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Chapter 26 PDF
Chapter 26 PDF
Chapter 26
Karl Marx: Historical Materialism
Key Words: Marxism, Communism, class differences, base structure, super structure,
labour, production, mode of production, means of production, revolution, Capitalism,
proletariat, material forces.
This chapter deals with the philosophy of Karl Marx, the renowned founder of the
Marxist or Communist school of thought. Karl Marx is a thinker who insisted that
philosophy should not be a mere theoretical exercise. Instead, it should make changes
in the way people live by abolishing exploitation, disparities and social inequalities.
To present his view he proposed a conception of history, the materialist conception,
which primarily addressed the problem of human alienation and sought to find
solutions to the problem. He conceived human history as a history of class conflicts
and proposed a classless society, where the conflicts would be ultimately resolved
along with all the fundamental philosophical problems human beings encounter. In
order to overcome the problem of human alienation, Marx proposes to change the
world and identified ways to materialize this. The materialist conception of history
outlines the fundamental problematic and the way out.
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
Engels provides an account of the important role labour had played in the
origin of man, which was later developed into a theory that explains the law of
development of human history by highlighting the link between social production and
human evolution. Engels says that our ancestors have learned how to make use of
their front extremities for simple operations, which were prehensile functions. One
such important stage in the process of human evolution is the erection gait, where the
ape started differentiating its hand from its foot. This had led to the realization that the
hand can be used for holding tools, which can be employed for fulfilling certain
purposes. This is the emergence of labour, an ability which man possesses, which
distinguishes him from the rest of the living creatures.
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
The possibility of labour with the body and the hand, with which man started
making desirable changes in his surroundings have eventually brought people
together and stimulated mutual assistance and joint activity, which ultimately led to
the emergence of social production. These fundamental insights were later
supplemented by the natural laws governing life, which explained how humans react
to nature.
With the emergence of labour and production people started coming together
to form social structures. Out of and together with the labour process language also
had emerged, which further stimulated the development of brain and the emergence of
consciousness and it also facilitated the conditions for separate useful actions.
Therefore, labour, which constitutes the core of man’s material life—by means of
which man interacts with nature in order to survive—is responsible even for the
development of his consciousness. Engels writes:
Labour and speech were the two essential stimuli under the influence of
which the brain of the ape gradually changed into that of man. Hand in
hand with the development of the brain went the development of its most
immediate instruments – the senses.
The specialization of the hand had indicated that humans could then handle and
employ tools in order to make changes in nature. This process is termed as
production, which Marx conceived as a specific human activity. Again, when people
started coming together and cooperate, it resulted in social production. Marx
considers production as the distinctive human activity. He writes:
The spider conducts operations that resemble those of a weaver, and a bee puts
to shame many an architect in the construction of her cells. But what
distinguishes the worst architect from the best of bees is this, that the architect
raises his structure in imagination before he erects it in reality. At the end of
every labour process we get a result that already existed in the imagination of
the labourer at its commencement. He not only effects a change of form in the
material on which he works, but he also realizes a purpose of his own.
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
(ii) by destroying or overthrowing the old socio-economic formation, and finally, (c)
by replacing it by a new one.
We may outline the law of social-economic formation. It is the result of the
conflict between production forces and production relations. Marxism affirms that this
universal law had governed the entire history of human societies, by governing all
progress of material production and of society as a whole. According to Marxism,
there are five socio-economic formations. They are:
1. The primitive-communal.
2. Slave-owning.
3. Feudal.
4. Capitalist.
5. Communist.
Marx claims that, in each formation, the conflict between production forces and
production relations ultimately reaches the stage of revolution. This happens because
the conflict makes the system unable to sustain without a change. Every socio-
economic formation thus encounters a stage of social upheaval, a stage of revolution,
after which there will be a transition from one socio-economic formation to another.
Marxism sees this as a socio-historical and law-governed process of development of
human society and it argues that this process underlines the progressive character of
social development.
A very important aspect of the materialistic interpretation is the emphasis it
gives to the economic aspects or more particularly, to the mode of production and the
nature of production relationships. Marx thus distinguishes between the base structure
of a society from its super structure, where the former is represented by the material
relations and the latter stands for the political and ideological relations. The base
structure is the base of a society and it consists of the totality of the historically
determined relations of production. The superstructure, on the other hand, stands for
the totality of the ideological relations, views, and institutions like the law and the
state, morality, religion, philosophy, art, political and legal forms of consciousness
and the institutions corresponding to them. This distinction between base and super
structures refers to the social relations of a historically determined society as a total
system. Marx and Engels write:
In the social production which people carry on, they enter into relations that
are defined, indispensable, and independent of their will; these relations of
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
But the base structure is not an independent or autonomous domain unaffected by the
changes that take place in the superstructure. Marx points to an interactive-dialectic
element that determines the entire system and relations of a social formation. The
historical changes in the base are derived from and determined by the changes in the
nature of the productive forces of society and the historically determined base in turn
determines the nature and type of the social superstructure.
A radical change in the economic structure of a given society produces
changes and radical transformation in the entire social superstructure. Here Marx
expects the proletariat or the working class playing a crucial role. This is because the
idea of class struggle is central to the Marxian conception, as it conceives it as the
source of social development. Marxism explains production relations in terms of class
relations.
