing of inner and
outer,
of soul and body.
Now, however, I say: my world is object
of
the observation of my fellow-man; he
is the
bearer of the observation, it is part
of
hmm; I put it into him, and so I do
with
his other experiences, thoughts, feelings,
of which I know through his sayings.
I say
that he has an “impression” of the
tree,
that he makes himself a “conception”
of the
tree. An impression, a conception,
a sensation
of another person, however, is imperceptible
to me; it finds no place in my world
of experience.
By so doing I introduce something that
has
a new character, that can never be
experience
to me, that is entirely foreign to
all that
so far was present. Thus my fellow-man
has
now got an inner world of observations,
feelings,
knowledge, and an outer world that
he observes
and knows. Since I stand to him as
he stands
to me I too have an inner world of
sensations
and feelings opposite to that which
I call
the “outer” world. The tree I saw and
know
is split into a knowledge and an object.
This process is called “introjection”
by
Avenarius; something is introduced,
introjected
into man that was not present in the
original
simple empirical world conception.
Introjection has made a cleavage in
the world.
It is the philosophical fall of man.
Before
the fall he was in a state of philosophical
innocence; he took the world as simple,
single,
as the senses show it; he did not know
of
body and soul, of mind and matter,
of good
and evil. The introjection brought
dualism
with all its problems and contradictions.
Let us look at its consequences already
at
the lowest state of civilisation. On
the
basis of experience introjection takes
place
not only into fellow-man but also into
fellow-animals,
into fellow-things, into trees, rocks,
etc:
this is animism. We see a man sleeping;
awakened
he says he was elsewhere; so part of
him
rested here, part left the body temporarily.
If it does not return, the first part
is
rotting away, but the other part appears
in dreams, ghostly. So man consists
of a
perishable body and a non-perishing
spirit.
Such spirits also live in trees, in
the air,
in heaven. At a higher stage of civilisation
the direct experience of spirits disappears;
what is experienced is the outer world
of
senses; the inner spiritual world is
super-sensual.
“Experience as things and experience
as knowledge
now stand against one another, incomparable
as a material and a spiritual world”
(Kritik
der reinen Erfahrung, § 110).
In this short summary of Avenarius’s
exposure
of his views we omitted one thing that
to
him is an essential link in the chain.
To
the sayings of the fellow-man belongs
not
only himself and his body, but belongs
in
particular his brain. In my experience,
Avenarius
says, I have three dependencies: between
the sayings of man and his outer world,
between
his brain and the outer world, and
between
his brain and his sayings. The second
is
a physical relation, part of the law
of energy;
the other two belong to logic.
Avenarius now proceeds first to criticise
and then to eliminate introjection.
That
actions and sayings of fellow-men are
related
to the outer world is my experience.
When
I introduce it as ideas into him, it
is into
his brain that I introduce them. But
no anatomical
section can disclose them. “We cannot
find
any characteristic in the thought or
in the
brain to show that thought is a part
or character
of the brain” (Kritik der reinen Erfahrung,
§ 125). Man can say truly: I have brain;
i. e. to the complex called “myself”
brain
belongs as a part; he can say truly:
I have
thoughts, i. e. to the complex “myself”
thoughts
belong as a part. But that does not
imply
that my brain have these thoughts.
“Thought
is thought of myself, but not therefore
thought
of my brain” (Kritik der reinen Erfahrung,
§ 131) “Brain is no lodging or site,
no producer,
no instrument or organ, no bearer or
substratum,
etc., of thinking ... Thinking is no
resident
or commander, no other side, no product
either,
not even a physiological function of
the
brain” (Kritik der reinen Erfahrung,
§ 132).
This imposing enumeration of usual
psychological
statements discloses why the brain
was introduced.
To refute our introjection of a mental
world
into fellow-man, Avenarius emphasises
that
its place would then be the brain,
and the
brain when anatomically dissected does
not
show it. Elsewhere he says: introjection
means that my thinking puts itself
at the
place of fellow-man, hence my thinking
combines
with his brain, which can be done only
in
fantasy, not really. As arguments to
serve
as the basis of a philosophical system
they
are rather artificial and unconvincing.
What
is true and important is the disclosure
of
the fact of introjection, the demonstration
that in our assumption that the world
of
fellow-man is the same kind of thing
as my
own, I introduce a second world of
fantasy
of another character, entirely outside
my
experience. It corresponds point for
point
with my own; its introduction is necessary;
but it means a doubling of the world,
or
rather a multiplication of worlds not
directly
accessible to me, no possible part
of my
world of experience.
Now Avenarius sees as his task the
building
up of a world-structure free from introjection,
by means of the simple data of experience.
In his exposition he finds it necessary
to
introduce a special system of new names,
characters and figures with algebraic
expressions
to designate our ordinary concepts.
The laudable
intention is this; not to be led astray
by
instinctive associations and meanings
connected
with ordinary language. But the result
is
an appearance of profoundness with
an abstruse
terminology that needs to be back-translated
into our usual terms if we want to
understand
its meanings, and is a source of easy
misunderstandings.
His argument expressed thus by himself
in
a far more intricate way, may be summarised
as follows:
We find ourselves, a relative constant,
amidst
a changing multitude of units denoted
as
“trees,” “fellow-men,” etc., which
show many
mutual relations, “Myself” and “surroundings”
are found both at the same time in
the same
experience; we call them “central-part”
and
“counter-part” (Zentralglied und Gegenglied).
That my fellow-man has thoughts, experiences
and a world just as I have, is expressed
in the statement that part of my surroundings
is central-part itself. When in his
brain
variations take place
(they belong to my world of experience),
then phenomena occur in his world;
his sayings
about them are determined by processes
in
his brains. In my world of experience
the
outer world determines the change in
his
brain (a neurological fact); not my
observed
tree determines his observation (situated
in another world), but the changes
caused
by the tree in his brain (both belonging
to my world) determine his observation.
Now
my scientific experience declares my
brain
and his brain to change in the same
way through
impressions of the outer world; hence
the
resulting “his world” and my world
must be
of the same stuff. So the natural world
conception
is restored without the need of introjection.
The argument comes down to this that
our
practice of assuming similar thoughts
and
conceptions as our own in fellow-men,
which
should be illicit notwithstanding our
spiritual
intercourse, should become valid as
soon
as we make a detour along the material
brains.
To which must be remarked that neurology
may assume as a valid theory that the
outer
world produces the same changes in
my brain
and in another man’s; but that, strictly
keeping to my experience, I have never
observed
it and never can observe it.
Avenarius’s ideas have nothing in common
with Dietzgen; they do not deal with
the
connection between knowledge and experience.
They are cognate to Mach’s in that
both proceed
from experience, dissolve the entire
world
into experience and believe thus to
have
done away with dualism.
“If we keep ‘complete experience’ free
from
all adulteration, our world-conception
will
be free from all metaphysical dualism.
To
these eliminated dualisms belong the
absolute
antithesis of ‘body’ and ‘mind,’ of
‘matter’
and ‘spirit,’ in short of physical
and psychical”
(page 118). “Things physical, matter
in its
metaphysical absolute sense finds no
place
in purified ‘complete experience,’
because
‘matter’ in this conception is only
an abstractum,
indicating the entirety of counter-parts
when abstraction is made of all ‘central-parts’”
(Bemerkungen zum Begriff des Gegenstandes
der Psychologie, § 119). This is analogous
to Mach; but it is different from Mach
in
being built out into a finished and
closed
system. The equality of the experience
of
fellow-man, settled by Mach in a few
words,
is a most difficult piece of work to
Avenarius.
The neutral character of the elements
of
experience is pointed out with more
precision
by Avenarius; they are not sensations,
nothing
psychical, but simply something “found
present”
(Vorgefundenes).
So he opposes prevailing psychology,
that
formerly dealt with the “soul,” afterwards
with “psychic functions,” because it
proceeds
from the assumption that the observed
world
is an image within us. This, he says,
is
not a “thing found present,” and neither
can it be disclosed from what is “found
present.”
“Whereas I leave the tree before me
as something
seen in the same relation to me, as
a thing
‘found present’ to me, prevailing psychology
puts the tree as ‘something seen’ into
man,
especially into his brain” (Bemerkungen
zum
Begriff des Gegenstandes der Psychologie,
page 45 Note). Introjection created
this
false object of psychology; it changed
“before
me” into “in me,” what is “found present”
into what is “imagined “ it made “part
of
(real) surroundings” into “part of
(ideal)
thinking.”
For Avenarius, instead, the material
changes
in the brain are the basis of psychology.
He proceeds from the thesis taken over
from
the special science of physiology that
all
action of the surroundings produces
changes
in the brain and that these produce
thoughts
and sayings — and this certainly lies
outside
direct experience. It is a curious
fact that
Mach and Carnap too speak of observing
(ideally,
not really) the brain (by physical
or chemical
methods, or by a “brain-mirror”) to
see what
happens there in connection with sensations
and thoughts. It seems that middle-class
theory of knowledge cannot do without
having
recourse to this materialist conception.
Avenarius is the most radical in this
respect;
for him psychology is the science of
the
dependence of behaviour upon the brain;
what
belongs to the actions of man is not
psychical
but physiological, mere brain processes.
When we speak of ideas and ideologies,
empirio-criticism
speaks of changes in the central nervous
system. The study of the great world-moving
ideas in the history of mankind turns
into
the study of their nervous systems.
Thus
empirio-criticism stands close to middle-class
materialism that also, in the problem
of
the determination of ideas by the surrounding
world, appeals to brain-matter, In
comparing
Avenarius with Haeckel we should rather
call
him Haeckel reversed. Both can understand
mind only as an attribute of the brain;
since
mind and matter, however, are fundamentally
disparate, Haeckel attributes a particle
of mind to every atom, whereas Avenarius
entirely dispenses with the mind as
a special
something. But therefore the world
for him
takes instead the somewhat shadowy
character
— frightening to materialists and opening
the gate to ideological interpretations
—
of consisting of “my experience” only.
Right as Avenarius may be that it is
not
strictly expedence, the equalisation
of fellow-men
with ourselves and the identity of
their
world with ours is an inevitably natural
affair, whatever kind of spiritual
or material
terms are used to express it. The point
is
again that middle-class philosophy
wants
to criticise and correct human thinking
instead
of trying to understand it as a natural
process.
In this context a general remark must
be
made. The essential character in Mach
and
Avenarius, as in most modem philosophers
of science, is that they start from
personal
experience. It is their only basis
of certainly;
to it they go back when asked what
is true.
When fellow-men enter into the play,
a kind
of theoretical uncertainty appears,
and with
difficult reasonings their experience
must
be reduced to ours. We have here an
effect
of the strong individualism of the
middle-class
world. [1] The middle-class individual
in
his strong feeling of personality has
lost
social consciousness; he does not know
how
entirely he is a social being. In everything
of himself, in his body, his mind,
his life,
his thoughts, his feeling, in his most
simple
experiences he is a product of society,
human
society made them all what they are.
What
is considered a purely personal sensation:
I see a tree — can enter into consciousness
only through the distinctness given
to it
by names. Without the inherited words
to
indicate things and species, actions
and
concepts, the sensation could not be
expressed
and conceived. Out of the indistinctive
mass
of the world of impressions the important
parts come forward only when they are
denoted
by sounds and thus become separated
from
the unimportant mass. When Carnap constructs
the world with out using the old names,
he
still makes use of his capacity of
abstract
thinking. Abstract thinking, however,
by
means of concepts, is not possible
without
speech; speech and abstract thinking
developed
together as a product of society.
