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PART II
THE COMPONENT PARTS OF
MARXISM – LENINISM – MAOISM
In Part II we take up separately the various
component parts of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism. This will help us to
understand various aspects of MLM in greater depth. It will also help us
to grasp MLM in the continuity and the process of development of its
various parts.
Chapter X
Philosophy
Philosophical Materialism
Dialectics
The Materialist Conception of History
Lenin's Contribution to the
Development of
Marxist Philosophy
Mao's Contribution to the Development of Marxist Philosophy
We have seen
in the foregoing pages how the working class had emerged as a class-for-ifself
by the mid 19th century – as a consolidated fighting force and a new
motive force of history. The bourgeoisie, that had been until then a
motive force for social development, began to be transformed into an
obsolete force that is doomed to disappear from the centre stage of
history.
Marx and
Engels recognised that the proletariat has to emerge as the most
revolutionary social class and a motive force for social development.
Besides, they also recognised that the proletariat in the course of
liberating itself from wage slavery, will also liberate the entire
society from all class exploitation and oppression and advance towards a
classless society.
The division
of society into two great classes; the continuous deterioration of the
living conditions of the working classes; the ever increasing
impoverishment of the masses; the recurrent crises in capitalist
production – all these shattered the illusion that capitalism and its
product, liberal bourgeois ideology, are the summation of the human
achievements. The gigantic task of overthrowing capitalism and advancing
towards a classless society has been thrust upon the shoulders of the
working class by history. Marx and Engels recognised the necessity for
the working class to have its own world outlook if it has to become
conscious of its historic task and fulfill it.
The
proletariat is a class that has no private property and that can break
its chain of wage slavery only through the abolition of private
property. However, other class ideology had a dominant influence over
the working class and the working class movement at that time. Which
ever class has control over the means of production in society will also
be in a position to dictate the intellectual life. The ruling class
ideology that arises on the basis of private property and serves the
interests of the private property will only serve as intellectual chains
of slavery and can never contribute to working class liberation. Marx
and Engels recognised that the working class can overthrow capitalism
only by developing its own new ideology that represents its class
interests, i.e., which works for the abolition of private property. The
development of a new, scientific world outlook that can represent the
interests of the working class, come to the fore as the immediate
historic necessity for the working class movement at that juncture. Marx
and Engels carried out this historic task most ably and Marxist
philosophy emerged in that course. Marxist philosophy is the world
outlook of the proletariat; it is the world outlook of the advanced
detachment of the working class, the communist party. The basis for the
proletarian party’s theoritical understanding in any sphere is Marxist
philosophy. Marxist philosophy is known as dialectical and historical
materialism.
Marxism is
the revolutionary theory of the working class. Its basis is dialectical
and historical materialism. Hence the aim of Marxist philosophy is to
transform this world in a revolutionary way. As Marx had stated: "The
philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point,
however, is to change it." 1
We have seen
that in the given concrete historical conditions of that time, German
classical philosophy had reached the peak of its development. Dialectics
became manifest in the most revolutionary manner in classical German
philosophy, particularly in the Hegelian philosophy. The uninterrupted
dialectical unity and dialectical motion and development in nature,
society and human thought were reflected in Hegelian dialectics. But,
being an objective idealist, Hegel thought that this dialectical unity
and development are reflection of the dialectical unity and development
of the absolute idea. Thus the dialectical laws that are a reflection in
human consciousness of the objective processes that are taking place in
the real world were turned "upside down" by Hegel. Marx and Engels made
them stand "upright" on their feet. And in this process, they
reconstructed dialectics totally on materialist basis.
Feuerbach
rejected both Hegelian idealism as well as his dialectics. Marx and
Engels not only reconstructed dialectics with a materialistic outlook,
but also made materialism scientific by making the scientific knowledge
as the basis of it. Hence Marxist philosophical materialism and
materialist dialecstic are different from all earlier philosophies.
Marxist philosophical materialism had liberated materialism once for all
from the speculations of philosophers. Rooted firmly in sciences, it has
developed into the most consisting and scientific materialist outlook.
