Δευτέρα 4 Ιουλίου 2022

Joseph Dietzgen

 Μπορεί να είναι εικόνα 1 άτομο και γένι
'Joseph Dietzgen: A Pioneer of Proletarian Science' by Ernest Untermann from International Socialist Review. Vol. 6 No. 11. May, 1906.
 
'TO LAY bare the historical roots of Marxism means to uncover the rootless theories of those who claim to have out grown it. The furies of private interest, who are stirred by every discussion of the question of private property, are re sponsible, on the field of economic science, for a spectacle which would be impossible on any other scientific field. A professor of natural history, who would revert from Darwin's theory of natural development to Cuvier's catastrophic theory, would be met by universal ridicule. But a man who turns back from Marx to Adam Smith or Kant is deemed as worthy of laurels in advance of the fray as a general who takes the field against the Chinese boxers. 
And yet all the confusion which poses nowadays as brand-new wisdom has been sifted and cleared as long ago as the forties of the nineteenth century by Marx and Engels. “No matter how many phantastic dummies of orthodox Marxists are put to the sword, in fortunately bloodless encounters, for the enjoyment of patriots and philistines, the field is ultimately held by the only orthodox Marxist that ever was, namely, the historical course of things.”
'Thus wrote Franz Mehring in the summer of 1901, in his preface to his edition of the "Posthumous Writings of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels.” But a little more than four years of capitalist development have demonstrated that he had too good an opinion of bourgeois science. For in the meantime we have seen official spokesmen in capitalist universities repudiating the Darwinian theories and reverting to the Mosaic theories of creation, without encountering either great ridicule or strong opposition. 
We have seen theological dabblers in natural science openly supported or seriously discussed by "great authorities” in natural science. We have seen metaphysics and theology fastening themselves like a plague upon science and trying to revive the golden age of medieval scholasticism. And yet all this is but another proof that the historical course of things up holds the theories of Marx and Engels. 
Official bourgeois science, like all bourgeois intelligence, is on its declining curve, because the industrial basis of capitalism is disintegrating.
'So much more does the revolutionary proletariat feel the need of a reliable science and realize that science from the point of view of the proletariat, proletarian science, is the only safeguard of its historical interests. 
The defenders and lovers of capitalism may resign themselves to their adulterated science as they do to their adulterated food, and pretend to regard these things as divine retributions for their awful sins, while they persuade themselves that it pays them to do so. But by the same token the proletarian will not be so meek. 
Wherever official science recoils from its own logical conclusions, there the revolutionary proletariat will call for volunteers to follow up the thread of scientific investigation until they find the undisguised truth. 
For only the full truth can make us free. 
Whenever the ruling class shall attempt to drag any truth upon the scaffold, she will find a revolutionary working man ready to die in her defense.
'Under these circumstances it is high time that the American socialist movement should acquaint itself with the first scientific socialist who sprang to the side of Marx and Engels when they flung the gage of battle into the teeth of bourgeois political economists and historians, the man who “sifted and cleared all the confusion which nowadays poses as brand-new wisdom” in philosophy and natural science, just as Marx and Engels did in their own special fields.
'This man was Joseph Dietzgen. Born in 1828, he was but twenty years old (ten years younger than Marx) when the “Communist Manifesto" made a socialist of him and drove him out on the street to make socialist speeches. At 21, the victory of the Central European reaction served to improve his education by driving him to the United States. Two years later he returned to Germany and resumed his father's trade, the tanning business, at the same time spending all his leisure in the study of history and philosophy. 
In 1853, he married. At the age of thirty-one, we find him once more in the United States, trying his luck at storekeeping in Montgomery, Alabama. But his advanced views on the slave question irritated the good southern church people, who compelled the "ignorant foreigner” to flee for his life in 1861.