Speech could never have originated
without
human society for which it is an organ
of
mutual communication. It could develop
in
a society only, as an instrument in
the practical
activity of man. This activity is a
social
process that as the deepest foundation
underlies
all my experiences. The activity of
fellow-man,
inclusive his speaking, I experience
as co-natural
with my activity because they are parts
of
one common activity; thus we know our
similarity.
Man is first an active being, a worker,
To
live he must eat, i. e. he must seize
and
assimilate other things; he must search,
fight, conquer. This action upon the
world,
a life-necessity, determines his thinking
and feeling, because it is his chief
life
content and forms the most essential
part
of his experiences. It was from the
first
a collective activity, a social labour
process.
Speech originated as part of this collective
process, as an indispensable mediator
in
the common work, and at the same time
as
an instrument of reflexive thinking
needed
in the handling of tools, themselves
products
of collective working. In such a way
the
entire world of experience of man bears
a
social character. The simple “natural
world
view” taken by Avenarius and other
philosophers
as their starting point, is not the
spontaneous
view of a primitive single man but,
in philosophical
garb, the outcome of a highly developed
society.
Social development has, through the
increasing
division of labour, dissected and separated
what before was a unit. Scientists
and philosophers
have the special task of investigating
and
reasoning so that their science and
their
conceptions may play their role in
the total
process of production-now the role
chiefly
of supporting and strengthening the
existing
social system. Cut off from the root
of life,
the social process of labour, they
hang in
the air and have to resort to artificial
reasonings to find a basis. Thus the
philosopher
starts with imagining himself the only
being
on earth and suspiciously asks whether
he
can demonstrate his own existence;
till he
is happily reassured by Descartes “I
think,
so I exist.” Then along a chain of
logical
deductions he proceeds to ascertain
the existence
of the world and of fellow-men; and
so the
self-evident comes out along a wide
detour
— if it comes out. For the middle-class
philosopher
does not feel the necessity to follow
up
to the last consequences, to materialism,
and he prefers to stay somewhere in-between,
expressing the world in ideological
terms.
So this is the difference: middle-class
philosophy
looks for the source of knowledge in
personal
meditation, Marxism finds it in social
labour.
All consciousness, all spiritual life
of
man, even of the most lonely hermit,
is a
collective product, has been made and
shaped
by the working community of mankind.
Though
in the form of personal consciousness
— because
man is a biological individual — it
can exist
only as part of the whole. People can
have
experiences only as social beings;
though
the contents are personally different,
in
their essence experiences are super-personal,
society being their self-evident basis.
Thus
the objective world of phenomena which
logical
thought constructs out of the data
of experience,
is first and foremost, by its origin
already,
collective experience of mankind.
Lenin How Mach’s idea could acquire
importance
in the Russian socialist movement,
may be
understood from social conditions.
The young
Russian intelligentsia, owing to the
barbarous
pre-capitalist conditions, had not
yet, as
in Western Europe, found its social
function
in the service of a bourgeoisie. So
it had
to aspire for the downfall of Czarism,
and
to join the socialist party. At the
same
time it stood in spiritual intercourse
with
the Western intellectuals and so took
part
in the spiritual trends of the Western
world.
Thus it was inevitable that efforts
should
be made to combine them with Marxism.
Of course Lenin had to oppose these
tendencies.
Marxian theory, indeed, can gain nothing
essential from Mach. Insofar as a better
understanding of human thinking is
needed
for socialists, this can be found in
Dietzgen’s
work. Mach was significant because
he deduced
analogous ideas out of the practices
of natural
science, for the use of scientists.
In what
he has in common with Dietzgen, the
reduction
of the world to experience, he stopped
midway
and gave, imbued with the anti-materialist
trends of his time, a vague idealistic
form
to his news. This could not be grafted
upon
Marxism. Here Marxist criticism was
needed.
The Criticism Lenin, however in attacking
Mach, from the start presents the antagonism
in a wrong way. Proceeding from a quotation
of Engels, he says:
“But the question here is not of this
or
that formulation of materialism, but
of the
opposition of materialism to idealism,
of
the difference between the two fundamental
lines in philosophy. Are we to proceed
from
things to sensation and thought? Or
are we
to proceed from thought and sensation
to
things? The first line, i. e., the
materialist
line, is adopted by Engels. The second
line,
i. e., the idealist line, is adopted
by Mach”
(34). [a1] It is at once clear that
this
is not the true expression of the antithesis.
According to materialism the material
world
produces thought, consciousness, mind,
all
things spiritual. That, on the contrary,
the spiritual produces the material
world,
is taught by religion, is found with
Hegel,
but is not Mach’s opinion. The expression
“to proceed from ... to” is used to
intermix
two quite different meanings. Proceeding
from things to sensations and thought
means:
things create thoughts. Proceeding
— not
from thoughts to things, as Lenin wrongly
imputes to Mach but — from sensations
to
things, means that only through sensations
we arrive at the knowledge of things.
Their
entire existence is built up out of
sensations;
to emphasise this truth Mach says:
they consist
of sensations.
Here the method followed by Lenin in
his
controversy makes its appearance he
tries
to assign to Mach opinions different
from
the real ones. Especially the doctrine
of
solipsism. Thus he continues:
“No evasions, no sophisms (a multitude
of
which we shall yet encounter) can remove
the clear and indisputable fact that
Ernst
Mach’s doctrine of things as complexes
of
sensations in subjective idealism and
a simple
rehash of Berkeleianism. If bodies
are ‘complexes
of sensations,’ as Mach says, or ‘combulations
of sensations,’ as Berkeley said, it
inevitably
follows that the whole world is but
my idea.
Starting from such a premise it is
impossible
to arrive at the existence of other
people
besides oneself: it is the purest solipsism.
Much as Mach, Avenarius, Petzoldt and
the
others may abjure solipsism, they cannot
in fact escape solipsism without falling
into howling logical absurdities.”
(34) Now,
if anything can be asserted beyond
any doubt
about Mach and Avenarius, it is that
their
opinions are not solipsism fellow-men
similar
to myself, deduced with more or less
stringent
logic, are the basis of their world
conception.
Lenin, however, manifestly does not
care
about what Mach really thinks, but
about
what he should think if his logic were
identical
with Lenin’s.
“From which there is only one possible
inference,
namely that the ‘world consists only
of my
sensations.’ The word ‘our’ employed
by Mach
instead of ‘my’ is employed illegitimately.”
(36) That indeed is an easy way of
arguing:
what I write down as the opinion of
my adversary
he replaces unjustifiably by what he
wrote
down himself. Lenin, moreover, knows
quite
well that Mach speaks of the objective
reality
of the world, and himself gives numerous
quotations to that effect. But he does
not
let himself be deceived as so many
others
were deceived by Mach.
“Similarly, even Mach ... frequently
strays
into a materialist interpretation of
the
word experience ... (171). Here nature
is
taken as primary and sensation and
experience
as products. Had Mach consistently
adhered
to his point of view in the mental
questions
of epistemology ... Mach’s special
‘philosophy’
is here thrown overboard, and the author
instinctively accepts the customary
standpoint
of the scientists.” (150) Would it
not have
been better if he had tried to understand
in what sense it was that Mach assumes
that
things consist of sensations?
The “elements” also are an object of
difficulty
to Lenin. He summarises Mach’s opinion
on
the elements in six theses, among which
we
find, in numbers 3 and 4:
“Elements are divided into the physical
and
the psychical: the latter is that which
depends
on the human nerves and the human organism
generally; the former does not depend
on
them: the connection of physical elements
and the connection of psychical elements,
it is declared, do not exist separately
from
each other they exist only in conjunction.”
(47) Anybody, even if acquainted only
superficially
with Mach, can see how he is rendered
here
in an entirely wrong and meaningless
way.
What Mach really says is this: every
element,
though described in many words, is
an inseparable
unity, which can be part of a complex
that
we call physical, but which combined
with
different other elements can form a
complex
that we call psychical. When I feel
the heat
of a flame, this sensation together
with
others on heat and thermometers and
with
visible phenomena combines into the
complex
“flame” or “heat,” treated in physics.
Combined
with other sensations of pain and pleasure,
with remembrances and with observations
on
nerves, the context belongs to physiology
or psychology. “None (of these connections)
is the only existing one, both are
present
at the same time” says Mach. For they
are
the same elements in different combinations.
Lenin makes of this that the connections
are not independent and only exist
together.
Mach does not separate the elements
themselves
as physical and psychical ones, nor
does
he distinguish a physical and psychical
part
in them the same element is physical
in one
context, psychical in another. If Lenin
renders
these ideas in such a sloppy and unintelligible
way it is no wonder that he cannot
make any
sense out of it, and speaks of “an
incoherent
jumble of antithetical philosophical
points
of view.” (47) If one does not take
the pains
or is unable to unravel the real opinions
of his adversary and only snatches
up some
sentences to interpret them from one’s
own
point of view, he should not wonder
that
nonsense comes out. This cannot be
called
a marxian criticism of Mach.
In the same faulty way he renders Avenarius.
He reproduces a small summary by Avenarius
of a first division of the elements:
what
I find present I partly call outer
world
(e. g. I see a tree), partly not (I
remember
a tree, trunk of a tree). Avenarius
denotes
them as thing-like (sachhaft) and thoughtlike
(gedankenhaft) elements. Thereupon
Lenin
indignantly exclaims:
“At first we are assured that the ‘elements’
are something new, both physical and
psychical
at the same time then a little correction
is surreptitiously inserted: instead
of the
crude, materialist differentiation
of matter
(bodies, things) and the psychical
(sensations,
recollections, fantasies) we are presented
with the doctrine of ‘recent positivism’
regarding elements substantial and
elements
mental.” (50) Clearly he does not suspect
how completely he misses the point.
In a chapter superscribed with the
ironical
title Does man think with his brain?
Lenin
quotes Avenarius’s statement that the
brain
is not the lodging, the site, etc.
of thinking;
thinking is no resident, no product,
etc.
of the brain. Hence: man does not think
with
his brain. Lenin has not perceived
that Avenarius
further on expresses clearly enough,
though
garbled in his artificial terminology,
that
the action of the outer world upon
the brain
produces what we call thoughts; manifestly
Lenin had not the patience to unravel
Avenarius’s
intricate language. But to combat an
opponent
you have to know his point ignorance
is no
argument. What Avenarius contradicts
is not
the role of the brain but that we call
the
product thought when we assign to it,
as
a spiritual being, a site in the brain
and
say it is living in the brain, is commanding
the brain, or is a function of the
brain.
The material brain, as we saw, occupies
precisely
the central place of his philosophy.
Lenin,
however, considers this only as a “mystification”:
“Avenarius here acts on the advice
of the
charlatan in Turgenev: denounce most
of all
those vices which you yourself possess.
Avenarius
tries to pretend that he is combating
idealism....
While distracting the attention of
the reader
by attacking idealism, Avenarius is
in fact
defending idealism, albeit in slightly
different
words; thought is not a function of
the brain:
the brain is not the organ of thought;
sensations
are — not functions of the nervous
system,
oh, no: sensations are — ‘elements’
.” (84)
The critic rages here against a self-mystification
without any basis. He finds “idealism”
in
that Avenarius, proceeds from elements,
and
elements are sensations. Avenarius,
however,
does not proceed from sensations but
from
what simple unsophisticated man finds
present;
things, surroundings, a world, fellow-men,
remembrances. Man does not find present
sensations,
be finds present a world. Avenarius
tries
to construct a description of the world
without
the common language of matter and mind
and
its contradictions. He finds trees
present,
and human brains, and — so he believes
—
changes in the brains produced by the
trees,
and actions and talk of fellow-men
determined
by these changes. Of all this Lenin
manifestly
has no inkling. He tries to make “idealism”
of Avenarius’s system by considering
Avenarius’s
starting point, experience, to be sensations,
something psychical, according to his
own
materialist view. His error is that
he takes
the contradistinction materialism-idealism
in the sense of middle-class materialism,
with physical matter as its basis.