Philosophical Materialism
"The great
basic question of all philosophy, especially of modern philosophy, is
that concerning the relation of thinking and being ...spirit to
nature..which is primary, spirit or nature..The answers which the
philosophers gave to this question split them into two great camps.
Those who asserted the primacy of spirit to nature, and therefore, in
the last analysis, assumed world creation in some form or another..
comprised the camp of idealism. The others, who regarded nature as
primary, belong to the various schools of materialism." 2
— Engels.
"Idealism
considers spirit (consciousness, concepts, the subject ) as the source
of all that exists on earth, and matter (nature and society, the object
) as secondary and subordinate. Materialism recognises the independent
existence of matter as detached from spirit and considers spirit as
secondary and subordinate." 3
— Mao.
Marx and
Engels founded Marxist philosophy firmly in the camp of materialism.
"Marx decidedly rejected not only idealism, which is always connected in
one way or another with religion, but also the views,...of..agnosticism,
criticism and positivism in their various forms, regarding such a
philosophy as a ‘reactionary’ concession to idealism" 4.
While rejecting idealism, Marx and Engels also rejected the ‘old’
materialism of Feuerbach and others, because 1) it was ‘predominantly
mechanical’; 2) it was non-historical, non-dialectical and did not apply
the standpoint of development consistently and comprehensively; 3) it
regarded the ‘human essence’ abstractly and not as the ensemble of all
‘social relations’ and it therefore did not understand the importance of
‘revolutionary, practical activity.’ Thus the ‘new’ materialism-Marxist
materialism-was a materialism rid of all these defects; it was
dialectical materialism.
They defined
matter as material reality existing objectively and that it gets
reflected in human consciousness. The way in which matter was defined by
Marxist philosophical materialism resolved fundamental question in
philosophy with a consistent materialist outlook. Marx and Engels
affirmed that matter is the most general category expressing the
universal essence of all concrete forms and parts of matter. Hence with
the growth of knowledge regarding matter, the concept of matter gets
even broader but does not become obsolete.
Marx and
Engels also proved most scientifically the second aspect in the
fundamental question in philosophy, viz, can human consciousness
properly reflect objective reality? Marxist theory of knowledge totally
rejects agnosticism and skepticism. Engels explain that the world will
remain as a "thing-in-itself" as presumed by Kant but transform into
"thing-for-us". He clarified that some things which are not known at a
given time may be known after sometime but there can never be anything
which remains forever as "thing-in-itself". Marxist theory of knowledge
affirms that man is capable of knowing anything in this world.
Marxist
theory of knowledge asserts that social practice is the source of
knowledge. It also states that social practice is the measure of truth.
It completely rejects rationalist and empiricist trends.
Dialectics
Hegelian
idealist dialectics was reconstructed into the most consistent and
scientific materialist dialectics in Marxist philosophy. Not believing
in the permanence of anything in this world, the materialist dialectics
proclaimed that capitalism is bound to be negated and that human society
will inevitably advance towards communism. No wonder, Marxist dialectics
has remained a threat to bourgeoisie even today.
"According to
Marx, dialectics is ‘the science of the general laws of motion, both of
the external world and of human thought.’" 5
"(The general
nature of dialectics [is]..the science of inter-connections, in contrast
to metaphysics.)"
"It is,
therefore, from the history of nature and human society that the laws of
dialectics are abstracted. For they are nothing but the most general
laws of these two aspects of historical development, as well as of
thought itself. And indeed they can be reduced in the main to three:
The law of
the transformation of quantity into quality and vice versa;
The law of
the interpenetration of opposites;
The law of
the negation of the negation." 6
— Engels
This act of
Marx of discovering the rational kernel of Hegel’s dialectics changed it
radically from being a philosophy of the status quo into a philosophy of
revolution. In the words of Marx, "In its mystified form, dialectics
became the fashion in Germany, because it seemed to transfigure and to
glorify the existing state of things. In its rational form it is a
scandal and abomination to bourgeoisdom and its doctrinaire professors,
because it includes in its comprehension and affirmative recognition of
the existing state of things, at the same time also, the recognition of
the negation of that state, of its inevitable breaking up; because it
regards every historically developed social form as in fluid movement,
and takes into account its transient nature not less than its momentary
existence; because it lets nothing impose upon it, and is in its essence
critical and revolutionary." 9
The Materialist Conception of History
Marx and
Engels gave to philosophy the revolutionary task of changing the world.
