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NEWS & LETTERS, March-April 2005

Youth

A look at the young Marx's humanism

by Carlos Saracino

An extensive analysis of Marx’s early works, especially his 1844 ECONOMIC-PHILOSOPHIC MANUSCRIPTS, is a prerequisite for understanding of Marxism "as a totality," a phrase that I borrow from the 20th-century Marxist-Humanist philosopher, Raya Dunayevskaya. It is here that we cannot fail to find human beings at the center of his inquiry: as the premises of their own history, the makers of their own existence, and the inventors of their own reality.

Indeed, no other thinker focuses so widely on humanity in order to explain the latter in all its aspects. Marx writes that in "direct contrast to German philosophy which descends from heaven to earth...we ascend from earth to heaven." Throughout history--and Germany is certainly not alone in this--writers and thinkers have explained the existence of human beings in all their aspects (from society to art) by resorting to all sorts of mystical explanations, of which the gods have usually been the most prominent. Yet Marx reverses this relationship: gods come to be explained through the (contradictory) existence of human beings.

It is with this purpose of illuminating Marx’s humanism that I will discuss below what I believe to be one of the most important of Marx’s early writings, THE GERMAN IDEOLOGY (1846). Although Engels wrote part of this text, I will refer below only to its main author, Marx.

Many believe that Marx dissipated his previous humanism here, coming to embrace a more mature scientific materialism. Yet where they see a Marx rejecting all idealism and embracing a scientific-empirical method that necessitates relentless action, I see a Marx that further expands his 1844 humanism by expounding his practical-idealist method to show the universality of human beings and the dual nature (conscious and material) of their existence, which is not a sharp dichotomy but an incessant dialectical relationship.

As Marx writes in THE GERMAN IDEOLOGY, "circumstances make men just as much as men make circumstances." The key, then, is not the difference between idealism and materialism, but Marx’s rejection of two one-sided perspectives, abstract idealism and scientific empiricism.

THE FUNDAMENTAL PREMISE

Marx dispels all mysticism and legend regarding the origin of humanity, seizing the fire from the gods and bringing it down to earth and its rational inhabitants. Such a Promethean view of humanity is articulated by Dunayevskaya in her MARXISM AND FREEDOM. Thus, he writes, "The first premise of all human history is...the existence of living individuals."

As Marx wrote in "Alienated Labor" (1844), humans exist not on their own, in virtue of themselves, but as part of nature, as part of that which is the only thing that exists in virtue of itself; thus human material existence depends on nature, "for nature depends on itself."  From this follows the first historical act of humans, who depending on nature for sustenance must acquire or produce their means of subsistence, an act which in turn constitutes the production of their "actual material life." Hence, humans’ productive activity is their life-activity.

To better understand what Marx means by human production, we must refer again to his essay on "Alienated Labor": "man produces freely from physical need and only truly produces when he is thus free; .... thus man also fashions things according to the laws of beauty." Thus, he presupposes the existence in humans of a free, universal consciousness, capable of relating to the material condition multilaterally. From such a concept follows Marx’s idealist-materialist statement to the effect that "free conscious activity is the species characteristic of man." But we notice immediately that Marx can by no means be compared to the abstract idealists, for his view is ultimately bound to the relationship between consciousness and its material condition, and not solely on inward, subjective perceptions.

MODE OF PRODUCTION AS EXISTENTIAL DETERMINANT

In THE GERMAN IDEOLOGY, Marx takes a closer look at the life-activity of human beings and its results, for, as he has shown, what they are is determined by their production, and thus the way in which they produce must determine the way in which they are: "What [human beings] are...coincides with their production, both with what they produce and with how they produce it."

Consciousness, in Marx’s view, is a reflection of humans’ material existence in all its facets--and since the latter is conditioned by the means, the mode and the object of production, then so is the former. Thus. "The production of ideas, of conceptions, of consciousness, is at first directly interwoven with the material activity and the material intercourse of men, the language of real life." All "mental production," from metaphysics to religion, is conditioned by--yet not confined to--the material factors determining production as well as the material relations ensuing from the latter. More specifically, Marx makes clear that humans are the creators of their own ideas and conceptions, and thus he parts completely with other-worldly concepts: "Consciousness can never be anything else than conscious existence, and the existence of men is their actual life process." 

THE FIVE MOMENTS OF HISTORY

Marx now offers a more systematic view of history, its development and the concomitant rise of consciousness that is in direct contradiction to the ideologists’ view. He takes us back to where we started: "the first premise of all human existence and, therefore, of all history... [is] that men must be in a position to live in order to be able to make history." Thus, human life involves the satisfaction of basic needs.

The second premise of history, simply stated, is that the satisfaction of the first needs, which involves both the "action of satisfying...[as well as] the instrument of satisfaction," leads to the development of new needs. We can call this second premise the driving force of development. A very important point here is that Marx does not merely confine his view of human need to scientific and economic development, but also to all sorts of creative activity, from art to poetry.