Thus he
shuts himself off completely from any
understanding
of modern views that proceed from experience
and phenomena as the given reality.
Lenin now brings forward an array of
witnesses
to declare that the doctrines of Mach
and
Avenarius are idealism or solipsism.
It is
natural that the host of professional
philosophers,
in compliance with the tendency of
bourgeois
thinking to proclaim the rule of mind
over
matter, try to interpret and emphasise
the
anti-materialist side of their ideas;
they
too know materialism only as the doctrine
of physical matter. What, we may ask,
is
the use of such witnesses? When disputed
facts have to be ascertained, witnesses
are
necessary. When, however, we deal with
the
understanding of somebody’s opinions
and
theories, we have to read and render
carefully
what he himself has written to expound
them;
this is the only way to find out similarities
and differences, truth and error. For
Lenin,
however, matters were different. His
book
was part of a law-suit, an act of impeachment;
as such it required an array of witnesses.
An important political issue was at
stake;
Machism threatened to corrupt the fundamental
doctrines, the theoretical unity of
the Party;
so its spokesmen had to do away with
them.
Mach and Avenarius formed a danger
for the
Party; hence what mattered was not
to find
out what was true and valuable in their
teachings
in order to widen our own views. What
mattered
was to discredit them, to destroy their
reputation,
to reveal them as muddle-heads contradicting
themselves, speaking confused fudge,
trying
to hide their real opinions and not
believing
their own assertions
All the middle-class philosophical
writers,
standing before the newness of these
ideas,
look for analogies and relationships
of Mach
and Avenarius with former philosophic
systems;
one welcomes Mach as fitting in with
Kant,
another sees a likeness to Hume, or
Berkeley,
or Fichte. In this multitude and variety
of systems it is easy to find out connections
and similarities everywhere. Lenin
registers
all such contradictory judgements and
in
this way demonstrates Mach’s confusion.
The
like with Avenarius. For instance:
“And it is difficult to say who more
rudely
unmasks Avenarius the mystifier — Smith
by
his straightforward and clear refutation,
or Schuppe by his enthusiastic opinion
of
Avenarius’s crowning work. The kiss
of Wilhelm
Schuppe in philopsophy is no better
than
the kiss of Peter Struve or Menshikov
in
politics.” (67) If we now read Schuppe’s
Open Letter to Avenarius, in which
in flattering
words he expresses his agreement, we
find
that he did not at all grasp the essence
of Avenarius’s opinion; he takes the
“myself”
as the starting point instead of the
elements
found present, out of which Avenarius
constructs
the “myself”. He misrepresents Avenarius
in the same way as Lenin does, with
this
difference, that what displeased Lenin
pleased
him. In his answer Avenarius, in the
courteous
words usual among scholars, testifies
to
his satisfaction at the assent of such
a
famous thinker, but then again expounds
the
real contents of his doctrine. Lenin
neglects
the contents of these explanations
which
refute his conclusions, and quotes
only the
compromising courtesies.
Natural Science Over against Mach’s
ideas
Lenin puts the materialistic views,
the objective
reality of the material world, of matter,
light ether, laws of nature, such as
natural
science and human common sense accept.
These
last are two respectable authorities;
but
in this case their weight is not very
great.
Lenin sneeringly quotes Mach’s own
confession
that he found little consent among
his colleagues.
A critic, however, who brings new ideas
cannot
be refuted by the statement that it
is the
old criticised ideas that are generally
accepted.
And as to common sense, i. e. the totality
of opinions of uninstructed people:
they
usually represent the dicta of science
of
a former period, that gradually, by
teaching
and popular books, seeped down the
masses.
That the earth revolves around the
sun, that
the world consists of indestructible
matter,
that matter consists of atoms, that
the world
is eternal and infinite — all this
has gradually
penetrated into the minds, first of
the educated
classes, then of the masses. When science
proceeds to newer and better views,
all this
old knowledge can, as “common sense,”
be
brought forward against them.
How unsuspectingly Lenin leans upon
these
two authorities — and even in a wrong
way
— is seen when he says:
“For every scientist who has not been
led
astray by professorial philosophy,
as well
as for every materialist, sensation
is indeed
the direct connection between consciousness
and the external world: it is the transformation
of the energy of external excitation
into
a state of consciousness. This transformation
has been, and is, observed by each
of us
a million times on every hand.” (44)
This
“observing” is of the same kind as
when one
should say: we see a thousand times
that
our eye sees and that light falls upon
the
retina. In reality we do not see our
seeing
and our retina; we see objects and
infer
the retina and the seeing. We do not
observe
energy and its transitions we observe
phenomena,
and out of these phenomena physicists
have
abstracted the concept of energy. The
transformation
of energy is a summarised physical
expression
for the many phenomena in which one
measured
quantity decreased, another increased.
They
are all good expedient concepts and
inferences,
reliable in the prediction of future
phenomena,
and so we call them true. Lenin takes
this
truth in such an absolute way that
he thinks
he expresses an observed fact “adopted
by
every materialist,” when he pronounces
what
is actually a physical theory. Moreover
his
exposition is wrong. That energy of
the light-impression
is converted into consciousness may
have
been the belief of middle-class materialists,
but science does not know of it. Physical
science says that energy transforms
exclusively,
and completely, into other energy;
the energy
of the light-impression is transformed
into
other forms: chemical, electrical,
heat-energy;
but consciousness is not known in physics
as a form of energy.
This confounding of the real, observed
world
and the physical concepts permeates
Lenin’s
work on every page. Engels denoted
materialists
as those who considered nature the
original
thing. Lenin speaks of a “materialism
which
regards nature, matter, as primary”
(41).
And in another place: “matter is the
objective
reality given to us in sensations”
(145).
To Lenin nature and physical matter
are identical;
the name matter has the same meaning
as objective
world. In this he agrees with middle-class
materialism that in the same way considers
matter as the real substance of the
world.
Thus his angry polemics against Mach
can
be easily understood. To Mach matter
is an
abstract concept formed out of the
phenomena
— or more strictly: sensations. So
Lenin,
now finding the denial of the reality
of
matter, then reading the simple statement
of the reality of the world, sees only
confusion;
and he pretends, now, that Mach is
a solipsist
and denies the existence of the world,
and
then scornfully remarks that Mach throws
his own philosophy to the winds and
returns
to scientific views.
With the laws of nature the case is
analogous.
Mach’s opinion that cause and effect
as well
as natural laws do not factually exist
in
nature, but are man-made expressions
of observed
regularities, is asserted by Lenin
to be
identical with Kant’s doctrine.
“... It is man who dictates laws to
nature
and not nature that dictates laws to
man!
The important thing is not the repetition
of Kant’s doctrine of apriorism ...
but the
fact that reason, mind, consciousness
are
here primary, and nature secondary.
It is
not reason that is a part of nature,
one
of its highest products, the reflection
of
its processes, but nature that is a
part
of reason, which ‘thereby is stretched
from
the ordinary, simple human reason known
to
us all to a ‘stupendous,’ as Dietzgen
puts
it, mysterious, divine reason. The
Kantian-Machian
formula, that ‘man gives laws to nature,’
is a fideist formula.” (161) This confused
tirade, entirely missing the point,
can only
be understood if we consider that for
Lenin
“nature” consists not only in matter
but
also in natural laws directing its
behaviour,
floating somehow in the world as commanders
who must be obeyed by the things. Hence
to
deny the objective existence of these
laws
means to him the denial of nature itself;
to make man the creator of natural
laws means
to him to make human mind the creator
of
the world. How then the logical salto
is
made to the deity as the creator must
remain
an enigma to the unsophisticated reader.
Two pages earlier he writes:
“The really important epistemological
question
that divides the philosophical trends
is
... whether the source of our knowledge
of
these connections is objective natural
law
or properties of our mind, its innate
faculty
of apprehending certain a priori truths,
and so forth. This is what so irrevocably
divides the materialists Feuerbach,
Marx
and Engels from the agnostic (Humeans)
Avenarius
and Mach.” (159) That Mach should ascribe
to the human mind the power to disclose
certain
aprioristic truths is a new discovery
or
rather fantasy of Lenin. Where Mach
deals
with the practice of the mind to abstract
general rules from experience and to
assign
to them unlimited validity, Lenin,
captivated
by traditional philosophical ideas,
thinks
of disclosing aprioristic truths. Then
he
continues:
“In certain parts of his works, Mach
...
frequently ‘forgets’ his agreement
with Hume
and his own subjectivist theory of
causality
and argues ‘simply’ as a scientist,
i. e.,
from the instinctive materialist standpoint.
For instance, in his Mechanik, we read
of
the ‘uniformity ... which natures teaches
us to mind in its phenomena.’ But if
we do
find uniformity in the phenomena of
nature,
does this mean mat uniformity exists
objectively
outside our mind? No. On the question
of
the uniformity of nature Mach also
delivers
himself thus: ... ‘That we consider
ourselves
capable of making predictions with
the help
of such a law only proves that there
is sufficient
uniformity in our environment, but
it does
not prove the necessity of the success
of
our predictions’ (Wärmelehre, page
383).
It follows that we may and ought to
look
for a necessity apart from the uniformity
of our environment, i. e., of nature.”
(160)
The embroilment in this tangle of sentences,
further embellished by courtesies here
omitted
is understandable only when conformity
of
nature is identical for Lenin with
the necessity
of success of our prophecies; when,
hence,
he cannot distinguish between regularities
as they occur in various degrees of
clearness
in nature, and the apodictic expression
of
exact natural law. And he proceeds:
“Where to look for it is the secret
of idealist
philosophy which is afraid to recognise
man’s
perceptive faculty as a simple reflection
of nature.” (160) In reality there
is no
necessity, except in our formulation
of natural
law; and then in practice ever again
we find
deviations, which, again, we express
in the
form of additional laws. Natural law
does
not determine what nature necessarily
will
do, but what we expect her to do. The
silly
remark that our mind should simply
reflect
nature we may leave undiscussed now.
His
concluding remark:
“In his last work, Erkenntnis und Irrtum,
Mach even defines a law of nature as
a ‘limitation
of expectation’ (2. Auflage, S. 450
ff.)!
Solipsism claims its own.” (160) This
lacks
all sense since the determination of
our
expectation by natural law is a common
affair
of all scientists. The embodiment of
a number
of phenomena in a short formula, a
natural
law, is denoted by Mach as “economy
of thinking”;
he exalts it into a principle of research.
We might expect that such a reducing
of abstract
theory to the practice of (scientific)
labour
should find sympathy among Marxists.
In Lenin,
however, it meets with no response,
and he
exposes his lack of understanding in
some
drolleries:
“That it is more ‘economical’ to ‘think’
that only I and my sensations exist
is unquestionable,
provided we want to introduce such
an absurd
conception into epistemology. Is it
‘more
economical’ to ‘think’ of the atom
as indivisible,
or as composed of positive and negative
electrons?
Is it ‘more economical’ to think of
the Russian
bourgeois revolution as being conducted
by
the liberals or as being conducted
against
the liberals? One has only to put the
question
in order to see the absurdity, the
subjectivism
of applying the category of ‘the economy
of thought’ here.” (171) And he opposes
to
it his own view:
“Human thought is ‘economical’ only
when
it correctly reflects objective truth,
and
the criterion of this correctness is
practice,
experiment and industry. Only by denying
objective reality, that is, by denying
the
foundations of Marxism, can one seriously
speak of economy of thought in the
theory
of knowledge.” (171) How simple and
evident
that looks. Let us take an example.