As society is the immediate field of activity of the working class, the
revolutionary transformation of the society naturally finds primacy of
place in Marxist philosophy. The materialists prior to Marx and Engels,
including Feurbach, failed to adopt a consistent materialist outlook
towards social phenomenon. On the hand, they applied dialectical
materialism to the history of society and developed historical
materialism. The basis for the materialist conception of history of Marx
is that social being determines the social consciousness. Marx
discovered the dialectical laws of motion of social development on this
basis of most consistent materialist outlook with regard to society.
Historical
materialism asserts that, the basis for is the production of necessities
of life and that is on this basis the superstructure is built. In Marx’s
view the relation between the base and superstructure is not one sided.
Marxism fully recognises that while the mode of production is the
determining element, it also recognises the influence of superstructure
on the base and interaction between them.
Marx himself
summarise as follows:
"In the
social production of their life, men enter into definite relations that
are indispensable and independent of their will, relations of production
which correspond to a definite stage of development of their material
productive forces. The sum total of these relations of production
constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation, on
which rises a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond
definite forms of social consciousness. The mode of production of
material life conditions the social, political and intellectual life
process in general. It is not the consciousness of men that determines
their being, but, on the contrary, their social being that determines
their consciousness. At a certain stage of their development, the
material productive forces of society come in conflict with the existing
relations of production, or – what is but a legal expression for the
same thing – with the property relations within which they have been at
work hitherto. From forms of development of the productive forces these
relations turn into their fetters. Then begins an epoch of social
revolution. With the change of the economic foundation the entire
immense superstructure is more or less rapidly transformed. In
considering such transformations a distinction should always be made
between the material transformation of the economic conditions of
production, which can be determined with the precision of natural
science, and the legal, political, religious, aesthetic or philosophic –
in short, ideological forms in which men become conscious of this
conflict and fight it out. Just as our opinion of an individual, is not
based on what he thinks of himself, so we can not judge of such a period
of transformation by its own consciousness; on the contrary, this
consciousness must be explained rather from the contradictions of
material life, from the existing conflict between the social productive
forces and the relations of production. No social order ever perishes
before all the productive forces for which there is room in it have
developed; and new, higher relations of production never appear before
the material conditions of their existence have matured in the womb of
the old society itself. Therefore mankind always sets itself only such
tasks as it can solve; since, looking at the matter more closely, it
will always be found that the task itself arises only when the material
conditions for its solution already exist or are at least in the process
of formation." 26 During
later years however there was a tendency among followers of Marxism to
overstress the economic aspect and thus arrive at a distorted
understanding in practice. Engels therefore clarified, "According to the
materialist conception of history, the ultimately determining
element in history is the production and reproduction of real life. More
than this neither Marx nor I have ever asserted. Hence if somebody
twists this into saying that the economic element is the only
determining one, he transforms that proposition into a meaningless,
abstract, senseless phrase. The economic situation is the basis, but the
various elements of the superstructure……….also exercise their influence
on the course of the historical struggle, and in many cases preponderate
in determining their form." 27
The theory of
class struggle of Marx emerged out of this materialist conception of
history. He also recognised that the contradiction between productive
forces and relations of production in class society manifests itself as
a class contradiction and it is this class struggle which serves as the
driving force of society. Hence described the history of class society
as a history of a class struggle.
As historical
materialism is an inseparable, living organic part of Marxist
philosophy, it has evolved into a comprehensive, consistent and
scientific outlook.
Marxist
philosophy is not a product of a philosophical urge to create a great
philosophical system. It has evolved in the course of fighting the
ruling class ideology that stood as an obstacle to the immediate
political struggle of the proletariat. That is why Marx and Engels had
not prepared dialectical and historical materialism as a text book. It
was founded and developed in the course of resolving the problems and
challenges faced by the working class movement in the diverse social,
economic, political and historical contexts. It means Marxist philosophy
had taken birth and developed only as a science of revolutionary
practice. Marx and Engels showed utmost interest in applying their
dialectical and historical materialism to formulate various tactics to
be adopted by the working class in diverse conditions. From Communist
League to Second International they used Marxist philosophy as an
ideological weapon to fight the wrong trends in the international
working class movements particularly against anarchism. The tactics
which they formulated for the working class movement from time to time
with this scientific world outlook have been vindicated by history.
