https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/c/naturally-radical-symbiosis

A naturally radical symbiosis
HELEN MERCER recommends a challenging account of the interaction between 
ecological science and dialectical materialism

Thursday 11th Feb 2021

EARLY WARNINGS: (Right) caricature of Edwin Ray Lankester by Leslie ‘Spy’ Ward 
in Vanity Fair 1905
The Return of Nature: Socialism and Ecology
by John Bellamy Foster
(Monthly Review Press, £30)

TWENTY years ago, Marx’s Ecology by John Bellamy Foster mined Marx’s writings 
for what he calls his “ecological materialism,” rehabilitating him as a major 
ecological thinker. Marx pointed out how capitalism disrupts the interactions 
between humans and the earth, creating what Foster calls a “metabolic rift,” 
leading to pollution and environmental degradation.

The central concern of his new book, which traces the work of 
scientist-philosophers whose ideas anticipated the modern ecological movement 
from Marx’s day to the 1970s, explores the evolution of ecological science 
simultaneously with the development of dialectical materialism.

This philosophy is not a dogma but, in the words of JD Bernal, it is a method 
of discovery — “an approach which sees interconnections between and within the 
human and the natural world, all elements constantly acting on and reacting to 
each other in the process of which they are transformed.” As JBS Haldane had 
it, the natural world consists of “processes, not things.”

Foster advances Engels’s argument that humanity’s distinctive relationship with 
nature is through labour, social labour and the use of tools. This central fact 
transforms human beings’ physical attributes — the hand, the tongue, language — 
human society and, simultaneously, nature.

Engels, insisting that nature is the proof of dialectics, warned of the 
unforeseen effects and uncontrolled forces of capitalist production and argued 
for the “conscious organisation of social production.”

Unsurprisingly, much of the energy of scientists in this period was directed 
against the establishment thinking of their day. The opponents of Darwin 
offered an idealist interpretation of evolution, with many of his supporters 
embracing eugenics and outright racism, while “mechanistic” materialists deny 
the application of materialism to the social world and critics of the New Left 
and the Frankfurt School dismissed the application of dialectics to the natural 
world. 

Zoologist E Ray Lankester, a friend of the Marx family who developed the 
concept of bionomics — a term now synonymous with ecology — features 
prominently. So too does William Morris and his world, with chapters charting 
his crossing the “river of fire” and his close reading of Capital.

Through Morris’s rather scattered writings, Foster portrays his artistic and 
political interests and activities as a “unified vision, connecting his 
understanding of the dialectical relations between nature, labour/art, and 
humanity.”

There is a bewildering cast of characters, dramatic tensions and intellectual 
sword fights — scientific endeavour became increasingly collective but it also 
met increasing opposition. Botanist Arthur Tansley, a student of Lankester’s, 
criticised a narrow taxonomic approach to botany, proposing instead the study 
of plants as living organisms in their relationship to their environment.

He and fellow ecologists were denounced as “Bolshevik botanists” by the 
professorial establishment, which derailed his academic career.

The roster of names is increasingly dominated by outstanding scientists with 
strong communist sympathies, some of whom joined the Communist Party of Great 
Britain. Among the many were Bernal, Christopher Caudwell, Hyman Levy, Haldane, 
Joseph Needham and Lancelot Hogben and a picture emerges of a scientific and 
cultural renaissance centred around the 1930s CPGB, sometimes literally in the 
rediscovery of Greek philosophy and especially the works of Epicurus and 
Democritus, the subjects of Marx’s doctoral thesis.

These “red scientists,” already familiar with Marx and with Engels’s 
Anti-Duhring, were deeply influenced by the “epoch-making” appearance of Soviet 
scientists at the second International Conference on the History of Science and 
Technology in London in 1931.

Their approach to the role of science in society acted on a “peculiarly British 
set of conditions... their strong Darwinian backgrounds and their own 
distinctive interpretations particularly of the classical historical 
materialist approach to science,” Foster writes, but here the book fails by not 
considering what links were made with the ideas of British Marxist economists.

Bernal published an account in a 1935 edition of Labour Monthly of Engels as a 
scientist, opening with Engels’s grasp of the fundamental connection between 
science and productivity. Jack Lindsay’s comment on Morris seems very relevant 
here: “Marx and Engels were aware of the disastrous effects on nature that a 
society of commodity-production was liable to inflict; but for Morris the 
awareness of this destructive tendency was central.”

With the Cold War, the close association of British Marxist science with the 
Soviet Union made them prime targets for anti-communists organised through the 
Society for Freedom in Science and the Congress for Cultural Freedom.

The community broke up, with “each doing as he could,” in the peace movement or 
the newly decolonised countries. I suspect that Foster will himself be 
criticised for his relatively even-handed analysis of Soviet science and the 
response of British scientists.

He ends with a sketch of the reworking of ideas from the 1960s in the research 
of Rachel Carson, Stephen Jay Gould, Barry Commoner and EP Thompson. This 
period saw the re-establishment of Bernal’s call for a “science for the 
people,” a programme echoing that of Engels.

Though long and complex, the book has a lyrical style which makes the details 
fascinating and absorbing — and its themes are central to current ecological 
and social crises in the time of Covid.


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