The old,
ptolemaic world-system placed the earth
as
resting in the centre of the world,
with
the sun and the planets revolving around
it, the latter in epicycles, a combination
of two circles. Copernicus placed the
sun
in the centre and had the earth and
the planets
revolving around it in simple circles.
The
visible phenomena are exactly the same
after
both theories, because we can observe
the
relative motions only, and they are
absolutely
identical. Which, then, pictures the
objective
world in the right way? Practical experience
cannot distinguish between them; the
predictions
are identical. Copernicus pointed to
the
fixed stars which by the parallax could
give
a decision; but in the old theory we
could
have the stars making a yearly circle
just
as the planets did; and again both
theories
give identical results. But then everybody
will say: it is absurd to have all
those
thousands of bodies describe similar
circles,
simply to keep the earth at rest. Why
absurd?
Because it makes our world-picture
needlessly
complicated. Here we have it — the
Copernican
system is chosen and stated to be true
because
it gives the most simply world system.
This
example may suffice to show the naïvité
of
the idea that we choose a theory because
after the criterion of experience it
pictures
reality rightly.
Kirchhoff has formulated the real character
of scientific theory in the same way
by his
well-known statements that mechanics,
instead
of “explaining” motions by means of
the “forces”
producing them, has the task “to describe
the motions in nature in the most complete
and simple way.” Thus the fetishism
of forces
as causes, as a kind of working imps,
was
removed; they are a short form of description
only. Mach of course pointed to the
analogy
of Kirchhoff’s views and his own. Lenin,
to show that he does not understand
anything
of it, because he is entirely captivated
in this fetishism, calls out in an
indignant
tone: “Economy of thought, from which
Mach
in 1872 inferred that sensations alone
exist
... is declared to be ... equivalent
to the
simplest description (of an objective
reality,
the existence of which it never occurred
to Kirchhoff to doubt ! )”
(172)
It must be remarked, besides, that
thinking
never can picture reality completely;
theory
is an approximate picture that renders
only
the main features, the general traits
of
a group of phenomena.
After having considered Lenin’s ideas
on
matter and natural laws, we take as
a third
instance space and time.
“Behold now the ‘teachings’ of ‘recent
positivism’
on this subject. We read in Mach: ‘Space
and time are well ordered (wohlgeordnete)
systems of series of sensations’
(Mechanik, 3. Auflage, page 498). This
is
palpable idealist nonsense, such as
inevitably
follows from the doctrine that bodies
are
complexes of sensations. According
to Mach,
it is not man with his sensations that
exists
in space and time, but space and time
that
exist in man, that depend upon man
and are
generated by man. He feels that he
is falling
into idealism, and ‘resists’ by making
a
host of reservations and ... burying
the
question under lengthy disquisitions
...
on the mutability of our conceptions
of space
and time. But this does not save him,
and
cannot save him, for one can really
overcome
the idealist position on this question
only
by recognising the objective reality
of space
and time. And this Mach will not do
at any
price. He constructs his epistemological
theory of time and space on the principle
of relativism, and that is all. Resisting
the idealist conclusions which inevitably
follow from his premises, Mach argues
against
Kant and insists that our conception
of space
is derived from experience
(Erkenntnis und Irrtum, 2. Auflage,
pages
530, 385). But if objective reality
is not
given us in experience (as Mach teaches)
...” (179) What is the use of going
on quoting?
It is all a sham battle, because we
know
that Mach assumes the reality of the
world;
and all phenomena, constituting the
world,
take place in space and time. And Lenin
could
have been warned that he was on a false
track,
by a number of sentences he knows and
partly
quotes, where Mach discusses the mathematical
investigations on multi-dimensional
spaces.
There Mach says: “That which we call
space
is a special real case among more general
imagined cases ... The space of vision
and
touch is a threefold manifold, it has
three
dimensions ... The properties of given
space
appear directly as objects of experience
... About the given space only experience
can teach us whether it is finite,
whether
parallel lines intersect, etc.... To
many
divines who do not know where to place
hell,
and to spiritists, a fourth dimension
might
be very convenient.” But “such a fourth
dimension
would still remain a thing of imagination.”
These quotations may suffice. What
has Lenin
to say to all this, besides a number
of groundless
squibs and invectives?
“But how does he (Mach) dissociate
himself
from them in his theory of knowledge?
By
stating that three-dimensional space
alone
is real! But what sort of defence is
it against
the theologians and their like when
you deny
objective reality to space and time?”
(183)
What difference might there be between
real
space and objective reality of space?
At
any rate he sticks to his error.
What, then, is that sentence of Mach
that
was the basis of this fantasy? In the
last
chapter of his Mechanik, Mach discusses
the
relation between different branches
of science.
There he says: “First we perceive that
in
all experiences on spatial and temporal
relations
we have more confidence, and a more
objective
and real character is ascribed to them,
than
to experiences on colour, heat or sound
...
Yet, looking more exactly, we cannot
fail
to see that sensations of space and
time
are sensations just as those of colour,
sound
or smell; only, in the former we are
more
trained and clear than in the latter.
Space
and time are well-ordered systems of
series
of sensations ...” Mach proceeds here
from
experience; our sensations are the
only source
of knowledge; our entire world, including
all we know about space and time, is
built
up out of them. The question of what
is the
meaning of absolute space and time
is to
Mach a meaningless question; the only
sensible
question is how space and time appear
in
our experience. Just as with bodies
and matter
we can form a scientific conception
of time
and space only through abstraction
out of
the totality of our experiences. With
the
space-and-time pattern in which we
insert
these experiences we are versed, as
most
simple and natural, from early youth.
How
it then appears in experimental science
cannot
be expressed in a better way than by
the
words of Mach: well-ordered systems
of series
of experiences.
What, contrariwise, Lenin thinks of
space
and time, transpires from the following
quotation:
“In modern physics, he says, Newton’s
idea
of absolute time and space prevails
(pages
442-444), of time and space as such.
This
idea seems ‘to us’ senseless, Mach
continues
— apparently not suspecting the existence
of materialists and of a materialist
theory
of knowledge. But in practice, he claims,
this view was harmless (unschädlich,
p. 442)
and therefore for a long time escaped
criticism.”
(180) Hence, according to Lenin, “materialism”
accepts Newton’s doctrine, the basis
of which
is that there exists an absolute space
and
an absolute time. This means that the
place
in space is fixed absolutely without
regard
to other things, and can be ascertained
without
any doubt. When Mach says that this
is the
point of view of contemporary physicists
he surely represents his colleagues
as too
old-fashioned; in his time already
it was
rather generally accepted that motion
and
rest were relative conceptions, that
the
place of a body is always the place
relative
to other bodies, and that the idea
of absolute
position has no sense.
Still there was a certain doubt whether
or
not space-filling world ether did not
offer
a frame for absolute space; motion
or rest
relative to world-ether could be rightly
called then absolute motion or rest.
When,
however, physicists tried to determine
it
by means of the propagation of light,
they
could find nothing but relativity.
Such was
the case with Michelson’s famous experiment
in 1889, arranged in such a way that
in its
result nature should indicate the motion
of our earth relative to the ether.
But nothing
was found; nature remained mute. It
was as
if she said: your query has no sense.
To
explain the negative result it was
assumed
that there always occurred additional
phenomena
that just cancelled the expected effect
—
until Einstein in 1905 in his theory
of relativity
combined all facts in such a way that
the
result was self-evident. Also within
the
world-occupying ether — absolute position
was shown to be a word without meaning.
So
gradually the idea of ether itself
was dropped,
and all thought of absolute space disappeared
from science.
With time it seemed to be different;
a moment
in time was assumed to be absolute.
But it
was the very ideas of Mach that brought
about
a change here. In the place of talk
of abstract
conceptions, Einstein introduced the
practice
of experiment. What are we doing when
we
fix a moment in time? We look at a
clock,
and we compare the different clocks,
there
is no other way. In following this
line of
argument Einstein succeeded in refuting
absolute
time and demonstrating the relativity
of
time. Einstein’s theory was soon universally
adopted by scientists, with the exception
of some anti-semitic physicists in
Germany
who consequently were proclaimed luminaries
of national-socialist “German” physics.
The latter development could not yet
be known
to Lenin when he wrote his book. But
it illustrates
the character of such expositions as
where
he writes:
“The materialist view of space and
time has
remained ‘harmless,’ i. e., compatible,
as
heretofore, with science, while the
contrary
view of Mach and Co. was a ‘harmful’
capitulation
to the position of fideism.” (183)
Thus he
denotes as materialist the belief that
the
concepts of absolute space and absolute
time,
which science once wanted as its theory
but
had to drop afterwards, are the true
reality
of the world. [a2] Because Mach opposes
their
reality and asserts for space and time
the
same as for every concept, viz. that
we can
deduce them only from experience, Lenin
imputes
to him “idealism leading to ‘fideism’.”
Materialism Our direct concern here
is not
with Mach but with Lenin. Mach occupies
considerable
space here because Lenin’s criticism
of Mach
discloses his own philosophical views.
From
the side of Marxism there is enough
to criticise
in Mach; but Lenin takes up the matter
from
the wrong end. As we have seen he appeals
to the old forms of physical theory,
diffused
into popular opinion, so as to oppose
them
against the modern critique of their
own
foundations. We found, moreover, that
he
identifies the real objective world
with
physical matter, as middle class materialism
did formerly. He tries to demonstrate
it
by the following arguments:
“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 designating
the
objective reality which is given to
man by
his sensations, and which is copied,
photographed
and reflected by our sensations, while
existing
independently of them.” (123) Fine;
with
the first sentence we all can agree.
When
then, however, we would restrict the
character
of reality to physical matter, we contradict
the first given definition. Electricity
too
is objective reality; is it physical
matter?
Our sensations show us light; it is
reality
but not matter, and the concepts introduced
by the physicists to explain its phenomena,
first the world ether, then the photons,
can not easily be denoted as a kind
of matter.
Is not energy quite as real as is physical
matter? More directly than the material
things,
it is their energy that shows itself
in all
experience and produces our sensations.
For
that reason Ostwald, half a century
ago,
proclaimed energy the only real substance
of the world; and he called this “the
end
of scientific materialism,” And finally,
what is given to us in our sensations,
when
fellow-men speak to us, is not only
sound
coming from lips and throat, not only
energy
of air vibrations, but besides, more
essentially,
their thoughts, their ideas. Man’s
ideas
quite as certainly belong to objective
reality
as the tangible objects; things spiritual
constitute the real world just as things
called material in physics. If in our
science,
needed to direct our activity, we wish
to
render the entire world of experience,
the
concept of physical matter does not
suffice;
we need more and other concepts; energy,
mind, consciousness.
If according to the above definition
matter
is taken as the name for the philosophical
concept denoting objective reality,
it embraces
far more than physical matter. Then
we come
to the view repeatedly expressed in
former
chapters, where the material world
was spoken
of as the name for the entire observed
reality.
This is the meaning of the word material,
matter in Historical Materialism, the
designation
of all that is really existing in the
world,
“including mind and fancies,” as Dietzgen
said. It is not, therefore, that the
modern
theories of the structure of matter
provoke
criticism of his ideas, as Lenin indicates
above on the same page, but the fact
that
he identifies physical matter at all
with
the real world.