'He passed the greater part of the following twenty-three years in Germany, except a period of about five years, during which he superintended a government tannery in St. Petersburg, Russia. 
In all these years, he devoted as much time to study as he could spare from the struggle for existence.
'Just as he had been one of the first to respond to the call of the “Communist Manifesto”, so he was one of the first to greet with enthusiasm the publication of the first volume of Marx's "Capital.” It was especially the philosophical element in the Marxian theories which appealed to him, and nearly all the articles which he wrote for the struggling socialist papers of that day are permeated by the breath of a growing scientific philosophy. 
In these articles we find an answer to all the specious and shallow assertions which still pass in certain circles for an evidence of great learning.
'It was but natural that Dietzgen should feel himself attracted by Ludwig Feuerbach even more than Marx and Engels were, and that he remained to the end a close friend of the author of the "Essence of Christianity."
'The first great work of Dietzgen matured in 1869, two years after the publication of the first volume of Marx's “Capital” and two years before the death of Feuerbach. It was written in St. Petersburg and bore the title, “The Nature of Human Brain Work.” Dietzgen took issue in this book with Kant and Hegel, and vindicated the materialist conception of history by demonstrating that the human faculty of thought is itself a material product, not a supernatural entity. At the same time, this line of research led him to develop the Marxian method beyond Marx and the field of human society into a natural and cosmic theory of human understanding.
'Marx and Engels were quick in recognizing the genius of the young tanner, who, although economically of the middle class, was nevertheless, like themselves, a proletarian by intellectual adoption. Marx in his preface to "Capital”, and Engels in his " Feuerbach," have acclaimed Dietzgen as their independent and equal coworker. At the international socialist congress at The Hague, in 1872, Marx introduced him to the assembled delegates with the words: “Here is our philosopher.”
'The fury of the Bismarckian reaction, in 1878, struck also this proletarian philosopher. But it did not prevent him from continuing his contributions to the underground socialist press and his studies. His children had grown up in the meantime, and when his son Eugene emigrated to the United States, in 1880, in order to prepare a home in that country for the Dietzgen family, our philosopher devoted himself to the philosophical education of this son by a series of letters on logic, which showed that the man was marching undauntedly forward on the trail which he had begun to blaze in his younger years. When he followed his son to the United States in 1884, setting foot on this country for the third time, he at once took an active part in the socialist movement of that period by editing first the New York party organ, Der Socialist, and later, after removing to Chicago, by taking charge of the Arbeiterzeitung just when the capitalist storm was wreaking vengeance on the communist anarchists of that city.
'His maturest work, written in 1887, one year before his sudden death, is the “Positive Outcome of Philosophy," in which he perfected his naturalist dialectics into a consistent natural monism.
'The scattered contributions of Joseph Dietzgen to the literature of the socialist movement have been carefully collected by his son Eugene, and the first volume of an English edition will soon be published by Charles H. Kerr & Company, Chicago. A second volume will follow in the not distant future.
'The first volume opens with a sketch of Joseph Dietzgen's life, by his son Eugene Dietzgen, who also contributes an illustration of the proletarian method of study and world-conception, in an essay entitled "Max Stirner and Joseph Dietzgen." This is followed by a collection of some of the most important articles written by Joseph Dietzgen during the early stages of the German socialist movement for some of the first German socialist papers. In the article on " Scientific Socialism," Dietzgen gives a philosophical explanation of the principles of scientific socialism. In his six sermons on “The Religion of Social-Democracy” he shows that morality is based on common needs and that standards of ethics change with changes in the material conditions of peoples. The next essay, on “Social-Democratic Philosophy” demonstrates that human salvation depends on material work, not on theological moonshine, and that socialists, therefore, look for salvation