June, 1999
Philosophic Dialogue: "Dialectics of revolution for the here and now"
Editor's note: As part of our effort to stimulate new
discussion of dialectical philosophy, the last four issues of NEWS
& LETTERS presented a detailed commentary on Hegel's SCIENCE OF
LOGIC written in 1961 by Raya Dunayevskaya, the founder of
Marxist-Humanism. These notes served as an anchor for a series of
classes on "The Dialectic of Marx's CAPITAL and Today's Global
Crisis" held nationwide by News and Letters Committees, which have
just concluded. To continue this discussion, we print below excerpts
from presentations given in three of those classes and invite your
response. We hope to present excerpts from other presentations in
future issues.
From class 1: Marx's Re-creation of Hegel's
Dialectic
In her majestic discussion of Marx's CAPITAL in chapter 10 of
ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION, AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF
REVOLUTION, Raya Dunayevskaya wrote, "[Its] dialectic is totally
new, totally internal, deeper than ever was the Hegelian dialectic
which had dehumanized the self-development of humanity in the
dialectic of consciousness, self-consciousness, and reason."
Before we rush to conclude that Marx therefore left Hegel
behind with the completion of his greatest theoretical work,
we should consider the next sentence, which says: "Marx could
transcend the Hegelian dialectic not by denying that it was
'the source of all dialectic'; rather, it was precisely because
he began with that source that he could make the leap to the
live Subject" (p. 143).
CAPITAL is Marx's full break with Hegel, since unlike the
GRUNDRISSE or CONTRIBUTION TO THE CRITIQUE OF POLITICAL ECONOMY
it fully integrates the human subject into his theoretic
categories. Yet it isn't as if Marx caught the Subject and
only afterwards was able to grasp the importance of Hegel.
On the contrary, his deep rootedness in Hegel's dialectic
enabled Marx "to make the leap to the live Subject."
To help elucidate this, I'd like to note several ways in
which Hegel's work directly impacted the writing of CAPITAL
(this list is by no means exhaustive!).
One is the concept of the unity of opposites. It is
expressed in Hegel's notion that identity is the identity of
identity and non-identity. This head-splitting notion underlies
Marx's entire discussion of the dual nature of capitalist
production. The commodity is the unity-in-difference of
use-value/exchange-value; labor is the unity-in-difference of
concrete labor/abstract labor; capital is the unity-in-difference
of variable capital/constant capital, etc. These opposites do
not lie side-by-side; they are mutually exclusive poles of the
same relation. Without Hegel's LOGIC, it is impossible to fully
grasp Marx's use of these categories.
Two is the notion of appearance as containing the necessity
or show of essence. This is central to Hegel's LOGIC. Unlike
Descartes, for whom appearance is peeled away to reveal the
underlying essence, Hegel emphasizes the objectivity of appearance,
i.e., THAT ESSENCE TOO MUST APPEAR. This is central to Marx as well.
He shows that value is abstract, has "absolutely no connection"
with the physical properties of objects; and yet, value must show
itself through a relation between these objects. It is impossible
to fully unravel this relation of appearance and essence, which is
central to chapter 1 of CAPITAL, without Hegel's LOGIC.
Three is the notion of concrete existence as the mode of
expression of the abstract universal. Marx was sharply critical of
Hegel in his 1844 Manuscripts for treating the concrete as a mere
vehicle for the abstract universal. Yet in CAPITAL he utilizes this
notion to express the nature of the value-form.
Concrete use-values, he shows, become mere modes of expression
for the substance of value, abstract labor. Marx writes, "This
inversion whereby the sensibly concrete counts only as appearance-form
of the abstractly-universal, and it is not to the contrary that the
abstractly-universal counts as property of the concretethis inversion
characterizes the value-expression. At the same time it renders
difficult its comprehension."
Dunayevskaya made a point closely related to this in the first part
of her "Rough Notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC" [see News & Letters,
Jan./Feb. 1999] in quoting Lenin's statement that "the general exists
only in the singular and through the singular." This is what happens
to the value-form of a product of labor under capitalism. The general,
value, exists only through the singular, in the relation between
particular use-values, just as these singular use-values "exist only
in the connection that leads to the general" form of value.
Four, and most important, is the centrality of the notion, the realm
of subjectivity and freedom, in delineating the logical categories.
This is central to Hegel. The Doctrine of the Notion, the realm of
subjectivity or freedom, is not simply the conclusion of his LOGIC;
it is intimated in its very originating principle. As he put it in
the PHENOMENOLOGY, "Every beginning must be made with the Absolute,
though it is Absolute only in its completion."
This is the approach Marx follows in CAPITAL, by bringing in the
realm of subjectivity or freedomthe notion of freely associated
laborright in chapter 1. This is no mere add-on or external addition.
Envisioning the new society is essential in order to see through
the perverse nature of value production itself. In making the
Doctrine of the Notion integral from its first chapter, CAPITAL
becomes no mere delineation of a logic of domination, but rather
the expression of a philosophy of liberation.
Peter Hudis
From class 2: The Phenomenon of Capitalism: The
Commodity-Form
In 1914, Lenin wrote that one could not understand CAPITAL without
studying the whole of Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC. Most post-Marx
Marxists have at best looked at being and essence in CAPITAL, but
not at how the third book of Hegel's LOGIC, the subjective logic
or the notion with its logic of freedom, relates to Marx.
Although the context was a letter trying to convince a youth to
study the whole of Hegel, Engels probably started us down this road
when he wrote: "If you compare development from commodity to capital
in Marx with development from being to essence in Hegel you have a
fairly good parallel" (letter of Nov. 1, 1891 to Conrad Schmidt).