Particularly, Paris Commune has incontrovertibly proved that the Marxist
understanding regarding party, state, proletarian dictatorship and such
other aspects is fully correct. Thus Marxism stood the test of time by
basing itself on social practice. Hence Marxist philosophy found
worldwide acceptance as the scientific world outlook of the proletariat.
Lenin’s Contribution to the Development of Marxist
Philosophy
Marx and
Engels gave leadership to the international working class movement at a
time when bourgeoisie was still a progressive class. On the other hand
Lenin led the international communist movement when capitalism was in
the stage of imperialism. With the help of Marxist philosophy that
emerged as creative science of revolutionary practice Lenin analysed the
particularities of the economic political and social conditions of his
time. Kautsky and other opportunist leaders of Second International
tried to transform Marxism into a dogma. For instance they tried to
apply assesments and tactics formulated by Marx and Engels which were
suitable to the concrete conditions of their time to imperialist stage
in a dogmatic manner. Lenin creatively analysed the historical,
political, social and economic conditions of his time from a dialectical
and historical materialistic perspective. He also affirmed that Marx and
Engels too had adopted the same method and to consider assesments and
tactics formulated by them to suit the then existing concrete conditions
as universally applicable ones irrespective of the historical conditions
would amount to a rejection of the essence of Marxist philosophy as a
creative science of revolutionary practice.
In the
ideological and political struggle carried out by Lenin against left and
right opportunists in Russia as well as international communist
movement, Marxist philosophy served as the sharpest theoretical weapon.
In the course of the development of the working class movement Lenin
further deepened the Marxist theoretical understanding regarding party,
state, dictatorship of proletariat etc., (these aspects will be dealt in
the later chapters) thereby enriching Marxist theory as a whole.
Lenin
elaborated all aspects of Marxist philosophy and particularly his
contribution to theory of knowledge and historical materialism have
enriched them further.
In
particular, his criticism on emprio-criticism which came to the fore as
a revisionist trend in philosophy is of fundamental importance. From
then on until today it has served as Marxist critique of the modern
bourgeois philosophical trends. He considered the attack on Marxism in
the name of "New" philosophical trends based on modern scientific
discoveries as a manifestation of the class struggle in the
philosophical front. He proved that all the "New" philosophical theories
were no different from the old subjective idealism of Berkely and Hume.
Lenin thus defeated most ably this attack on Marxism in the
philosophical front. In this process he creatively developed Marxist
philosophy.
His creative
contribution to Marxist philosophical materialism is of utmost
importance. The empiricists argued that the concept of the matter itself
had become obsolete as a result of the latest discoveries in modern
science. Lenin realised that the attack on the category of matter – very
basis of Marxist philosophical materialism – was not at all the revision
of Marxism in the light of new scientific advances, but actually an
attack on the very foundations of Marxist philosophy. He
incontrovertibly proved that the latest discoveries in modern science
had only further vindicated the Marxist definition of matter. He also
showed that it was physics, which confined definition of matter to one
of its specific forms, that was in crisis but not Marxism.
"It is
absolutely unpardonable to confuse, as the Machists do, any particular
theory of the structure of matter with the epistemological category, to
confuse the problem of the new properties of new aspects of matter
(electrons, for example) with the old problem of the theory of
knowledge, with the problem of the sources of our knowledge, the
existence of objective truth, etc." (p. 129)
"The new
physics," Lenin wrote, "having found new kinds of matter and new forms
of its motion, raised the old philosophical questions because of the
collapse of the old physical concepts." (p. 279)
"In its
philosophical aspects, the essence of the ‘crisis in modern physics’ is
that the old physics regarded its theories as ‘real knowledge of the
materialist world,’ i.e., a reflection of the objective reality. The new
trend in physics regards theories only as symbols, signs, and marks for
practice, i.e., it denies the existence of an objective reality
independent of our mind and reflected by it. . . . .. the materialist
theory of knowledge, instinctively accepted by the earlier physics, has
been replaced by an idealist and agnostic theory of knowledge, which,
against the wishes of the idealists and agnostics, has been taken
advantage of by fideism ..... The modern physics consists in the
latter’s departure from the direct, resolute and irrevocable recognition
of the objective value of its theories." (pp. 256-57)
"‘Matter
disappears’ means that the limit within which we have hitherto known
matter disappears and that our knowledge is penetrating deeper;
properties of matter are likewise disappearing which formally seemed
absolute, immutable, and primary (impenetrability, inertia, mass, etc.)
