Sunday, March 7, 2010
ENGELS ON FREEDOM AND NECESSITY
Thomas Riggins
(Engels and Philosophy VI)

http://paeditorsblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/engels-on-freedom-and-necessity.html

Engels discusses this topic in Chapter XI, Part I of Anti-Dühring
(Morality and Law. Freedom and Necessity). Dühring claims to discuss
the problems of law and politics with knowledge gained from "the MOST
EXHAUSTIVE SPECIALIZED STUDIES." And he contrasts his own in depth
studies with the "admittedly neglected legal studies of Herr Marx."

Well, if Thomas Henry Huxley was Darwin's Bulldog, Engels was Marx's
and nothing sets him off more that Dühring's propensity to portray
himself in a favorable light at the expense of Marx, especially when
Marx's knowledge of the subject matter under review was many
magnitudes greater than the paltry speculations put forth by Dühring.

In his discussion on law and politics Dühring begins by making
sweeping generalizations about the law in general, such as that
"revenge" is the basis of criminal law, and then moves on to
comparisons of French law with the Prussian 'Landrecht'-- all of which
reveals that Herr Dühring knows very little about these matters. He
seems ignorant of the fact that French law,that is, modern civil law
[outside of England] "rests on the social achievements of the Great
French Revolution" as embodied in the Code Napoléon.

Dühring puts himself forward as a great student of the law, but Engels
points out that he is not only ignorant with regard to French law, but
that his ignorance carries over to Roman law and even Germanic law
(especially its English version "which is the only Germanic law which
has developed independently of Roman authority up to the present day
and spread to all parts of the world....")

Dühring's form of socialism has another great defect and that is his
rampant anti-Semitism. Engels says "his hatred of the Jews" is carried
"to ridiculous extremes" which he "exhibits on every possible
occasion." Engels really takes Dühring to task over this issue.
Dühring thinks that hatred of Jews is based on "natural grounds" and
is a "natural judgment" while Engels says it is a wide spread
prejudice "inherited from the bigotry of the Middle Ages."

What is worse is that Dühring thinks one of the arguments in favor of
"socialism" is that it will lead to better methods of Jew control.
These are Dühring's words: "socialism is the only power which can
oppose population conditions with a rather strong Jewish admixture."
Engels sums up his view of Dühring's opinions as those of a man full
of "grandiloquent boasts" and exhibiting "the crassest ignorance."

At this point Engels remarks that when dealing with questions of
morality and law it is hard to ignore the question of "free will." Are
all our actions predetermined or can we be held responsible for them?
Herr Dühring gives two, conflicting, answers to this problem. His
first answer is that there is a tug of war in the mind (brain) between
instincts and reason. Our instincts pull us one way and reason
another. The more rational we are, the more educated and subject to
reason, the less we will be subject to the irrational emotions driven
by out instinctual impulses. Dühring thinks this explanation will do
away with the silly notion of "inner freedom." Each individual's
behavior will be determined by his or her proportion of rational to
irrational "drives".

Engels does not really evaluate this first answer, but says it is
blown out of the water by Dühring's second answer. Engels quotes
Dühring: "We base moral responsibility on freedom, which however means
nothing more to us than susceptibility to conscious motives in
accordance with out natural and acquired intelligence. All such
motives operate with the inevitability of natural law, notwithstanding
an awareness of possible contrary actions; but it is precisely on this
unavoidable compulsion that we rely when we apply the moral levers."

I think the problem is this second answer ends up with "unavoidable
compulsion." Yet the first answer also says about the same thing. The
tug of war between reason and unreason will be resolved by the
preponderance of the strength of each force within the individual.
Engels calls it a "parallelogram of forces" resulting in the action
taken being a mean between them. So perhaps Engels overstates the case
that Dühring's two answers contradict each other.

Be that as it may, Engels is really interested in the second answer.
It is not, he says, the result of any original thinking on the part of
Dühring. It is a dumbed down version of Hegel, as is so often the case
with Dühring's views. It was Hegel who "was the first to state
correctly the relation between freedom and necessity". "Necessity,"
Hegel wrote, " is BLIND only IN SO FAR AS IT IS NOT UNDERSTOOD."

Engels explains that. FREEDOM is knowing what the laws of nature are
and how we can use them "towards definite ends." This is true both for
the natural [or external] realm (physics, chemistry, etc.,) and for
the inner or mental realm. These two sets of laws can be separated
conceptually (the physical and mental) but they are actually one set
in reality. "Freedom of the will therefore means nothing but the
capacity to make decisions with knowledge of the subject."

This means the more knowledge you have, the more educated you are
about the things you are dealing with the FREER you are in dealing
with them and at the same time the more NECESSITY comes into play--
i.e., of knowing what necessary actions must be done to attain the
goal sought. Engels says, with respect to the will, "the uncertainty,
founded on ignorance, which seems to make an arbitrary choice among
many different and conflicting possible decisions, shows precisely by
this that it is not free, that is is controlled by the very object it
should it self control. And since freedom increases with knowledge of
the world it, like equality, and law and morality, is "necessarily a
product of historical development."

The greatest liberation from natural necessity of humankind on record,
yet still strictly determined by physical laws, was the discovery of
how to make FIRE: "the generation of fire from friction." Engels says
that in our [his] age we might think the greatest advance in human
control of nature, and thus in freedom, was the invention of the STEAM
ENGINE and the modern world that it has made possible. We would be
wrong. Fire was the very first of the forces of nature that humans
began to learn how to control and it was this feat of "man" that
"thereby separated him for ever from the animal kingdom."

Nevertheless, the invention of the steam engine was a great leap
forward. Engels thought that the steam engine had so increased the
productive forces of humankind that we could, in the age of steam,
solve the social problem. For the increase in the PRODUCTIVE FORCES
"alone make possible a state of society in which there are no longer
class distinctions" in which there be will enough socially created
product for all and "for the first time there can be talk of real
human freedom"-- that is, "of an existence in harmony with the laws of
nature that have become known."

Well, if we are threatening to destroy our environment, killing the
oceans, and destroying the last of the oxygen producing rain forests
(the lungs of the planet) and billions of people are facing starvation
and famine, something has gone amiss in the last century and a half
and we are definitely out of sync with the laws of nature while the
increase in the productive forces is bringing servitude not freedom to
masses of humanity. Engels vision is on hold.

Engels, however, was no utopian socialist, and would not have been
shocked if he had been told that the human race was still many
generations away from his musings on the attainment of "real human
freedom." He had a longer time frame than many of his erstwhile
followers who throw in the towel whenever there is a major setback.
"But how young the whole of human history still is," he wrote, "and
how ridiculous it would be to attempt to ascribe any absolute validity
to our present views, is evident from the simple fact that all past
history can be characterized as the history of the epoch from the
practical discovery of the transformation of mechanical motion into
heat up to that of the transformation of heat into mechanical motion."
Engels' views are, of course, not absolutely valid, but I see nothing
that has happened in the miniscule slice of time that has expired
since he expressed them and the present day which would lead one to
think they are out of date.

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