The meaning of the word matter in Historical
Materialism, as pointed out here, is
of course
entirely foreign to Lenin; contrary
to his
first definition he will restrict it
to physical
matter. Hence his attack on Dietzgen’s
“confusion”:
“Thinking is a function of the brain,
says
Dietzgen. ‘My desk as a picture in
my mind
is identical with my idea of it But
my desk
outside of my brain is a separate object
and distinct from my idea.’ These perfectly
clear materialistic propositions are,
however,
supplemented by Dietzgen thus: ‘Nevertheless,
the non-sensible idea is also sensible,
material,
i. e., real....’ This is obviously
false.
That both thought and matter are ‘real,’
i. e., exist, is true. But to say that
thought
is material is to make a false step,
a step
towards confusing materialism and idealism.
As a matter of fact this is only an
inexact
expression of Dietzgen.” (249) Here
Lenin
repudiates his own definition of matter
as
the philosophical expression of objective
reality. Or is perhaps objective reality
something different from really existing?
What he tries to express but cannot
without
“inexactness of expression” — is this:
that
thought may really exist, but the true
genuine
reality is only found in physical matter.
Middle-class materialism, identifying
objective
reality with physical matter, had to
make
every other reality, such as all things
spiritual,
an attribute or property of this matter.
We cannot wonder, therefore, that we
find
with Lenin similar ideas. To Pearson’s
sentence:
“It is illogical to assert that all
matter
has consciousness” he remarks:
“It is illogical to assert that all
matter
is conscious but it is logical to assert
that all matter possesses a property
which
is essentially akin to sensation, the
property
of reflection.” (88) And still more
distinctly
he avers against Mach:
“As regards materialism, ... we have
already
seen in the case of Diderot [a3] what
the
real views of the materialists are.
These
views do not consist in deriving sensation
from the movement of matter or in reducing
sensation to the movement of matter,
but
in recognising sensation as one of
the properties
of matter in motion. On this question
Engels
shared the standpoint of Diderot.”
(40) Where
Engels may have said so, is not indicated.
We may doubt whether Lenin’s conviction
that
Engels on this point agreed with him
and
Diderot, rests on precise statements.
In
his Anti-Dühring Engels expressed himself
in another way: “Life is the form of
existence
of albuminous substances”; i. e. life
is
not a property of all matter but appears
only in such complicated molecular
structures
as albumen. So it is not probable that
he
should have considered sensitiveness,
which
we know as a property of living matter
only,
a property of all matter, Such generalisations
of properties observed only in special
cases,
to matter in general, belong to the
undialectic
middle-class frame of mind.
The remark may be inserted here that
Plechanov
exhibits ideas analogous to Lenin’s.
In his
Grundprobleme des Marxismus he criticises
the botanist France on the subject
of the
“spirituality of matter,” the “doctrine
that
matter in general and organic matter
especially
always has a certain sensitivity.”
Plechanov
then expresses his own view in the
words:
“France considers this contradictory
to materialism.
In reality it is the transfer of Feuerbach’s
materialistic doctrine. We may assert
with
certainty that Marx and Engels would
have
given attention to this trend of thought
with the greatest interest.” This is
a cautious
assertion testifying that Marx and
Engels
in their writings never showed any
interest
in this trend of thought. France as
a limited-minded
naturalist knows only the antithesis
of views
in middle-class thinking; he assumes
that
materialists believe in matter only,
hence
the doctrine that in all matter there
is
something spiritual is, to him, no
materialism
at all. Plechanov, on the other hand,
considers
it a small modification of materialism
that
makes it more resistant.
Lenin was quite well aware of the concordance
of his views with middle-class materialism
of the 19th century. For him “materialism”
is the common basis of Marxism and
middle-class
materialism. After having expounded
that
Engels in his booklet on Feuerbach
charged
these materialists with three things
— that
they remained with the materialist
doctrine
of the 18th century, that their materialism
was mechanical, and that in the realm
of
social science, they held fast to idealism
and did not understand Historical Materialism
— he proceeds:
“Exclusively for these three things
and exclusively
within these limits, does Engels refute
both
the materialism of the eighteenth century
and the doctrines of Buchner and Co.!
On
all other, more elementary, questions
of
materialism (questions distorted by
the Machians)
there is and can be no difference between
Marx and Engels on the one hand and
all these
old materialists on the other,” (246)
That
this is an illusion of Lenin’s has
been demonstrated
in the preceding pages these three
things
carry along as their consequences an
utter
difference in the fundamental epistemological
ideas. And in the same way, Lenin continues,
Engels was in accordance with Dühring
in
his materialism:
“For Engels ... Dühring was not a sufficiently
steadfast, clear and consistent materialist.”
(247) Compare this with the way Engels
finished
Dühring off in words of scornful contempt.
Lenin’s concordance with middle-class
materialism
and his ensuing discordance with Historical
Materialism is manifest in many consequences.
The former waged its main war against
religion;
and the chief reproach Lenin raises
against
Mach and his followers is that they
sustain
fideism. We met with it in several
quotations
already; in hundreds of places all
through
the book we find fideism as the opposite
of materialism. Marx and Engels did
not know
of fideism; they drew the line between
materialism
and idealism. In the name fideism emphasis
is laid upon religion. Lenin explains
whence
he took the word. “In France, those
who put
faith above reason are called fideists
(from the Latin fides, faith).” (263)
This oppositeness of religion to reason
is
a reminiscence from pre-marxian times,
from
the emancipation of the middle-class,
appealing
to “reason” in order to attack religious
faith as the chief enemy in the social
struggle;
“free thinking” was opposed to “obscurantism.”
Lenin, in continually pointing to fideism
as the consequence of the contested
doctrines
indicates that also to him in the world
of
ideas religion is the chief enemy.
Thus he scolds Mach for saying that
the problem
of determinism cannot be settled empirically:
in research, Mach says every scientist
must
be determinist but in practical affairs
he
remains indeterminist.
“Is this not obscurantism ... when
determinism
is confined to the field of ‘investigation,’
while in the field of morality, social
activity,
and all fields other than ‘investigation’
the question is left to a ‘subjective
estimate’.”
(193) ... “And so things have been
amicably
divided: theory for the professors,
practice
for the theologians!” (194) Thus every
subject
is seen from the point of view of religion.
Manifestly it was unknown to Lenin
that the
deeply religious Calvinism was a rigidly
deterministic doctrine, whereas the
materialist
middle class of the 19th century put
their
faith into free will, hence proclaimed
indeterminism.
At this point a real Marxian thinker
would
not have missed the opportunity of
explaining
to the Russian Machists that it was
Historical
Materialism that opened the way for
determinism
in the field of society; we have shown
above
that the theoretical conviction that
rules
and laws hold in a realm — this means
determinism
— can find a foundation only when we
succeed
in establishing practically such laws
and
connections. Further, that Mach because
he
belonged to the middle class and was
bound
to its fundamental line of thought,
by necessity
was indeterminist in his social views;
and
that in this way his ideas were backward
and incompatible with Marxism. But
nothing
of the sort is found in Lenin; that
ideas
are determined by class is not mentioned;
the theoretical differences hang in
the air.
Of course theoretical ideas must be
criticised
by theoretical arguments. When, however,
the social consequences are emphasised
with
such vehemence, the social origins
of the
contested ideas should not have been
left
out of consideration. This most essential
character of Marxism does not seem
to exist
for Lenin.
So we are not astonished that among
former
authors it is especially Ernst Haeckel
who
is esteemed and praised by Lenin. In
a final
chapter inscribed “Ernst Haeckel and
Ernst
Mach” he compares and opposes them.
“Mach
... betrays science into the hands
of fideism
by virtually deserting to the camp
of philosophical
idealism” (361). But “every page” in
Haeckel’s
work “is a slap in the face of the
‘sacred’
teachings of all official philosophy
and
theology.” Haeckel “instantly, easily
and
simply revealed ... that there is a
foundation.
This foundation is natural-scientific
materialism.”
(364).
In his praise it does not disturb him
that
the writings of Haeckel combine, as
generally
recognised, popular science with a
most superficial
philosophy — Lenin himself speaks of
his
“philosophical naïvité” and says “that
he
does not enter into an investigation
of philosophical
fundamentals.” What is essential to
him is
that Haeckel was a dauntless fighter
against
prominent religious doctrines.
“The storm provoked by Ernst Haeckel’s
The
Riddle of the Universe in every civilised
country strikingly brought out, on
the one
hand, the partisan character of philosophy
in modern society and, on the other,
the
true social significance of the struggle
of materialism against idealism and
agnosticism.
The fact that the book was sold in
hundreds
of thousands of copies, that it was
immediately
translated into all languages and that
it
appeared in special cheap editions,
clearly
demonstrates that the book ‘has found
its
way to the masses’, that there are
numbers
of readers whom Ernst Haeckel at once
won
over to his side. This popular little
book
became a weapon in the class struggle.
The
professors of philosophy and theology
in
every country of the world set about
denouncing
and annihilating Haeckel in every possible
way.” (362) What class-fight was this?
Which
class was here represented by Haeckel
against
which other class? Lenin is silent
on this
point. Should his words be taken to
imply
that Haeckel, unwittingly, acted as
a spokesman
of the working class against the bourgeoisie?
Then it must be remarked that Haeckel
was
a vehement opponent to socialism, and
that
in his defence of Darwinism he tried
to recommend
it to the ruling class by pointing
out that
it was an aristocratic theory, the
doctrine
of the selection of the best, most
fit to
refute “the utter nonsense of socialist
levelling”.
What Lenin calls a tempest raised by
the
Weltraetsel was in reality only a breeze
within the middle class, the last episode
of its conversion from materialism
to idealistic
world conception. Haeckel’s Weltraetsel
was
the last flare up, in a weakened form,
of
middle-class materialism, and the idealist,
mystic, and religious tendencies were
so
strong already among the bourgeoisie
and
the intellectuals that from all sides
they
could pounce upon Haeckel’s book and
show
up its deficiencies. What was the importance
of the book for the mass of its readers
among
the working class we have indicated
above.
When Lenin speaks here of a class fight
he
demonstrates how little he knew of
the class
fight in countries of developed capitalism,
and saw it only as a fight for and
against
religion.
Plechanov’s Views The kinship with
middle-class
materialism revealed in Lenin’s book
is not
simply a personal deviation from Marxism.
Analogous views are found in Plechanov,
at
the time the acknowledged first and
prominent
theorist of Russian socialism. In his
book
Grundprobleme des Marxismus (Fundamental
Problems of Marxism), first written
in Russian,
with a German translation in 1910,
he begins
by broadly treating the concordance
between
Marx and Feuerbach. What usually is
called
Feuerbach’s Humanism, he explains,
means
that Feuerbach proceeds from man to
matter.
“The words of Feuerbach quoted above
on the
‘human head’ show that the question
of ‘brain
matter’ was answered at the time in
a materialist
sense. And this point of view was also
accepted
by Marx and Engels. It became the basis
of
their philosophy.” Of course Marx and
Engels
assumed that human thoughts are produced
in the brain, just as they assumed
that the
earth revolved around the sun. Plechanov,
however, proceeds: “When we deal with
this
thesis of Feuerbach, we get acquainted
at
the same time with the philosophical
side
of Marxism.” He then quotes the sentences
of Feuerbach: ‘Thinking comes from
being,
but being comes not from thinking.