As post-Marx Marxism elaborated this, Marx in Vol. I of CAPITAL
supposedly discusses the surface level of the market in the first
chapter, but then exposes it as false by pointing to the underlying
production relations that are the true essence of capitalism, all
developed in the rest of the book. However, this leaves out the
subjective or notional side, the fact that the worker not only
suffers, but also struggles to be free. This is the element that
emerges forcefully already in chapter 1, in Marx's discussion of
freely associated labor as the future in the present. Contra Engels,
this is not only being and essence, but also notion.
In his preface to the most recent translation of Vol. I, the
Trotskyist economist Ernest Mandel stumbles over this very point,
reducing our goal to "capitalism's replacement by a classless society
of associated producers" (p. 86). Raya Dunayevskaya catches him, writing
that in refusing to write "freely associated" as had Marx, Mandel here
"perverts the whole concept of freedom" (MARX'S CAPITAL AND TODAY'S
GLOBAL CRISIS, p. 18). This is not unrelated to the fact that for
Mandel, a collectivist totalitarian society like Stalinist Russia,
with its associated but hardly free labor, was superior to private
capitalism, while to a Marxist-Humanist such state-capitalism has no
advantages over the other kind.
There's another reason not to rush to essence, however, which is
that being or phenomenon, as Dunayevskaya warns us repeatedly in her
notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC, should not be dismissed. This is
key because when human relations appear as relations between things,
this is not a false appearance that hides the truth. Instead and more
ominously, it is an appearance that reflects essence, for as Marx
writes, that is what human relations under capitalism really are.
Only freely associated labor, he writes, can break that up and
remove the veil and the oppression of the fetishism of commodities.
Only then will human relationships be one of a free association
while simultaneously becoming transparent and clear once again. The
fetish imprisons even the theoretician who opposes capitalism, he
implies.
Yet isn't Marx also implying here that he, a theoretician and not
a worker, has penetrated the fetish, not by participating in an
experiment in freely associated labor like a worker inside the Paris
Commune, but through the power of abstraction, through his historical
and dialectical analysis of capitalism?
And once Marx has published this in CAPITAL cannot others therefore
gain those same insights by studying it, as we are doing? Through
doing that, don't we begin to reach the point where, as Raya
Dunayevskaya puts it, "thought molds experience" in a way that
"determines" experience (PHILOSOPHY AND REVOLUTION, p. 13)? Doesn't
this allow us to penetrate the fetish, since Marx's dialectical thought,
once we embrace it, is now molding our experience in a new way? Won't
that give direction to the activity not only of intellectuals and youth,
but also of workers?
Kevin Anderson
From class 3: The Essence of Capitalism: The
Labor Process
It is only by descending into the production process that Marx is
able to go beyond the REFLECTION of the form of value as exchange value
to the essence and form of value itself.
In the labor process, labor's twofold character presents itself first
as a certain quality and the expenditure of a certain quantity of labor.
By the expenditure of a certain quantity of labor, measured by the
socially necessary labor time of the factory clock, a new amount of
value is added to the products of labor; at the same time, by its
qualitative property as a particular kind of labor, "the original values
of the means of production are preserved in the product" (CAPITAL, Vol. I,
trans. Ben Fowkes, p. 309).
The powerful duality in this is that labor as MEDIATION in the
process of production between the objects of production and the
products of production is also, or for that very reason, the key to
establishing new social relations.
As Dunayevskaya noted in a Feb. 25, 1949 letter to C.L.R. James on
Hegel's category of law in the Doctrine of Essence: "law in the sense in
which Marx uses 'absolute general law'... can only be abrogated by the
mediation of the proletariat establishing different social relations"
(THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION, 1600).
It is essential to stress this dual aspect of labor, i.e., as what at
once creates, transfers, and preserves value, and what, for that very
reason, can abrogate the LAW of value and the general law of accumulation.
Thus, it is not just that Marx split the category of labor, but that
lodged within that duality is the revolutionary impulse to tear-up the
value form by its roots. That is so whether the revolt is at the point
of production, or is against the exploitative manifestations of the value
form outside of production, as in the case of the 1992 Los Angeles
rebellion.
Of Hegel's dialectic in the Doctrine of Essence, Raya says,
"What a dialectician that Hegel was; nothing else can explain the sheer
genius of that man's language which defines identity as 'unseparated
difference and now as he enters Actuality and totality asserts that
totality is found as SUNDERED COMPLETENESS'" (RDC, 1601). This speculative
standpoint needed to hold contradictory determinations together as one is
evident in the following formulation by Marx: "...the two properties of
labor, by virtue of which it is enabled in one case to preserve value and
in the other to create value, within the same indivisible process are
different in their very essence" (CAPITAL, p. 309).
Philosophically speaking, what is important is that while Hegel's
concepts of identity and totality are found in the the Doctrine of
Essence of his SCIENCE OF LOGIC, his speculative grasp of them
transfers them to the Doctrine of the Notion. Likewise, we also see
that insofar as Marx grasps the inseparability of value preserved and
value added to the products of labor as directly proportional to each
other, he has comprehended the unity of concrete and abstract labor,
i.e., the qualitative and quantitative aspects of the labor process,
and of the relation of subject to object that becomes perverted under
the relentless regimen of the factory clock.
This, in embryo, is Marx's notion of surplus-value. When Marx's
concept of surplus-value does appear full-blown in the production
Process, it is as the "Rate of Surplus Value" which is equally the
"Degree of Exploitation of labor-power" (p. 320). In other words,
surplus-value is from its first appearance in the production process
a result achieved through the perversion of the labor process, that
of the relationship of subject to object.
Lou Turner
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