3/15/2023 0 Comments Communist dialectic![]() Whereas vulgar evolutionists, who limit themselves generally to recognizing evolution in only certain spheres, content themselves in all other questions with the banalities of "common sense." Dialectic training of the mind, as necessary to a revolutionary fighter as finger exercises to a pianist, demands approaching all problems as processes and not as motionless categories. Only one must not forget that the concept of "evolution" itself has been completely corrupted and emasculated by university professors and liberal writers to mean peaceful "progress." Whoever has come to understand that evolution proceeds through the struggle of antagonistic forces that a slow accumulation of changes at a certain moment explodes the old shell and brings about a catastrophe, revolution whoever has learned finally to apply the general laws of evolution to thinking itself, he is a dialectician, as distinguished from vulgar evolutionists. Writing in 1939, the Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky summed up the dialectical method, which was first given systematic expression by the German philosopher Georg Hegel in the early 19th century: These "molecular" changes eventually pile up and give way to sudden ruptures and transformations-which can take the form of upheavals, wars and revolutions. In its rational form it is a scandal and an abomination to the bourgeoisie and its doctrinaire spokesmen, because it includes in its positive understanding of what exists a simultaneous recognition of its negation, its inevitable destruction because it regards every historically developed form as being in a fluid state, in motion, and therefore grasps its transient aspect as well and because it does not let itself be impressed by anything, being in its very essence critical and revolutionary.Įven at those moments in history when society appears stable and impervious to change, the truth is that it is changing-all the time, though often in imperceptibly small ways. ![]() As Karl Marx put it in an afterword to a German edition of the first volume of his masterwork of dialectical analysis Capital: The dialectical method is a way of thinking about reality that can be a crucial tool for revealing the passing and transitory nature of a social system that at times-perhaps most of the time-appears to be a fact as real and unmovable as the floor at the bottom of the staircase.īy contrast, dialectics takes as its starting point that the social world is in a constant state of change and flux-and that capitalism, while it powerfully structures human relationships, is itself the product of human activity that emerges out of the material world, including the natural world.įOR THIS reason alone, it should be obvious why the people who run our society despise the very idea of dialectics. It came after something-and that means it comes before whatever comes next. It's a product of human activity and emerged out of a process of historical development. Capitalism may be the product of thousands of years of prior human civilizations, but that means it hasn't existed from the start of human society. It's a historically specific social structure. Or without understanding the connection between capitalism's economic laws and the rest of the social world, including art, the family, sexuality, the environment and so on.īut capitalism is unlike gravity in at least one crucial respect. Likewise, many people go through their daily life without understanding how capitalist society powerfully shapes their world-without asking the question of why what they produced with their hands and brains during a day on the job should belong, by law, to someone else. Other than physicists, few people could state Newton's law of universal gravitation: that the gravitational force of two bodies of mass is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. The power of capitalist society to structure the social world-like gravity's pull on everything around us, including ourselves-is so all-encompassing, in fact, that many people never become aware of it as a force with its own laws. Similarly, in capitalist society, someone headed home after spending the day working in a factory or at a bank doesn't believe they can simply take with them the value of what they produced-at least not without the risk of losing their job and facing incarceration. No one would stand at the top of the staircase and think they could avoid the reality of descending it. So we become accustomed as a habit of mind to treating them as unchangeable features of the world around us. The laws of both operate inexorably, and attempts to disregard them can result in serious injury or death. CAPITALISM IS like gravity: it envelops our world so completely that it's easy to forget about it entirely.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |