Philosophic Dialogue
October 2000
Concept of revolutionary organization
by Gerard Emmett
I want to say something in response to Cyril Smith's "Philosophic Dialogue"
in the July 2000 issue of NEWS & LETTERS. If this is an example of the kind
of rethinking that might be going on today, then it is real cause for
optimism. I hope therefore that this will be accepted in a spirit of
dialogue.
Smith's article interests me as an example of the drive to separate
philosophy and organization that seems to really inhere in all of post-Marx
Marxism. In this particular case-and there are many other ways of making
this separation-Smith bases himself on Marx's 1844 "Critique of the
Hegelian Dialectic."
As Smith says, "Here Marx shows that Hegel stays within the confines of
philosophy, and thus remains at home within what he called 'estrangement.'
He also attacks Hegel because he 'posited man as equivalent to
self-consciousness.'"
Smith continues, "[Dunayevskaya] quotes quite correctly Hegel's statement
that 'the truths of philosophy are valueless apart from their
interdependence and organic union.' But that implies that we can't pick out
those bits of Hegel's work which appear to fit in with our own
revolutionary ideas. We must take him as a whole. Remember that Hegel
clearly situates his massive body of thought within the historical context
of his own time and place, in the aftermath of the French revolution, in
backward Germany. 'Applying' it to the 21st century, it seems to me, is to
do it injury and to blunt Marx's critique.
"I believe that Dunayevskaya's refusal to attend to Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF
RIGHT illustrates this mistaken attitude. Marx actually made this book the
starting point for his life long struggle with Hegel, when he wrote his
1843 'Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of the State.'"
DUNAYEVSKAYA AND HEGEL'S PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT
Cyril Smith isn't the only one who has seen the PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT as an
issue for Dunayevskaya's Marxist-Humanism. There is also her correspondence
from 1986 with non-Marxist Hegel scholar Louis Dupre on the Idea of
Cognition, part of her work on the dialectics of philosophy and
organization. In a "Random Thoughts" of Jan. 5, 1987 (THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA
COLLECTION, 10846) she quotes from Dupre's response to her own letter:
"...he agrees with me...that 'the eternal idea is ceaseless motion, the
movement itself,' whereupon he begins disagreeing: 'But I no longer follow
you when you call the eternal idea "revolution in permanence." Your social
interpretation is, in my opinion, not supported by Hegel's text. The entire
concept of social revolution belongs to the practical order which itself is
never absolute. I suspect that the real answer to your question lies in the
PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT...'
"At that point he rejects my interpretation with par. 577 as being any sort
of 'entrance into the new society. I would rather read it as an entrance
into philosophy.'"
So both Smith and Dupre see a stumbling block for Marxist-Humanism in the
PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT; for Smith, philosophy can't be made to comprehend
revolutionary, "practical-critical" activity; and for Dupre, the
"practical" can't be made to carry the weight of the philosophic
"absolute." It is really this deep background in Dunayevskaya's unfinished
work on the dialectics of philosophy and organization that ultimately makes
Cyril Smith's "Philosophic Dialogue" so challenging.
In response, I would just like to look at a few key points in the copious
body of ideas that is represented by the works of Hegel, Marx and
Dunayevskaya.
COPIOUS BODY OF IDEAS
To begin with Hegel, and to return to his own "philosophic moment" in the
PHENOMENOLOGY OF MIND: he follows the forms of Spirit that have presented
themselves in thought and history up to the final stage of the
PHENOMENOLOGY, "Absolute Knowing." What comes to the forefront here for
Hegel is "organization":
"The goal, which is Absolute Knowledge or Spirit knowing itself as Spirit,
finds its pathway in the recollection of spiritual forms as they are in
themselves and as they accomplish the organization of their spiritual
kingdom. Their conservation, looked at from the side of their free
existence appearing in the form of contingency, is History; looked at from
the side of their intellectually comprehended organization, it is the
Science of the ways in which knowledge appears" (A. V. Miller, trans., p.
493).