and which are now revealed to be relative and characteristic only of
certain states of matter." (p.260)
"The
teachings of the science on the structure of the matter, on the chemical
composition of food, on the atom and the electron, may and constantly do
become obsolete" (p.185)
"The electron
is as inexhaustible as the atom, nature is infinite." (p. 262) This idea
of Lenin in effect became the fundamental notion of present day physics,
especially the physics of elementary particles.
"The concept
matter. . . . . epistemologically implies nothing but objective reality
existing independently of the human mind and reflected by it." (p. 261)
"Matter is
that which, acting upon our sense-organs, produces sensations; matter is
the objective reality given to us in sensation." (p.146) With this
understanding he defined matter as follows:
"Matter is a
philosophical category denoting the objective reality which is given to
man by his sensations, and which is copied, photographed and reflected
by our sensations while existing independently of them." (p. 130)
The above
definition has not only defined the most general category of matter in a
most scientific manner but also irrefutably solved the fundamental
question of philosophy from the materialist stand point.
Lenin laid
bare the real essence of the "New", "Third line" in philosophy and
exposed its fideistic face. This exposition is still relevant today.
"Recent
philosophy is as partisan as was philosophy two thousand years ago. The
contending parties are essentially – although this is concealed by a
pseudo-erudite quackery of new terms or by a weak-minded
non-partisanship – materialism and idealism. The latter is nearly a
subtle, refined form of fideism." (p. 358)
"Marx and
Engels were partisan in philosophy from start to the finish, they were
able to detect the deviations from materialism and concessions to
idealism and fideism in every one of the ‘recent’ trends." (p. 339)
"The genius
of Marx and Engels lies precisely in the fact that during a very long
period, nearly half a century, they developed materialism, further
advanced one fundamental trend in philosophy. . . . . and showed how to
apply . . . . . this same materialism in the sphere of the social
sciences, mercilessly brushing aside as rubbish all nonsense,
pretentious hotchpotch, the innumerable attempts to ‘discover’ a ‘new’
line in philosophy, to invent a ‘new’ trend and so forth." (p. 336)
"The
‘realists’, etc., including the ‘positivists’, the Machists etc., are
all a wretched mush; they are a contemptible middle party in philosophy,
who confuse the materialist and idealist trends on every question. The
attempt to escape from these two basic trends in philosophy is nothing
but ‘conciliatory quackery’." (p. 340)
"The
objective class role of emprio-criticism consists entirely in rendering
faithful service to fideists in their struggle against materialism in
general and historical materialism in particular." (p. 358)
Lenin clearly
exposed the real essence of the reconciliation of religion with modern
science and called it as "cultural fideism".
"Contemporary
fideism does not at all reject science; all it rejects is the
‘exaggerated claims’ of science, to wit, its claim to objective truth."
(p. 125)
"Modern,
cultural fideism . . . . . does not think of demanding anything more
than the declaration that the concepts of natural science are ‘working
hypotheses.’ We will, sirs, surrender science to you scientists provided
you surrender epistemology, philosophy to us – such is the condition for
the cohabitation of the theologians and professors in the ‘advanced’
capitalist countries." (p. 280)
Lenin
developed Marxist theory of reflection in a creative way. He explained
on the basis of modern scientific discoveries that matter has the
property of being reflected and consciousness is the highest form of
reflection of matter in the brain.
The theory of
reflection of matter developed by Lenin, the definition he gave to
matter further strengthend the foundations of Marxist philosophical
materialism, making them impregnable to any attacks from any form of
idealism.