Being
exists in itself and by itself, existence
has its basis in itself;” and he concludes
by adding “Marx and Engels made this
opinion
on the relation between being and thinking
the basis of their materialist conception
of history.” Surely; but the question
is
what they mean by “being”. In this
colourless
word many opposing concepts of later
times
are contained undistinguished. All
that is
perceptible to us we call being; from
the
side of natural science it can mean
matter,
from the side of social science the
same
word can mean the entire society. To
Feuerbach
it was the material substance of man:
“man
is what he eats”; to Marx it is social
reality,
i. e. a society of people, tools, production-relations,
that determines consciousness.
Plechanov then speaks of the first
of Marx’s
theses on Feuerbach; he says that Marx
here
“completes and deepens Feuerbach’s
ideas”;
he explains that Feuerbach took man
in his
passive relations, Marx in his active
relation
to nature. He points to the later statement
in Das Kapital: “Whilst man works upon
outside
nature and changes it, he changes at
the
same time his own nature,” and he adds:
“The
profundity of this thought becomes
clear
in the light of Marx’s theory of knowledge
... It must be admitted, though, that
Marx’s
theory of knowledge is a direct offspring
of Feuerbach’s or, more rightly, represents
Feuerbach’s theory of knowledge which,
then,
has been deepened by Marx in a masterly
way.”
And again, on the next page, he speaks
of
“modern materialism, the materialism
of Feuerbach,
Marx and Engels.” What must be admitted,
rather, is that the ambiguous sentence:
being
determines thought, is common to them,
and
that the materialist doctrine that
brain
produces thought is the most unessential
part of Marxism and contains no trace
yet
of a real theory of knowledge.
The essential side of Marxism is what
distinguished
it from other materialist theories
and what
makes them the expression of different
class
struggles. Feuerbach’s theory of knowledge,
belonging to the fight for emancipation
of
the middle class, has its basis in
the lack
of science of society as the most powerful
reality determining human thinking.
Marxian
theory of knowledge proceeds from the
action
of society, this self-made material
world
of man, upon the mind, and so belongs
to
the proletarian class struggle. Certainly
Marx’s theory of knowledge descended,
historically,
from Hegel and Feuerbach; but equally
certainly
it grew into something entirely different
from Hegel and Feuerbach. It is a significant
indication of the point of view of
Plechanov
that he does not see this antagonism
and
that he assigns the main importance
to the
trivial community of opinion — which
is unimportant
for the real issue — that thoughts
are produced
by the brain.
The Russian Revolution The concordance
of
Lenin and Plechanov in their basic
philosophical
views and their common divergence from
Marxism
points to their common origin out of
the
Russian social conditions. The name
and garb
of a doctrine or theory depend on its
spiritual
descent; they indicate the earlier
thinker
to whom we feel most indebted and whom
we
think we follow. The real content,
however,
depends on its material origin and
is determined
by the social conditions under which
it developed
and has to work. Marxism itself says
that
the main social ideas and spiritual
trends
express the aims of the classes, i.
e. the
needs of social development, and change
with
the class struggles themselves. So
they cannot
be understood isolated from society
and class
struggle. This holds for Marxism itself.
In their early days Marx and Engels
stood
in the first ranks of the middle-class
opposition,
not yet disjoined into its different
social
trends, against absolutism in Germany.
Their
development towards Historical Materialism,
then, was the theoretical reflex of
the development
of the working class towards independent
action against the bourgeoisie. The
practical
class-antagonism found its expression
in
the theoretical antagonism. The fight
of
the bourgeoisie against feudal dominance
was expressed by middle-class materialism,
cognate to Feuerbach’s doctrine, which
used
natural science to fight religion as
the
consecration of the old powers. The
working
class in its own fight has little use
for
natural science, the instrument of
its foe:
its theoretical weapon in social science,
the science of social development.
To fight
religion by means of natural science
has
no significance for the workers; they
know,
moreover, that its roots will be cut
off
anyhow first by capitalist development,
then
by their own class struggle. Neither
have
they any use for the obvious fact that
thoughts
are produced by the brain. They have
to understand
how ideas are produced by society.
This is
the content of Marxism, as it grows
among
the workers as a living and stirring
power,
as the theory expressing their growing
power
of organisation and knowledge. When
in the
second half of the 19th century capitalism
gained complete mastery in Western
and Central
Europe as well as m America, middle-class
materialism disappeared. Marxism was
the
only materialist class-view remaining.
In Russia, however, matters were different.
Here the fight against Czarism was
analogous
to the former fight against absolutism
in
Europe. In Russia too church and religion
were the strongest supports of the
system
of government: they held the rural
masses,
engaged in primitive agrarian production,
in complete ignorance and superstition.
The
struggle against religion was here
a prime
social necessity. Since in Russia there
was
no significant bourgeoisie that as
a future
ruling class could take up the fight,
the
task fell to the intelligentsia during
scores
of years it waged a strenuous fight
for enlightenment
of the masses against Czarism. Among
the
Western bourgeoisie, now reactionary
and
anti-materialist, it could find no
support
whatever in this struggle. It had to
appeal
to the socialist workers, who alone
sympathised
with it, and it took over their acknowledged
theory, Marxism. Thus it came about
that
even intellectuals who were spokesmen
of
the first rudiments of a Russian bourgeoisie,
such as Peter Struve and Tugan Baranovski,
presented themselves as Marxists. They
had
nothing in common with the proletarian
Marxism
of the West: what they learned from
Marx
was the doctrine of social development
with
capitalism as the next phase. A power
for
revolution came up in Russia for the
first
time when the workers took up the fight,
first by strikes only, then in combination
with political demands. Now the intellectuals
found a revolutionary class to join
up with,
in order to become its spokesmen in
a socialist
party.
Thus the proletarian class struggle
m Russia
was at the same time a struggle against
Czarist
absolutism, under the banner of socialism.
So Marxism in Russia, developing as
the theory
of those engaged in the social conflict,
necessarily assumed another character
than
in Western Europe. It was still the
theory
of a fighting working class, but this
class
had to fight first and foremost for
what
in Western Europe had been the function
and
work of the bourgeoisie, with the intellectuals
as its associates. So the Russian intellectuals,
in adapting the theory to this local
task,
had to find a form of Marxism in which
criticism
of religion stood in the forefront.
They
found it in an approach to earlier
forms
of materialism, and in the first writings
of Marx from the time when in Germany
the
fight of the bourgeoisie and the workers
against absolutism was still undivided.
This appears most clearly in Plechanov,
the
“father of Russian Marxism.” At the
time
that in Western countries theorists
occupied
themselves with political problems,
he turned
his attention to the older materialists.
In his Beiträge zur Geschichte des
Materialismus
(Contributions to the History of Materialism)
he treats the French materialists of
the
18th century, Helvetius, Lamettrie,
and compares
them with Marx, to show how many valuable
and important ideas were already contained
in their works. Hence we understand
why in
his Grundprobleme des Marxismus he
stresses
the concordance between Marx and Feuerbach
and emphasises the viewpoints of middle-class
materialism.
Yet Plechanov was strongly influenced
by
the Western, especially the German
workers’,
movement. He was known as the herald
of the
Russian working-class struggle, which
he
predicted theoretically at a time when
practically
there was hardly any trace. He was
esteemed
as one of the very few who occupied
themselves
with philosophy; he played an international
role and took part in the discussions
on
Marxism and reformism. Western socialists
studied his writings without perceiving
at
the time the differences hidden within
them.
Thus he was determined by Russian conditions
less exclusively than Lenin.
Lenin was the practical leader of the
Russian
revolutionary movement. Hence in his
theoretical
ideas its practical conditions and
political
aims are shown more clearly. The conditions
of the fight against Czarism determined
the
basic views exposed in his book. Theoretical,
especially philosophic views are not
determined
by abstract studies and chance reading
in
philosophical literature, but by the
great
life-tasks which, imposed by the needs
of
practical activity, direct the will
and thought
of man. To Lenin and the Bolshevist
party
the first life-task was the annihilation
of Czarism and of the backward barbarous
social system of Russia. Church and
religion
were the theoretical foundations of
that
system, the ideology and glorification
of
absolutism, expression and symbol of
the
slavery of the masses. Hence a relentless
fight against them was needed; the
struggle
against religion stood in the centre
of Lenin’s
theoretical thought; any concession
however
small to “fideism” was an attack on
the life-nerve
of the movement. As a fight against
absolutism,
landed property, and clergy, the fight
in
Russia was very similar to the former
fight
of bourgeoisie and intellectuals in
Western
Europe; so the thoughts and fundamental
ideas
of Lenin must be similar to what had
been
propagated in middle-class materialism,
and
his sympathies went to its spokesmen.
In
Russia, however, it was the working
class
who had to wage the fight; so the fighting
organisation had to be a socialist
party,
proclaiming Marxism as its creed, and
taking
from Marxism what was necessary for
the Russian
Revolution: the doctrine of social
development
from capitalism to socialism, and the
doctrine
of class war as its moving force. Hence
Lenin
gave to his materialism the name and
garb
of Marxism, and assumed it to be the
real
— i. e. peculiarly working-class as
contrasted
with middle-class — Marxism.
This identification was supported by
still
another circumstance. In Russia capitalism
had not grown up gradually from small-scale
production in the hands of a middle
class,
as it had in Western Europe. Big industry
was imported from outside as a foreign
element
by Western capitalism, exploiting the
Russian
workers. Moreover Western financial
capital,
by its loans to Czarism, exploited
the entire
agrarian Russian people, who were heavily
taxed to pay the interests. Western
capital
here assumed the character of colonial
capital,
with the Czar and his officials as
its agents.
In countries exploited as colonies
all the
classes have a common interest in throwing
off the yoke of the usurious foreign
capital,
to establish their own free economic
development,
leading as a rule to home capitalism.
This
fight is waged against world-capital,
hence
often under the name of socialism;
and the
workers of the Western countries, who
stand
against the same foe, are the natural
allies.
Thus in China Sun Yat-Sen was a socialist;
since, however, the Chinese bourgeoisie
whose
spokesman he was, was a numerous and
powerful
class, his socialism was “national”
and he
opposed the “errors” of Marxism.
Lenin, on the contrary, had to rely
on the
working class, and because his fight
had
to be implacable and radical, he espoused
the most radical ideology of the Western
proletariat fighting world-capitalism,
viz.
Marxism. Since, however, the Russian
revolution
showed a mixture of two characters,
middle-class
revolution in its immediate aims, proletarian
revolution in its active forces, the
appropriate
bolshevist theory too had to present
two
characters, middle-class materialism
in its
basic philosophy, proletarian evolutionism
in its doctrine of class fight. This
mixture
was termed Marxism. But it is clear
that
Lenin’s Marxism, as determined by the
special
Russian attitude toward capitalism,
must
be fundamentally different from the
real
Marxism growing as their basic view
in the
workers of the countries of big capitalism.
Marxism in Western Europe is the world
view
of a working class confronting the
task of
converting a most highly developed
capitalism,
its own world of life and action, into
communism.
The Russian workers and intellectuals
could
not make this their object; they had
first
to open the way for a free development
of
a modern industrial society. [a4] To
the
Russian Marxists the nucleus of Marxism
is
not contained m Marx’s thesis that
social
reality determines consciousness, but
in
the sentence of young Marx, inscribed
in
big letters in the Moscow People’s
House,
that religion is the opium of the people.
It may happen that in a theoretical
work
there appear not the immediate surroundings
and tasks of the author, but more general
and remote influences and wider tasks.
In
Lenin’s book, however, nothing of the
sort
is perceptible. It is a manifest and
exclusive
reflection of the Russian Revolution
at which
he was aiming. Its character so entirely
corresponds to middle-class materialism
that.
if it had been known at the time in
Western
Europe — but only confused rumours
on the
internal strifes of Russian socialism
penetrated
here — and if it could have been rightly
interpreted, one could have predicted
that
the Russian revolution must somehow
result
in a kind of capitalism based on a
workers’
struggle.