In the activity of Absolute Spirit in the final paragraph (577) of
PHILOSOPHY OF MIND, you do indeed seem to see this organization there:
"...it is the nature of the fact, the notion, which causes the movement and
development, yet this same movement is equally the action of cognition. The
eternal idea, in full fruition of its essence, eternally sets itself to
work, engenders and enjoys itself as absolute Mind" (William Wallace,
trans. p. 314-15).
We often ask why it is that the "logical" pattern of the final three
syllogisms in this work isn't followed out. You have par. 575,
Logic-Nature-Mind, the form of Hegel's ENCYCLOPEDIA; and par. 576,
Nature-Mind-Logic, "where Mind reflects on itself in the Idea" and
"philosophy appears as a subjective cognition, of which liberty is the aim,
and which is itself the way to produce it." With par. 577, you don't go (in
a sense) "backward" to Logic, but rather you are faced with Nature, Mind,
and the Idea in a new unity of philosophy and the organization of its
existence. Coming at the end of the ENCYCLOPEDIA, as well as at a late
date in Hegel's own mortal life, can this be seen as an expression of the
way in which he hoped that his philosophy would exist in the world?
In any event, if we do now trace a path backward in the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
we see how this philosophic unity is a judgment already contained in and
upon other sections of the work, a principle that measures them-for
example, at the end of the section "Mind Subjective" (par. 482), where
Hegel states "If to be aware of the Idea-to be aware, that is, that men are
aware of freedom as their essence, aim, and object-is matter of
speculation, still this very Idea itself is the actuality of men-not
something which they have, as men, but which they are." (Think of par.
577's "process of the objectively and implicitly existing Idea.")
Hegel further states that in the form of religion, this state of affairs
"...must appear" and "become an influence to oppress liberty of spirit and
to deprave political life." This is a powerful and principled critique of
reality, not at all what one associates with the false image of Hegel as an
apologist for Prussian absolutism or nationalism. But it may also be true
here, as Cyril Smith points out, that there can be found seeds of the kind
of accommodation to reality that many of Hegel's followers have objected to
in the PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT. This was not an objection that began with Marx,
but was present from the time this work was first published.
In regard to Marx's critique-by far the most profound-it might help to look
at Hegel's analysis of the commodity form in the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND. This
is in the section "Mind Objective," under the heading of "Law" and
"Contract." In par. 494 Hegel takes up the commodity and gets as far with
it as the concept of use-value and exchange-value:
"...there is put into the thing or performance a distinction between its
immediate specific QUALITY and its substantial being or VALUE, meaning by
value the quantitative terms into which that qualitative feature has been
translated. One piece of property is thus made comparable with another, and
may be made equivalent to a thing which is (in quality) wholly
heterogeneous. It is thus treated in general as an abstract, universal
thing or commodity."
The commodity form here continues to exist in the framework of law as Hegel
develops it. This helps you to see why chapter 1 of CAPITAL is where Marx
both re-creates Hegel's dialectic of freedom most fully and yet concretely
goes much farther than Hegel ever could have.
ORGANIZATION AND MARX'S CRITIQUE OF HEGEL
Chapter 10 of Dunayevskaya's ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION AND MARX'S
PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION is profound on the relation between Marx and
Hegel, and the "Great Divide" with Marx's re-creation of Hegel's dialectic
in chapter 1 of Capital. But (as Smith has suggested) I want to go back now
and look at Marx's critique of Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT. The first and
longer version of Marx's critique-of which the more compact, well-known and
brilliant essay of 1843 is a kind of summation-doesn't in any way throw
over Hegel's concept of the Idea of freedom as the measure of reality, in
this case as the measure of the German reality to which Marx sees Hegel
accommodating himself.
Far from rejecting Hegel's dialectic in his brilliant 1843 essay, Marx uses
Hegel's concept of the "inverted world" from the "Culture" section of the
PHENOMENOLOGY to rip to shreds the whole of the backward German reality. As
well, Marx extends that critique of backward Germany to that which is
unconsciously retrograde in the whole of modern reality, including the
supposedly more economically and politically advanced nations of France and
Britain. Further, Marx here puts to the "practical party," who would
"abolish philosophy without realizing it," the necessity for a philosophic
confrontation with reality.
