Is Marxism deterministic?

ISR Issue 58, March-April 2008


CRITICAL THINKING


Is Marxism deterministic?

PHIL GASPER argues that Marx's theory of history is vital for
understanding social change, but it doesn't claim that socialism is
inevitable

KARL MARX'S key idea, in the words of his collaborator Frederick
Engels, was that "the production of the immediate material means of
subsistence and consequently the degree of economic development attained
by a given people or during a given epoch form the foundation upon which
the state institutions, the legal conceptions, art, and even the ideas
on religion, of the people concerned have been evolved." Moreover, all
class-based societies are characterized by conflict between exploiters
and exploited that can only be ended by their revolutionary
transformation.

One of the most common misconceptions about Marxism is that it is a
deterministic theory that sees the course of history as preordained by
economic and social forces. According to one recent commentator, for
example, "In Marx's theory, the oppressed class does not need to hope
for social justice as merely a tentative possibility, because the laws
of history are on their side and guarantee the outcome."

Misinterpretations like this are often based on isolated quotations
from Marx's writings taken out of context, such as the passage in the
Communist Manifesto that declares, "the victory of the proletariat [is]
inevitable." But this statement is simply a rhetorical flourish aimed at
spurring on the Manifesto's readers, since a few pages earlier Marx and
Engels had already pointed out that the class struggle has no
predetermined result, and can end "either in the revolutionary
reconstitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the
contending classes."

Others have believed that since Marx and Engels saw themselves as
offering a scientific account of society, they were therefore committed
to the existence of deterministic laws that would either leave no room
for human agency and struggle to play a significant role or determine
the outcome of such struggle. This argument rests on the false
assumption that science is necessarily deterministic. But that idea is
no longer accepted even in the physical sciences, let alone the
biological and social sciences.

When Marx describes what he sees as the laws of motion of capitalism,
he describes tendencies, not deterministic laws. So, for example, he
argues that there is a tendency for the rate of profit to fall in
capitalist economies, since labor is the ultimate source of value and
production tends to become more capital intensive. However, he
immediately goes on to make clear that there are many counteracting
influences that can keep the rate of profit high, including increasing
the intensity of exploitation, pushing down wages below the value of
labor power, lowering the value of capital goods, and the effects of
foreign trade.

The upshot is that Marx does not claim that the rate of profit must
always and everywhere decline under capitalism (which it obviously does
not do), and if the rate of profit remains high for relatively long
periods of time, Marxists have plenty of resources available to explain
why this might be the case.
But while some have criticized Marxism for being deterministic, others
have claimed that a theory of historical tendencies rather than
deterministic processes is equally problematic.

This was the argument of the philosopher Karl Popper, who claimed that
Marxism is unscientific because it "is not refutable by any conceivable
event." According to Popper:
In some of its earlier formulations.[the] predictions [of Marxist
theory] were testable, and in fact falsified. Yet instead of accepting
the refutations the followers of Marx re-interpreted both the theory and
the evidence in order to make them agree. In this way they rescued the
theory from refutation; but they did so at the price of adopting a
device which made it irrefutable.and by this stratagem they destroyed
its much advertised claim to scientific status.

Popper's argument remains influential, even though philosophers of
science have been shooting holes in it for several decades. To begin
with, there is nothing wrong with modifying a scientific hypothesis when
it fails to fit with the evidence. In fact it would be crazy to adopt
the practice of abandoning a hypothesis every time it made an incorrect
prediction, particularly if it already has a track record of success.

In fact, Popper initially argued that Darwin's theory of evolution is
also unscientific because it "is not refutable by any conceivable
event." Later, Popper retracted the claim that Darwinism is
unscientific, but in doing so he effectively abandoned his whole account
of what makes something scientific.

Popper assumes that scientific theories are tested by making accurate
predictions that can be compared with the results of observation. But
many sciences don't make precise predictions. Darwin's theory does make
some predictions-for example, that we won't find a rabbit fossil in a
two-billion-year-old rock-but it doesn't predict where we will find any
particular fossils, or what species we will find in particular
geographical areas, or how well adapted particular species are to their
environments. And it can't predict the future course of evolutionary
development.

However, while Darwin's theory isn't very good at making predictions,
it is very good at generating explanations. It can explain the patterns
we observe in the fossil record, the facts of biogeographical
distribution, and why organisms are only imperfectly adapted to their
environments. It's because it can explain these facts, and many others,
by showing how natural selection acting on populations over time can
account for what we observe, that Darwin's theory is so well
established.

Darwinism is compatible with many conceivable observations. If
distinctive species of land mammals are found on an island many miles
from the mainland, the theory can explain that. If there are no land
mammals on the island, the theory can explain that too. But that doesn't
mean that the theory couldn't be refuted. If in order to explain the
biological facts, Darwinians were forced again and again to make highly
implausible assumptions, or if someone could come up with a better
explanation of the evidence, then we would have reason to reject the
theory. But evolutionary explanations don't require implausible
assumptions, and there are no remotely satisfactory alternatives that
can explain the same range of biological facts.