For instance, World War II spawned several scientific inventions, such as the jet engine, which later became necessary to air travel (a need we had acquired earlier). Yet simultaneously, Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (one of the greatest works by one of the greatest painters in history) was a reaction to the international political climate, and more specifically, to the murderous nature of Nazi aerial war tactics in fascist Spain. Thus, a change in the social relations during that period resulted not only in technological and scientific advances, but also in artistic developments (e.g. the advancement of Cubism).

Lastly we proceed to the third premise of human history, which is that "people, who daily remake their own life, begin to make other people, to propagate their kind: the relation between man and woman, parent and children, the family." The family is the first social relationship, yet with increased development it becomes subordinate to the state.

All three premises of history, says Marx, exist from the very first, not as chronological stages but as "three ‘moments’...which have existed simultaneously since the dawn of history and the first men, and which still assert themselves in history today." Thus he writes: "The production of life, both of one’s own in labor and of fresh life in procreation, now appears as a double relationship: on the one hand as a NATURAL, on the other as a SOCIAL, relationship" (my emphasis). Marx defines a social relationship as "the co-operation of several individuals, no matter under what conditions, in what manner, and to what end."

Now we come to see a fourth "moment": a certain mode of production must be coupled with a certain mode of cooperation, which Marx defines as a "productive force." The productive forces accessible to human beings in a given society determine the nature of that society, and hence, human history "must always be studied and treated IN RELATION to the history of industry and exchange" (my emphasis).

Marx now comes to the fifth "moment," consciousness. Having established four basic premises of history, he says that we also come to know that humans have consciousness, yet that it is "not inherent, not ‘pure’ consciousness." Consciousness, like all of human existence, is bound by matter, and thus consciousness first expresses itself through its material form: language. But once again, we note his implacable emphasis on the material condition, which is not to say that consciousness is completely subordinate to matter, but that it is conditioned by the latter. "Language," Marx says, "is as old as consciousness, language is practical consciousness that exists also for other men...LANGUAGE, LIKE CONSCIOUSNESS, ARISES FROM THE NEED, THE NECESSITY, OF INTERCOURSE WITH OTHER MEN" (my emphasis).

As humanity develops, the division of labor ceases to be solely sexual (arising from the inevitability of the differing roles of man and woman in procreation), or spontaneous (arising out of natural predisposition, "needs, accidents, etc."). It is at this point that division of labor proper--the "DIVISION OF MENTAL AND MATERIAL LABOR" [emphasis added]--makes its first appearance, with the priests entering history as the first ideologists.

Only at this point, Marx argues, can consciousness become "other than consciousness of existing practice... [representing] something without representing something real." Consciousness is now in a position to free itself from the fetters of the material world, and only now can it venture into religion, philosophy, etc. Yet even if the latter comes into contradiction with existing socio-political relations, it is only because consciousness itself, even its "unfettered" manifestations, never ceases to represent at least part of the active life-process of human beings, and thus the material reality by which it is conditioned; thus Marx writes that if any of these "pure" manifestations of consciousness come into conflict with existing relations, it is only because "existing social relations have come into contradiction with existing forces of production."

Consciousness, as a part of human existence since the first moment in history, constitutes an essential reflection (or a dialectical negation) of the existing forces of production and society. Yet insofar as consciousness is interwoven with material activity and reacts to the latter just as much as the latter reacts to it, we see that IT TOO CAN AFFECT CHANGE. But we make this claim carefully, lest we should forget the material medium on which consciousness must, so to speak, exert and manifest itself: the world that we have built through our conscious-material life-activity can only change--TRULY change--by means of a change in the latter.

THE HUMANIST PATH TO REVOLUTION

We have now seen the materialist premises underlying the whole of Marx’s Humanism. We have seen him take the first certainty, the self-evident fact of all of human existence--human existence itself--and build from it a whole new way of looking at the world and its rational inhabitants. Human beings ARE no longer made in the image of God, nor are we because we think--Cogito ergo sum--we now see that God was made in our image, and that we think because we ARE! And who but human beings, by the very PROCESS whereby they live could have created all of this? This is all too evident to us.

What strikes us now with more force than ever is that inherent in the very core of Marx’s thought, from the very first, is the path to revolution. Any and all change in human society derives from a change in the mode of labor, and a free society must of necessity be a society wherein individuals associate freely and spontaneously--wherein they freely relate to the activity and object of production. Thus we see that freedom as an idea no longer retains any independence or any hope of effecting change by itself, for freedom in actuality can be nothing but freedom and spontaneity in production.

We also see that the "uprooting of existing social relations"--the patriarchal family, class society, etc.--depends as much on the development of theory, insofar as producing real change is concerned, as on our actual LIFE-ACTIVITY. Theory acquires its merit and relevance, not insofar as it is a clever logical abstraction or a castle in the air, but insofar as it is PRACTICAL THEORY, that is INSOFAR AS IT HAS THE POWER TO INFLUENCE AND DIRECT ACTION.

Marx has empowered humanity with the fire of creation--it is for no other reason that Dunayevskaya calls Marx’s view Promethean. He writes of human beings that not only create their OWN existence by means of production but that "daily remake their own life": thus the world in which we wake up tomorrow will forever be of our own making. Whether we exterminate all life on earth, or whether we build the material foundations for a new social order--so long as we exist remains OUR choice.

"Human Power is its own end."

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