not so much to religious and ethical preaching as to the organic growth of social development. In “The Limits of Cognition," "Our Professors on the Limits of Cognition," and “The Inconceivable,” he draws the veil from the contradictory and immature notions of official theology and science concerning the nature of the human faculty of thought, and shows that this faculty has only natural, not supernatural, limits. In the “Excursions of a Socialist into the Domain of Epistemology," he takes issue with the bourgeois Darwinians and belated followers of 18th century materialism, and shows that even the most advanced scientific materialist of the bourgeoisie, Haeckel, fails to apply his scientific method uniformly (or monistically). Especially the chapter on “Materialism versus Materialism,” in which he sets forth the difference between proletarian monism and bourgeois materialism, and that on “Darwin and Hegel,” in which he compares the relative merits of these two thinkers in the formulation of a scientific theory of evolution, are very valuable and should serve as eye openers, particularly for those who fancy that they have refuted the scientific naturalism of the modern proletariat when they have delivered themselves of a few commonplaces against the bourgeois conception of materialism.
'The socialist movement has hitherto given almost exclusive recognition to Karl Marx and Frederick Engels. It will gradually learn to appreciate also Joseph Dietzgen and give him his dues. Karl Marx was the first to formulate in a general way the theory of historical materialism and to apply Darwinian principles to society by culling the natural kernel from the mystic shell of Hegelian evolution. Dietzgen proved the correctness of this general theory by demonstrating beyond peradventure the material origin and nature of the faculty of thought, thereby completing the explanation given of this faculty by modern biological psychology, and applying the very ultimate conclusions of his discovery with unfaltering consistency.
'It is this discovery of  Dietzgen's which gives the death, blow to all metaphysical and dualistic thought. Once that we have grasped the import of his work, we are armored against all attacks of reactionary speculation.
'Thanks to Joseph Dietzgen, we can apply the historical materialism of Marx with perfect understanding and with a conviction of its irrefutable truth. A proletarian armed with the intellectual weapons of Darwin's natural selection theory, Marx's historical materialism, and Dietzgen's theory of understanding, can approach every phenomenon in society and nature with scientific objectiveness and precision.
'And if the spokesmen of modern bourgeois philosophy prate learnedly of the Passing of Materialism, and if some bourgeois parrots in the socialist movement echo their glittering generalities, with an air of pronouncing the latest scientific truths, it is due to the work of these three revolutionary thinkers that we are enabled to reply: "Speak for yourselves! We know your tune, and we also know why you are singing it. There was a time when you used to sing another tune, which you called the Passing of Socialism. Now that the facts have proved your ignorance of social development, you have taken up the new tune of the Passing of Materialism. This tune is true enough so far as you and your class are concerned. Among you, the passing of materialism, that is to say, the passing of an uncompromising adherence to scientific induction and experiment, is but a reflex in your mind of the Passing of Capitalism. But scientific materialism has found a strong and young champ ion in the rising proletariat, and the Coming of Socialism means the Coming of Scientific Materialism and the Passing of dualistic Theology and Metaphysics.”
The International Socialist Review (ISR) was published monthly in Chicago from 1900 until 1918 by Charles H. Kerr and critically loyal to the Socialist Party of America. It is one of the essential publications in U.S. left history. During the editorship of A.M. Simons it was largely theoretical and moderate. In 1908, Charles H. Kerr took over as editor with strong influence from Mary E Marcy. The magazine became the foremost proponent of the SP's left wing growing to tens of thousands of subscribers. It remained revolutionary in outlook and anti-militarist during World War One. It liberally used photographs and images, with news, theory, arts and organizing in its pages. It articles, reports and essays are an invaluable record of the U.S. class struggle and the development of Marxism in the decades before the Soviet experience. It was closed down in government repression in 1918. 
 