Marxism is in these respects analogous to Darwinism. It is not
particularly good at making predictions, because the outcome of social
and historical processes depends on too many interacting factors; and
often, quite small differences between two otherwise similar situations
can lead to very different outcomes. But it is highly successful in
generating explanations, and showing which strategies for social change
are likely to be successful and unsuccessful.

As an illustration of the difficulties of prediction, consider
something that Leon Trotsky wrote about the Nazis' rise to power in
Germany in the 1930s. Trotsky's analysis of fascism is a brilliant and
incisive application of Marx's framework to understand a complex
historical and political development. Briefly, Trotsky analyzed fascism
as a reactionary political movement based on the petite bourgeoisie,
which emerged in a period of major economic crisis in reaction to the
growth of mass revolutionary consciousness among the working class.

The fascists were anti-working class, but they were also, in rhetoric
at least, highly critical of big capital. Hitler attacked both Communism
and the financial system as part of an international Jewish conspiracy.
Despite this, the German bourgeoisie turned to the Nazis in the early
1930s since the latter offered the only way of both crushing the
possibility of working-class revolution and of pursuing Germany's
imperialist ambitions.

Trotsky pointed out the tensions that resulted from this alliance. He
wrote: "While it makes use of fascism, the bourgeoisie nevertheless
fears it," and he noted that the Nazis' aggressive promotion of their
racist, pseudo-revolutionary ideology meant "playing with fire for the
big bourgeoisie." Nevertheless, Trotsky assumed that after the Nazis
took power in 1933, they would quite rapidly become a military
dictatorship acting in the interests of the German bourgeoisie.

This prediction was entirely reasonable given the Marxist view of the
dominance of economics over politics, but it turned out to be mistaken.
The conflicts between the Nazis and the traditional German ruling class
were never fully overcome, and in fact as World War Two progressed, they
became more pronounced, with the Nazis increasingly pursuing policies
that were detrimental to both the war effort and to German capitalism,
including most notably the Holocaust.

What Trotsky did not foresee was that in the context of the economic
crisis of the 1930s, the Nazi regime was able to construct a huge state
sector of the economy, effectively translating political power into
economic power. This economic base gave the Nazis the ability to
dominate private capital and to pursue their own ideological agenda.
None of this takes away from Trotsky's analysis of fascism, which made
clear the urgency of united working-class mobilizations to fight it. The
tragedy was not that Trotsky was unable to predict in detail the future
course of Nazism in power, but that there was no political organization
capable of putting his ideas into practice.

But this example illustrates that Marxism as a theory is tested by its
ability to explain events, not to predict them. In retrospect it is
possible to explain the Nazis' rise to power and their subsequent
political trajectory in Marxist terms, but it was impossible to predict
all of this in any detail before it happened, given the complexity of
the many interacting elements that underlay what happened.

Marxism does not offer a deterministic account of society and history,
and in fact it is not possible to do so. What it does offer is a
scientific account of the social factors and contradictions that make
certain futures possible or likely, and other futures unlikely or
impossible. It is not a theory of the inevitability of the socialist
transformation of society, but rather an account of the social factors
and circumstances that make such a future possible and a guide to action
for those fighting for socialism.

A moment ago I argued that the complexity of social life makes accurate
prediction impossible. But preeminent among the complexities is the role
of human choice and intervention. A persistent theme in Marx's work from
his earliest writings to his final letters is the crucial role of human
agency in transforming society. In his most famous formulation, he puts
it this way:"Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they
please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under
circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past."

Marxism endeavors to provide a scientific understanding of those
circumstances, which both set limits on what humans can do in any
specific historical period, but which also create opportunities for
individuals, groups, and classes to advance their own interests.
The broadest example of a limit on action is the fact that the level of
material production in a given society restricts the possible forms that
can be taken by the relationships of ownership and control. People have
dreamed of a society free from exploitation and oppression for
centuries, but socialism only became a historical possibility when the
level of material production had increased to a sufficient level of
abundance under capitalism.

Capitalism also provides an example of the way in which changed
circumstances create new opportunities for social actors. By
concentrating workers in integrated workplaces and large urban centers,
the capitalist mode of production provides the working class with the
opportunity to fight collectively for its interests and to transform the
whole of society. Marxism can help illuminate those possibilities and
help the working class to grasp them. But it is not a theory that this
will or must happen automatically.

There is, however, one very general prediction that Marxism does make
about the future of capitalist society-either it will be overthrown by
socialist revolution or it will result in some form of barbarism,
whether that be social collapse or environmental catastrophe. Marx's
theory of history is a vital tool in the struggle to bring about the
first of these possibilities and to avoid the second.




Phil Gasper teaches philosophy at Notre Dame de Namur University in
California and is editor of The Communist Manifesto: A Road Map to
History's Most Important Political Document (Haymarket Books, 2005). He
can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 




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