According to Marxism, there are broadly two classes in the history of human
societies; the haves and the have nots. The difference between them is based on the
way they are related to the means of production. A class stands for a group of people
which is different from other groups in terms of their relationship to the means of
production. Each class has its unique role to play in the social organization of labour
as each class’s mode of appropriating and ownership of public wealth vary. In order
to explicate this further, Marx examines the emergence of classes in human history.
Marx says that the primitive society was classless, as people lived in small
communes enjoying equal rights and everything was common. But in such societies
the level of economic development was very low. Later, with social development and
progress, classes evolved in relation to production relationships, which introduced the
fundamental dichotomy between the haves and have-nots. In the capitalist societies,
this difference is between the capitalists who own the property and industrial houses
and the proletariat or the working class who are propertyless. Marx also observes that
there will be a constant struggle between the classes of the haves and the have-nots
and hence between the capitalists and the proletariat. The significant contribution of
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
Marx observes that, ideally the product of labour should remain with the
labourer, as it is the way he creates himself and hence it is his essence. But under
alienated labout of capitalism, the proletariat does not have any right over his product
which is the result of his labour. He does not own the means of production and hence
he is forced to exchange the product of his labour—which actually is his own
essence—for money or wages. Hence his relationship with the product characterizes
alienation. He has no right or control over the product and hence it appears before him
as an alien object. It stands over and above him, opposed to him as an independent
power. The product, which is his essence, is separated from him in the act of
production itself. Hence he is alienated from himself in the very act of production.
Since he has no power, right or control of what he produces, he is unable to view his
work as a part of his real self.
The proletariat, as mentioned above, will then be exchanging his labour, his
activity of production, which is his method of self-creation and creation of his own
essence, for the wages he is paid for. Hence the product appears before him as an
alienated object. The money for which he has exchanged it becomes his enemy, as it
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becomes the symbol of his alienation. The more he worships this money, the more he
becomes alienated from himself.
Again, the work he does in cooperation with others should make him a part of
humanity, the human species. Marx observes that his species-life constitutes his social
essence. But under the conditions of alienated labour this social essence is taken away
from him. Here he is alienated from other men, as instead of cooperation with others
in the act of social production, he competes with them, as what determines his value is
the capitalist principle of demand and supply. The more the supply is, the less
becomes the demand of a product. In capitalism, the worker is a product and the more
they are, the less the demand for them in capitalist establishments, which aim at profit
maximization. Here one’s fellow worker becomes a threat to one’s own interests. Man
thus becomes alienated from humanity and his social self.
In order to overcome alienation, Marx proposes the abolition of private
property, as it is the latter, which causes alienation from nature and other men. This
consists in the abolition of Wages and money and not just a hike in the wages, as that
would not resolve the fundamental problem of alienation.
Marx here proposes initiating a revolution by the proletariat class. The
dialectical relationship and the clashes between the capitalists and the proletariat leads
to the formation of a classless society. Capitalists and proletariats are the two classes,
which constitute the thesis and the anti thesis, and the classless society is the
synthesis. Marx says that this dialectics actually emerges from the concept of private
property itself. Private property creates its own antithesis, as in order to exist it must
also maintain the existence of the propertyless working class. But to be propertyless is
to suffer the loss of essence and get alienated and in order to overcome this the
proletariat has to abolish itself as well as private property. Hence in the Marxian idea
of classless society, both private property and class differences will disappear.
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
sufficient to change this situation. The root cause of this alienation consists in the
establishment of certain forms of modes of production and the material forces that
support them. Marx says that material forces must be overthrown by material forces
and he locates the force that can overthrow the existing capitalist mode of production
in the working class.
Quiz
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
Answer Key
1. [d]
2. [c]
3. [b]
4. [d]
5. [c]
6. [a]
Assignment
References
Books
1. Avineri, Shlomo, The Social and Political Thought of Karl Marx, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1970.
2. Copleston, Frederick, A History of Philosophy, vol.7: 18th and 19th Century
German Philosophy, London, Continuum, 2003.
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Aspects of Western Philosophy: Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly, IIT Madras
3. Durant, Will, A Story of Philosophy: The lives and opinions of the greater
philosophers of the Western World, Pocket Books, 1991.
4. Kenny, Anthony, A New History of Western Philosophy, Oxford, Clarendon
Press, 2012.
5. Rogers, Arthur Keyon, A Student’s History of Philosophy, New York, The
Macmillan Company, 1935.
6. Russell, Bertrand: History of Western Philosophy, London, Routledge
Classics, 2004.
7. Singer, Peter, Marx, Oxford, Oxford University press, 1980.
8. Wheen, Francis, Karl Marx, London: Fourth Estate, 1999
9. Wood, Allen, Karl Marx, London: Routledge; second edition, 2004.
Web Resources
1. Wolff, Jonathan, "Karl Marx", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(Summer 2011 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL =
<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2011/entries/marx/>.
2. Marx-Engels Archive Home Page, available at:
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/
3. Marx and Engles’ Writings, available at: http://marx.eserver.org/
4. Karl Marx (1818 - 1883), entry in
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/marx_karl.shtml
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