The criticism Marx makes of social relations, "the human world, the state,
society," gets deepened and extended-including as the unmasking of
commodity fetishism, bringing that overriding form of social
unconsciousness into the light of reason-over a lifetime of Marx's theory
and practice. But the most immediate fruit of Marx's critique of Hegel
appears in 1844 in Marx's ECONOMIC AND PHILOSOPHIC MANUSCRIPTS,
specifically his "Critique of the Hegelian Dialectic."
Place the "Critique of the Hegelian Dialectic," which points to the
"positive moments of Hegel's dialectic" and then immediately looks at the
communist movement in that light, beside "Private Property and Communism,"
where Marx re-creates the concept of "self-consciousness" that he has been
critiquing in Hegel: "Communism as a fully developed naturalism is humanism
and as a fully developed humanism is naturalism. It is the definitive
resolution of the antagonism between man and nature, and between man and
man. It is the true solution of the conflict between existence and essence,
between objectification and self-affirmation, between freedom and
necessity, between individual and species. It is the solution of the riddle
of history and knows itself to be this solution."
The very next sentence of "Private Property and Communism" in fact seems to
echo the final paragraph of Hegel's Phenomenology on "Absolute Knowing,"
with "the whole historical development...the real genesis of communism (the
birth of its empirical existence) and its thinking consciousness, is its
comprehended and conscious process of becoming...." (T. B. Bottomore,
trans.).
Again, what I think you are seeing with this appropriation of
"self-consciousness" is the birth of the "party," or the birth of Marx's
concept of organization as the responsibility for the idea of revolution in
permanence. Here, I want to look at some of the most important
organizational documents that came from the pen of Marx. In these are what
might be called "appearances" of Marx's philosophy of revolution in
permanence. For instance, in the COMMUNIST MANIFESTO the vision and
principle of the new, human society is expressed as, "The free development
of each is the condition for the free development of all."
In Capital itself there is the vision of "freely-associated labor"
stripping away the fetishism of the commodity form. And in the 1875
CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAM we have Marx's fullest projection of the role
of freely creative labor in a new human society. As Dunayevskaya summarizes
the meaning of this document, in which Marx measures the reality of the
existing "Marxist" movement by his own body of thought, "What must tower
above all struggles against exploitation, nationally and internationally,
is the perspective of a totally classless society; the vision of its ground
would be 'from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.'" And she adds, "The revolution that would overthrow capitalism would have
to be a great deal more total in its uprooting of the old than just
fighting against what is. Thus Marx says that to reach the communist stage,
there would have to be an end to the 'enslaving subordination of the
individual to the division of labor and therewith also the antithesis
between mental and physical labor...'" (ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION
AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION, p. 156-157).
It would be impossible to imagine this profound level of "economy," of the
living human being's interaction with his/her environment, without as well
the highest level of "philosophic consciousness," or profound grasp of its
meaning. In short, what you are brought back to here is the unity of
organization and what Marx called "principle"-and what remains for us today
the ground for taking up the dialectics of philosophy and organization.
What I am reminded of here also, to return from the future to Hegel once
more, is par. 577 of the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND: "...in full fruition of its
essence, eternally sets itself to work, engenders and enjoys itself as
absolute Mind," as compared to Marx's "labor from a mere means of life, has
itself become the prime necessity of life..." from the CRITIQUE OF THE
GOTHA PROGRAM.
If I can jump ahead now to 1953, just to ask one question. Based upon the
work of Marx and Hegel, did Dunayevskaya have the right to translate
Hegel's final paragraph in the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND as "We have entered the
new society" in her letter of May 20, 1953? It seems to me that what
Dunayevskaya accomplished there was to strip away the last fetishism from
the concept of revolutionary organization in a way that could potentially
allow the revolutionary movement to come into a deeper unity with
itself-what Marx was doing in re-creating the self-consciousness that he
criticized in Hegel. In other words, then and later she was re-creating for
organization the whole philosophic development by which Marx created his
own body of ideas-the role of philosophy and revolution in the coming-to-be
of a new form of spirit, a new way of being free in the world, a new
society but, first of all, the power to project such a thing.
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