Exclusive contrasts?

When you deny a bipolar contrast in order to propose another reduction to another, you are not always doing something smart, comrade.
Liberal democrats use the ''exclusive contrast'' "totalitarianism-democracy" to nullify the "capital-labor/work" contrast.
This fact, that they use this contrast TO cancel the "capital-labor/work" contrast, does not mean that both contrasts do not exist at the same time as intertwined.
The left ''exclusive contrast'' which reverses the ''exclusive contrast'' they ''use'' liberal democrats with another ''exclusive contrast'' (capital-labour/work contrast), is an anti-dialectical position, wich is so much anti-dialectical as much as is the position they ''use'' the liberal democrats bourgeois.
 
Ιωάννης Τζανάκος
 
 
 
 

Σάββατο 2 Ιουλίου 2022

Questions to Michael Karadjis.

 
Questions to Michael Karadjis.
1. Is the new imperialist world multipolar or (potentially) (again) bipolar?
2. Is the territorial-centric aspect of the new "Eastern" imperialism (as its reactionary aspect) a complementary or an essential element of it?
3. The necessary alliance with the "enemy of the enemy" is a cause of the alienation of the sectarian anti-imperialists of the West, but does it not also pose a danger to the leftists of the East "from the other way around"? Beyond wishful thinking, how and when will the peoples of the whole world meet, when they are thus divided into opposing, necessarily, allied formations?
4. Solve the mystery of the Syrian opposition for me. Aren't the vast majority of the anti-Assad opposition entirely or partial responsible for the jihadism diversion? Caution! I am not saying that the Syrian opposition was (and is) entirely and predominantly jihadist, as the Russian imperialists, Assad and the leftist Stalinist anti-imperialists say, but I am saying that the opposition has responsibilities:
a) because it tolerated the phenomenon, perhaps allied itself with them b ) put Turkey in the game from the beginning, c) it did not for a moment overcome theocracy and political Islam, d) it remained fanatically anti-Kurdish.
Is it so, or not? am I simplifying or saying what is hidden through idealizations?
 
Ιωάννης Τζανάκος
 
 

Παρασκευή 1 Ιουλίου 2022

Anti-ukrainische Kriegspropaganda

 Μπορεί να είναι εικόνα κείμενο

 
Ende eines dreiseitigen Textes über den ukrainischen Nationalismus, oder das, was der Autor dafür hält. 
Der Gedanke ist so deprimierend, dass das Leute lesen könnten, die sich mit der Geschichte des Donbaskrieges nicht so gut auskennen (und vielleicht Rolf Surmann als ja nicht völlig unzurechnungsfähigen Historiker kennen), und dann am Ende wirklich denken, die ukrainische Armee (obwohl nein, es war vor allem das Asow-Regiment persönlich, steht im Absatz drüber) hätte aus reinem Ethnonationalismus diesen Krieg angezettelt, ach was, die Bevölkerung dort, die doch nur russisch sein wollte, "systematisch" bombardiert. 
Man kann das eigentlich nicht anders nennen als anti-ukrainische Kriegspropaganda.
  

The genie in Aladdin's lamp, is out.

 
Most people want to rest within some limits, in the "space" that remains when they "remove" the boundary that delimits that "space" (and any "space").
But the limit, every limit, is this situation that constitutes what "remains" beyond its "self" as a limit.
So our good people, everyday people, priests, ideologues, theologians, discover at some point that in their supposedly non-negotiable "space" there exists the "demon"-limit, and they also learn that this very "demon" makes their resting place a precarious and volcanic place.
They then try to banish, exorcise, expel this precarious and always mixed element, and start the ideological and theological wars, giving this boundary subtantial names and markings.
The fascist then discovers the "Jew" and the sectarian communist the petty bourgeoisie.
All of them are looking for the inner enemy that disturbs the tranquility of their repose within some imaginary non-boundary place-space.
They would all like the boundaries to exist but not bother them so much, to be far from home, in some undefined remote region, somewhere where people live with blurred boundaries and unclear identities.
However, these "distant ones" appear at some point in the quiet dead homes of the confident people, and that's when the "holy fight" of the confident people begins.
I inform them:
The genie in Aladdin's lamp, is out.
 
Ιωάννης Τζανάκος
 
 

Limit

 
Limit/boundary blows up all ontologies.
We are on the limit-line, we are in the limit-line, we are the limit, Ukrainians Greeks Kurds Jews, and we will fuck your ideological holyhouse.
 
Ιωάννης Τζανάκος
 
 

The deeper racism

 
The strongest racism is the racism against blacks/blackness, but the deeper racism is the racism against mongrels.
The mongrel as an entity, in a wider context, is the object of hatred of all ''clear'' "natures".
The mixture is, among other things, a limit, a repressed limit which, acting as an element of those it delimits, reveals them as non-existent, as autogenous.
But even if the pseudo-autogenous "clear" beings "accepted" the "role" of the mongrel-boundary, this (as a possible fact) would not save them from radical questioning, possibly even exposing them to the state of extinction.
For this reason, every limit-mix is ​​unspoken and implicit in every ontological system of thought and action, also in those systems that project themselves as open to the fertility of limits, thus (project themselves) as alien to every ontology.
 
Ιωάννης Τζανάκος