Philosophy and Religion, Part 7b

How Stalin buried Marx
Cyril Smith is very effective in dealing with the dead phrase with a
zombie existence, “dialectical materialism”, never used by Marx,
invented by Kautsky and Plekhanov, and turned into a catch-phrase by
Stalin. The third linked item is Chapter 2, “How the Marxists Buried
Marx” (linked below), from Cyril Smith’s “Marx at the Millennium”,
published in 1998. On the third page of that chapter, Smith wrote:
“… it is appropriate to begin with one of the most widely circulated
philosophical statements of the twentieth century. It starts like this:
“Dialectical materialism is the outlook of the Marxist-Leninist party.
It is called dialectical materialism because its approach to the
phenomena of nature, its method of apprehending them is dialectical,
while its interpretation of the phenomena of nature, its conception of
these phenomena, its theory, is materialistic.
“Historical materialism is the extension of the principles of
dialectical materialism to the study of social life, an application of
the principles of dialectical materialism to the phenomena of the life
of society, to the study of society and of its history.”
“This stuff appeared in 1939. In my view, its method, standpoint,
dogmatic style and conclusions are all utterly opposed to everything
that Marx stood for.”
The author was J. V. Stalin. A little later Smith writes (and he could
have been writing about “Dialego”):
“Let us bring ourselves to look briefly at the way the Stalinist
catechism of 1939 hitched up a highly mechanised materialism with
something called ‘dialectics’. On the one hand, ‘Nature, being, the
material world, is primary, and mind, thought, is secondary.’ What does
this word ‘primary’ mean? Does it mean ‘first in time’ or ‘first in
importance’? Or does it mean that matter ‘causes’ changes in ‘mind’?
Nobody can tell, and precisely this ambiguity conferred mysterious
power.”
Smith shows how even Lenin had been fooled by the catch-phrase:
“In the preface to his 1908 book Materialism and Empirio-Criticism,
Lenin declared: ‘Marx and Engels scores of times termed their
philosophical views dialectical materialism.’ He was so sure about
this, that he felt no need to give any references.
“In fact, there is not one! Marx never employed the phrase in any of
his writings. The term ‘dialectical materialism’ was introduced in 1891
by Plekhanov, in an article in Kautsky’s Neue Zeit. He thought wrongly,
I believe, that he was merely adapting it from Engels’s usage in
Anti-Duhring and Ludwig Feuerbach.”
Cyril Smith did a good job. His work can help those who would wish to
liberate themselves from the dead hands of Plekhanov, Kautsky and
Stalin.
Cyril Smith also does not spare Trotsky, with whom he otherwise appears
to have had some sympathy. The most serious deficiency he finds in
Trotsky, however, is not any of Trotsky’s sins of omission or
dissembling, but Trotsky’s lack of philosophy, and his failure to get
any of his followers to make up his own deficiency. While Lenin made
great progress in philosophy, Trotsky failed altogether, writes Smith.
What Smith is saying is that in the last analysis, it was the inability
to overcome the Philistine, Stalin, through full command of philosophy,
which led to the degradation of the Russian Revolution and its eventual
reversal. Philosophy is the keystone. Without it, the other stones are
bound to fall. Smith says of the Trotskyists:
“But they never had the theoretical resources to penetrate to its
philosophical core. The best they could do was to show that Stalinist
policies and distortions were contrary to the decisions of Lenin’s
party and the teachings of ‘Marxism’.”
The Trotskyists were trapped within the same hall of mirrors that they
had helped Stalin to construct.
The practical work of philosophy is, crucially, to weed out or clip off
the words, dead of meaning, that encumber and trip us in our work; or
otherwise, if possible, to restore their freshness. Some of those words
in our present time might be: “hegemony”, “accumulation”, and “elements
of socialism”.
The other linked item is about “Marxism”, whether there ever was such a
thing, and if so, whether Marx was a “Marxist”. The full Cyril Smith
archive on MIA can be found here.
Click on this link:How The Marxists Buried Marx, 1998, Smith (13629
words)Karl Marx and the Origins of ‘Marxism’, 1998, Smith (4670 words)
Further (optional) reading:Hegel, Economics, and Marx's Capital, 1999,
Cyril Smith (7803 words)The Communist Manifesto after 150 years, 1998,
Smith (8285 words)



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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 8/08/2010 05:29:00 PM

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