There is a widespread opinion that
the bolshevist
party was Marxist, and that it was
only for
practical reasons that Lenin, the great
scholar
and leader of Marxism, gave to the
revolution
another direction than what Western
workers
called communism — thereby showing
his realistic
marxian insight. The critical opposition
to the Russian and C. P. politics tries
indeed
to oppose the despotic practice of
the present
Russian government — termed Stalinism
— to
the “true” Marxist principles of Lenin
and
old bolshevism. Wrongly so. Not only
because
in practice these politics were inaugurated
already by Lenin. But also because
the alleged
Marxism of Lenin and the bolshevist
party
is nothing but a legend. Lenin never
knew
real Marxism. Whence should he have
taken
it? Capitalism he knew only as colonial
capitalism;
social revolution he knew only as the
annihilation
of big land ownership and Czarist despotism.
Russian bolshevism cannot be reproached
for
having abandoned the way of Marxism:
for
it was never on that way. Every page
of Lenin’s
philosophical work is there to prove
it;
and Marxism itself, by its thesis that
theoretical
opinions are determined by social relations
and necessities, makes clear that it
could
not be otherwise. Marxism, however,
at the
same time shows the necessity of the
legend;
every middle-class revolution, requiring
working-class and peasant support,
needs
the illusion that it is something different,
larger, more universal. Here it was
the illusion
that the Russian revolution was the
first
step of world revolution liberating
the entire
proletarian class from capitalism;
its theoretical
expression was the legend of Marxism.
Of course Lenin was a pupil of Marx;
from
Marx he had learnt what was most essential
for the Russian revolution, the uncompromising
proletarian class struggle. Just as
for analogous
reasons, the social-democrats were
pupils
of Marx. And surely the fight of the
Russian
workers, in their mass actions and
their
soviets, was the most important practical
example of modern proletarian warfare.
That,
however, Lenin did not understand Marxism
as the theory of proletarian revolution,
that he did not understand capitalism,
bourgeoisie,
proletariat in their highest modern
development,
was shown strikingly when from Russia,
by
means of the Third International, the
world
revolution was to be started, and the
advice
and warnings of Western Marxists were
entirely
disregarded. An unbroken series of
blunders,
failures, and defeats, of which the
present
weakness of the workers’ movement was
the
result, showed the unavoidable shortcoming
of the Russian leadership.
Returning now to the time that Lenin
wrote
his book we have to ask what then was
the
significance of the controversy on
Machism.
The Russian revolutionary movement
comprised
wider circles of intellectuals than
Western
socialism; so part of them came under
the
influence of anti-materialist middle-class
trends. It was natural that Lenin should
sharply take up the fight against such
tendencies.
He did not look upon them as would
a Marxist
who understands them as a social phenomenon,
explaining them out of their social
origin,
and thus rendering them ineffectual;
nowhere
in his book do we find an attempt at
or a
trace of such an understanding. To
Lenin
materialism was the truth established
by
Feuerbach, Marx and Engels, and the
middle-class
materialists; but then stupidity, reaction,
money-interests of the bourgeoisie
and the
spiritual power of theology had brought
about
a revulsion in Europe. Now this corruption
threatened to assail bolshevism too;
so it
had to be opposed with the utmost vigour.
In this action Lenin of course was
entirely
right. To be sure, it was not a question
of the truth of Marx or Mach, nor whether
out of Mach’s ideas something could
be used
in Marxism. It was the question whether
middle-class
materialism or middle-class idealism,
or
some mixture, would afford the theoretical
basis for the fight against Czarism.
It is
clear that the ideology of a self-contented,
already declining bourgeoisie can never
fit
in with a rising movement, not even
with
a rising middle class itself. It would
have
led to weakness, where unfolding of
the utmost
vigour was necessary. Only the rigour
of
materialism could make the Party hard,
such
as was needed for a revolution. The
tendency
of Machism, somehow parallel to revisionism
in Germany, was to break the radicalism
of
struggle and the solid unity of the
party,
in theory and in practice. This was
the danger
that Lenin saw quite clearly. “When
I read
it (Bogdanov’s book) I became exceedingly
provoked and enraged,” he wrote to
Gorky,
February 1908. Indeed, we perceive
this in
the vehemence of his attack upon the
adversary,
in every page of the work; it seems
to have
been written in a continuous fury.
It is
not a fundamental discussion clearing
the
ideas, as was, for example Engels’s
book
against Dühring; it is the war-pamphlet
of
a party leader who has to ward off
by any
means the danger to his party. So it
could
not be expected that he should try
really
to understand the hostile doctrines;
in consequence
of his own unmarxian thinking he could
only
misinterpret and misrepresent them.
The only
thing needed was to knock them down,
to destroy
their scientific credit, and thus to
expose
the Russian Machists as ignorant parrots
of reactionary blockheads.
And he succeeded. His fundamental views
were
the views of the bolshevist party at
large,
as determined by is historical task.
As so
often, Lenin had felt exactly the practical
exigencies. Machism was condemned and
expelled
from the party. As a united body the
party
could take its course again, in the
van of
the working class, towards the revolution.
The words of Deborin quoted in the
beginning
thus are only partially true. We cannot
speak
of a victory of Marxism, when there
is only
question of a so-called refutation
of middle-class
idealism through the ideas of middle-class
materialism. But doubtless Lenin’s
book was
an important feature in the history
of the
Party, determining in a high degree
the further
development of philosophic opinions
in Russia.
Hereafter the revolution, under the
new system
of state capitalism — a combination
of middle
class materialism and the marxian doctrine
of social development, adorned with
some
dialectic terminology — was, under
the name
“Leninism,” proclaimed the official
State-philosophy.
It was the right doctrine for the Russian
intellectuals who, now that natural
science
and technics formed the basis of a
rapidly
developing production system under
their
direction, saw the future open up before
them as the ruling class of an immense
empire.
The Proletarian Revolution The publication
first of a German, then of an English
translation
of Lenin’s work shows that it was meant
to
play a wider role than its function
in the
old Russian party conflict. It is presented
now to the younger generation of socialists
and communists in order to influence
the
international workers’ movement. So
we ask
what can the workers in capitalist
countries
learn from it? Of the refuted philosophical
ideas it gives a distorted view; and
under
the name of Marxism another theory,
middle
class materialism is expounded. It
does not
aim at bringing the reader to a clear
independent
judgement in philosophical questions;
it
intends to instruct him that the Party
is
right, and that he has to trust and
to follow
the party leaders. What way is it that
this
party leader shows to the international
proletariat?
Let us read Lenin’s view of the world-contest
of the classes in his final sentences:
“...
behind the epistemological scholasticism
of empirio-criticism it is impossible
not
to see the struggle of parties in philosophy,
a struggle which in the last analysis
rejects
the tendencies and ideology of the
antagonistic
classes in modern society ... The contending
parties are essentially ... materialism
and
idealism. The latter is merely a subtle,
refined form of fideism, which stands
fully
armed, commands vast organisations
and steadily
continues to exercise influence on
the masses,
turning the slightest vacillation in
philosophical
thought to its own advantage. The objective
class role played by empirio-criticism
entirely
consists in rendering faithful service
to
the fideists in their struggle against
materialism
in general and Historical Materialism
in
particular.” (371)
Nothing here of the immense power of
the
foe, the bourgeoisie, master of all
the riches
of the world, against which the working
class
hardly can make any progress. Nothing
of
its spiritual power over the minds
of the
workers, still strongly dominated by
middle-class
culture and hardly able to overcome
it in
a continuous struggle for knowledge.
Nothing
of the new powerful ideologies of nationalism
and imperialism threatening to gain
a hold
over the workers too, and indeed, soon
afterwards,
dragging them along into the world
war. No,
the Church, the organisation of “fideism”
in full armour, that is to Lenin the
most
dangerous hostile power. The fight
of materialism
against religious belief is to him
the theoretical
fight accompanying the class struggle.
The
limited theoretical opposition between
the
former and the later ruling class appears
to him the great world fight of ideas
which
he connects with the proletarian class
fight,
the essence and ideas of which lie
far outside
his view. Thus in Lenin’s philosophy
the
Russian scheme is transferred upon
Western
Europe and America, the anti-religious
tendency
of a rising bourgeoisie is transferred
to
the rise of the proletariat. Just as
among
German reformists at that time the
division
was made between “reaction” and “progress”
and not according to class but according
to political ideology — thus confusing
the
workers — so here it is made according
to
religious ideology, between reactionaries
and free-thinkers, instead of establishing
its class-unity against bourgeoisie
and State,
to get mastery over production, the
Western
proletarian class is invited to take
up the
fight against religion. If this book
and
these ideas of Lenin had been known
in 1918
among Western Marxists, surely there
would
have been a more critical attitude
against
his tactics for world revolution.
The Third International aims at a world
revolution
after the model of the Russian revolution
and with the same goal. The Russian
economic
system is state capitalism, there called
state-socialism or even communism,
with production
directed by a state bureaucracy under
the
leadership of the Communist Party.
The state
officials, forming the new ruling class,
have the disposal over the product,
hence
over the surplus-value, whereas the
workers
receive wages only, thus forming an
exploited
class. In this way it has been possible
in
the short time of some dozens of years
to
transform Russia from a primitive barbarous
country into a modern state of rapidly
increasing
industry on the basis of advanced science
and technics. According to Communist
Party
ideas, a similar revolution is needed
in
the capitalist countries, with the
working
class again as the active power, leading
to the overthrow of the bourgeoisie
and the
organisation of production by a state
bureaucracy.
The Russian revolution could be victorious
only because a well-disciplined united
bolshevist
party led the masses, and because in
the
party the clear insight and the unyielding
assurance of Lenin and his friends
showed
the right way. Thus, in the same way,
in
world revolution the workers have to
follow
the Communist Party, leave to it the
lead
and afterwards the government; and
the party
members have to obey their leaders
in rigid
discipline. Essential are the qualified
capable
party leaders, the proficient, experienced
revolutionaries; what is necessary
for the
masses is the belief that the party
and its
leaders are right.
In reality, for the working class in
the
countries of developed capitalism,
in Western
Europe and America, matters are entirely
different. Its task is not the overthrow
of a backward absolutist monarchy.
Its task
is to vanquish a ruling class commanding
the mightiest material and spiritual
forces
the world ever knew. Its object cannot
be
to replace the domination of stockjobbers
and monopolists over a disorderly production
by the domination of state officials
over
a production regulated from above.
Its object
is to be itself master of production
and
itself to regulate labour, the basis
of life.
Only then is capitalism really destroyed.
Such an aim cannot be attained by an
ignorant
mass, confident followers of a party
presenting
itself as an expert leadership. It
can be
attained only if the workers themselves,
the entire class, understand the conditions,
ways and means of their fight; when
every
man knows from his own judgement, what
to
do. They must, every man of them, act
themselves,
decide themselves, hence think out
and know
for themselves. Only in this way will
a real
class organisation be built up from
below,
having the form of something like workers’
councils. It is of no avail that they
have
been convinced that their leaders know
what
is afoot and have gained the point
in theoretical
discussion — an easy thing when each
is acquainted
with the writings of his own party
only.
Out of the contest of arguments they
have
to form a clear opinion themselves.
There
is no truth lying ready at hand that
has
only to be imbibed; in every new case
truth
must be contrived by exertion of one’s
own
brain.
This does not mean, of course, that
every
worker should judge on scientific arguments
in fields, that can be mastered only
by professional
study. It means, first, that all workers
should give attention not only to their
direct
working and living conditions but also
to
the great social issues connected with
their
class struggle and the organisation
of labour;
and should know how to take decisions
here.
But it implies, secondly, a certain
standard
of argument in propaganda and political
strife.
When the views of the opponent are
rendered
in a distorted way because the willingness
or the capacity to understand them
is lacking,
then in the eyes of the believing adherents
you may score a success; but the only
result
— intended indeed in party strife —
is to
bind them with stronger fanaticism
to the
party. For the workers however, what
is of
importance is not the increase of power
of
a party but the increase of their own
capacity
to seize power and to establish their
mastery
over society. Only when, in arguing
and discussing,
the opponent is given his full pound,
when
in weighing arguments against one another
each solid opinion is understood out
of social
class relations, will the participant
hearers
gain such well-founded insight as is
necessary
for a working class to assure its freedom.
The working class needs Marxism for
its liberation.
Just as the results of natural science
are
necessary for the technical construction
of capitalism, so the results of social
science
are necessary for the organisational
construction
of communism. What was needed first
was political
economy, that part of Marxism that
expounds
the structure of capitalism, the nature
of
exploitation, the class-antagonism,
the tendencies
of economic development. It gave, directly,
a solid basis to the spontaneously
arising
fight of the workers against the capitalist
masters. Then, in the further struggle,
by
its theory of the development of society
from primitive economy through capitalism
to communism, it gave confidence and
enthusiasm
through the prospect of victory and
freedom.
When the not yet numerous workers took
up
their most difficult fight, and the
hopeless
indifferent masses had to be roused,
this
insight was the first thing needed.
When the working class has grown more
numerous,
more powerful, and society is full
of the
proletarian class struggle, another
part
of Marxism has to come to the forefront.
That they should know that they are
exploited
and have to fight, is not the main
point
any more; they must know how to fight,
how
to overcome their weakness, how to
build
up their unity and strength. Their
economic
position is so easy to understand,
their
exploitation so manifest that their
unity
in struggle, their common will to seize
power
over production should presumably result
at once. What hampers them is chiefly
the
power of the inherited and confused
ideas,
the formidable spiritual power of the
middle-class
world, enveloping their minds into
a thick
cloud of beliefs and ideologies, dividing
them, and making them uncertain and
confused.
The process of enlightenment, of clearing
up and vanquishing this world of old
ideas
and ideologies is the essential process
of
building the working-class power, is
the
progress of revolution. Here that part
of
Marxism is needed that we call its
philosophy,
the relation of ideas to reality.
Among these ideologies the least significant
is religion. As the withered husk of
a system
of ideas reflecting conditions of a
far past,
it has only an imaginary power as a
refuge
for all, who are frightened by capitalist
development. Its basis has been continually
undermined by capitalism itself. Middle-class
philosophy then put up in its place
the belief
in all those lesser idols, deified
abstractions,
such as matter, force causality in
nature,
liberty and progress in society. In
modern
times these now forsaken idols have
been
replaced by new, more powerful objects
of
veneration: state and nation. In the
struggle
of the old and the new bourgeoisies
for world
power, nationalism, now the most needed
ideology,
rose to such power as to carry with
it even
broad masses of the workers. Most important
are, besides such spiritual powers
as democracy,
organisation, union, party, because
they
have their roots in the working class
itself
as results of their life practice,
their
own struggle. Just because there is
connected
with them the remembrance of passionate
exertion,
of devoted sacrifices, of feverish
concern
with victory or defeat, their merit
— which
is bound as a class tool to those particular
past times and conditions — is exalted
to
the belief in their absolute excellence.
That makes the transition to new necessities
under new conditions difficult. The
conditions
of life frequently compel the workers
to
take up new forms of fight; but the
old traditions
can hamper and retard it in a serious
way.
In the continuous contest between inherited
ideology and practical needs, it is
essential
for the workers to understand that
their
ideas are not independently existing
truths
but generalisations of former experiences
and necessities; that human mind always
has
the tendency to assign to such ideas
an unlimited
validity, as absolutely good or bad,
venerated
or hated, and thus makes the people
slaves
to superstition; but that by understanding
limits and conditions, superstition
is vanquished
and thought is made free. And, conversely,
what is recognised as the lasting interest,
as the essential basis of the fight
for his
class, must be unerringly kept in mind
—
though without being deified — as the
brilliant
guiding star in all action. This —
besides
its use as explanation of daily experience
and class struggle — is the significance
of Marxian philosophy, the doctrine
of the
connection of world and mind, as conceived
by Marx, Engels, and Dietzgen; this
gives
strength to the working class to accomplish
its great task of self-liberation.
Lenin’s book, on the other hand, tries
to
impose upon the readers, the author’s
belief
in the reality of abstractions. So
it cannot
be helpful in any way for the workers’
task.
And as a matter of fact its publication
in
Western languages was not meant to
be that.
Workers aiming at the self-liberation
of
their class stand beyond the horizon
of the
Communist Party. What the Communist
Party
can see is the competitor, the rival
party,
the Second International trying to
keep the
leadership over the working class.
As Deborin
was quoted in the Preface, the aim
of the
publication was to win social-democracy,
corrupted by middle class idealistic
philosophy,
back to materialism — or else to browbeat
it by the more captivating radical
terms
of materialism — as a theoretical contribution
to the Red Front. For the rising class-movement
of the workers it matters little which
of
these unmarxian party-lines of thought
should
get the upper hand.
But in another way Lenin’s philosophy
may
be of importance for their struggle.
The
aim of the Communist Party — which
is called
world-revolution — is to bring to power,
by means of the fighting force of the
workers,
a layer of leaders who then establish
planned
production by means of State-Power;
in its
essence it coincides with the aims
of social
democracy. The social ideals growing
up in
the minds of the intellectual class
now that
it feels its increasing importance
in the
process of production: a well-ordered
organisation
of production for use under the direction
of technical and scientific experts
— are
hardly different. So the Communist
Party
considers this class its natural allies
which
it has to draw into its circle. By
an able
theoretical propaganda it tries to
detach
the intelligentsia from the spiritual
influences
of the declining bourgeoisie and of
private
capitalism, and to win them for the
revolution
that will put them into their proper
place
as a new leading and ruling class.
Or, in
philosophical terms, to win them for
materialism.
A revolution cannot be made with the
meek,
softening ideology of a system of idealism,
but only under the inspiring daring
radicalism
of materialist thought. For this the
foundation
is afforded by Lenin’s book. On this
basis
an extensive literature of articles,
reviews,
and books has already been published,
first
in German and then in still greater
numbers
in English, in Europe and in America,
with
the collaboration of well-known Russian
scholars
and Western scientists sympathising
with
the Communist Party. The contents of
these
writings make clear at first sight
that they
are not destined for the working class
but
for the intellectuals of these countries.
Leninism is here expounded before them
—
under the name of Marxism, or “dialectics”
— and they are told that it is the
fundamental
all-embracing world-doctrine, in which
the
special sciences must be seen as subordinate
parts. It is clear that with real Marxism,
as the theory of the real proletarian
revolution,
such a propaganda would have no chance;
but
with Leninism, as a theory of middle-class
revolution installing a new ruling
class,
it might be successful.
There is of course this difficulty,
that
the intellectual class is too limited
in
number, too heterogeneous in social
position,
hence too feeble to be able single-handed
to seriously threaten capitalist domination.
Neither are the leaders of the Second
and
the Third International a match for
the power
of the bourgeoisie, even if they could
impose
themselves by strong and dear politics
instead
of being rotten through opportunism,
When,
however, capitalism is tumbling into
a heavy
economic or political crisis which
rouses
the masses, when the working class
has taken
up the fight and succeeds in shattering
capitalism
in a first victory — then their time
will
come. Then they will intervene and
slide
themselves in as leaders of the revolution,
nominally to give their aid by taking
part
in the fight, in reality to deflect
the action
in the direction of their party aims.
Whether
or not the beaten bourgeoisie will
then rally
with them to save of capitalism what
can
be saved, in any case their intervention
comes down to cheating the workers,
leading
them off from the road to freedom.
Here we see the possible significance
of
Lenin’s book for the future working-class
movement. The Communist Party, though
it
may lose ground among the workers,
tries
to form with the socialists and the
intellectual
class a united front, ready at the
first
major crisis of capitalism to take
in its
hands the power over and against the
workers.
Leninism and its philosophical textbook
then
will serve, under the name of Marxism,
to
overawe the workers and to impose upon
the
intellectuals, as the leading system
of thought
by which the reactionary spiritual
powers
are beaten, Thus the fighting working
class,
basing itself upon Marxism, will find
Lenin’s
philosophical work a stumbling-block
in its
way, as the theory of a class that
tries
to perpetuate its serfdom.
Annotations a1 All numbers in parentheses
refer to pages in Lenin’s Materialism
and
Empirio-Criticism, Foreign Languages
Publishing
House, Moscow, 1947.
a2 These obsolete ideas as an essential
part
of Leninism as the Russian State-philosophy,
were afterwards imposed upon Russian
science,
as may be inferred from the following
communication
in Waldemar Kaempfert, Science in Soviet-Russia:
“Toward the end of the Trotsky purge,
the
Astronomical Division of the Academy
of Sciences
passed some impassioned resolutions,
which
were signed by the president and eighteen
members and which declared that ‘modern
bourgeois
cosmogony is in a state of deep ideological
confusion resulting from its refusal
to accept
the only true dialectic-materialistic
concept,
namely the unity of the universe with
respect
to space as well as time’, and a belief
in
relativity was branded as ‘counter-revolutionary’.”
a3 Diderot, one of the Encyclopaedists
of
the 18th century, had written “that
the faculty
of sensation is a general property
of matter,
or a product of its organisation” (Lenin,
page 29). The wider scope admitted
in the
latter expression was dropped by Lenin.
a4 Bolshevist historians, since they
knew
capitalism only in the character of
colonial
capitalism, were keen in recognising
the
role of colonial capital in the world,
and
were able to write excellent studies
on it.
But at the same time they readily overlooked
its difference from home capitalism.
Thus
Prokrovski in his History of Russia
represents
1917 as the end of a Russian capitalist
development
of many centuries.
Comments c1 The translation of the
German
word “bürgerlich” into “middle-class”
— whether
conscious mis-translation or unconscious
misunderstanding — is accurate when
re-translated
to mean “bourgeois”. This explains
why Rothschild
shadow funds found Lenin and Trotsky's
pockets
so comforting as they facilitated the
derailment
and harnessing of the Russian Revolution
into bourgeois management form (specifically
away from generalized self-management)
and
into an exclusively quantitative content.
Release History Lenin as Philosopher
was
first published in German in Amsterdam
as
Lenin als Philosoph. Kritische Betrachtung
der philosophischen Grundlagen des
Leninismus,
under the pseudonym John Harper, by
the Bibliothek
der Rätekorrespondenz, No. 1. Ausgabe
der
Gruppe Internationaler Kommunisten
in Holland,
in 1938. This German-language edition
was
distributed in the U. S. A. by International
Council Correspondence. The first French
translation was published in 1947 in
Internationalisme
the journal of the Gauche Communiste
de France.
The first English translation was published
by New Essays in New York in 1948.
Another web release is available at
the Libertarian
Communist site at http://libcom.org/library/lenin-as-philosopher-pannekoek.
This edition was e-published directly
from
the 1948 New Essays pamphlet on 24-July-2007
by Lust for Life http://www.lust-for-life.org
In association with Point of Departure
http://www.point-of-departure.org
rasputin@point-of-departure.org
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