The
revolutionary dialectics was further carried ahead by Lenin who
particularly made a deep study of contradictions. He "called
contradiction ‘the salt of dialectics’ and stated that the division of
the One and the knowledge of its contradictory parts is the essence of
dialectics." 10 He further
asserted, "In brief, dialectics can be defined as the doctrine of the
unity of opposites. This embodies the essence of dialectics, but it
requires explanations and development."11
These ‘explanations and development’ was done some twenty
years later by Mao.
Lenin
elaborated and explained the esence of historical materialism and
enriched it by analysing the concrete historical phenomena with
brilliance.
"Marx
deepened and developed philosophical materialism to the full, and
extended the congnition of nature to include the cognition of human
society. His historical materialism was a great achievement
in scientific thinking. The chaos and arbitrariness that had previously
reigned in views on history and politics were replaced by a strikingly
integral and hormonious scientific theory, which shows how, in
consequence of the growth of productive forces, out of one system of
social life another and higher system develops – how capitalism, for
instance, grows out of feudalism.
"Just as
man's knowledge reflects nature (i.e., developing matter), which exist
independently of him, so man's social knowledge (i.e., his
various use and doctrines– philosophical, religious, political and so
forth) reflects the economic system of society. Political
institutions are a superstructure on the economic foundation." (Marx,
Engels Marxism, p. 64)
He explained
the organic relationsthip between dialectical materialism and historical
materialism in this way,"materialism in general recognises objectively
real being (matter) as independent of the social consciousness of
humanity. In both cases consciousness is only the reflection of being,
at best an approximately true (adequate, perfectly exact) reflection of
it. From these Marxist philosophy, which is cast from a single piece of
steel, you can not eliminate one basic premise, one essential part,
without departing from objective truth, without falling a prey to
bourgeois-reactionary falsehood." (p. 326)
Mao’s Contribution to the Development of Marxist
Philosophy
Mao too like
Lenin, adopted the method of creatively applying Marxist Philosophy to
the analysis of the concrete historical, economic, political and social
conditions and in this course he elaborated all aspects of Marxist
philosophy. The manner in which he took the scientific world outlook to
the proletariat of the oppressed masses in a backword semi-feudal,
semi-colonial country comprising the peasantry as the major component,
stands as a model even today. He continued the legacy of Lenin, waged
consistent struggle against all types of revisionism and dogmatic
interpretations of Marxism, and analysed the concrete conditions of
China with the scientific world outlook of the proletariat. He thereby
developed the general line and theory of New Democratic Revolution for
the colonial and semi-colonial countries.
Like Lenin,
Mao also made fundamental contribution to the development of Marxist
philosophy. His works such as On Contradiction, On Practice,
Where do the correct ideas come from, On the handling of
contradictions among the people in particular have contributed
greatly to the development of Marxist philosophy.
Mao’s
analysis of contradictions is a fundamental contribution to the Marxist
philosophy. The method he adopted for studying various contradictions,
the relations between the contradictions, and the various aspects of the
contradiction is the most scientific. He developed dialectics, as
described by Lenin, as a science of study of opposing aspects of
contradictions. On the whole dialectical motion and development were
reflected in the analysis of contradiction by Mao.
Mao made a
phenomenal leap in the understanding of contradictions. He summarised
his discoveries in the following manner,
"The law of
contradiction in things, that is, the law of the unity of opposites, is
the fundamental law of nature and of society and therefore also the
fundamental law of thought.....According to dialectical materialism,
contradiction is present in all processes of objectively existing things
and of subjective thought and permeates all these processes from
beginning to end; this is the universality and absoluteness of
contradiction. Each contradiction and each of its aspects have their
respective characteristics; this is the particularity and relativity of
contradiction. In given conditions, opposites possess identity, and
consequently can coexist in a single entity and can transform themselves
into each other; this again is the particularity and relativity of
contradiction. But the struggle of opposites is ceaseless, it goes on
both when the opposites are coexisting and when they are transforming
themselves into each other, and becomes especially conspicuous when they
are transforming themselves into one another; this again is the
universality and absoluteness of contradiction. In studying the
particularity and relativity of contradiction, we must give attention to
the distinction between the principal contradiction and the
non-principal contradictions and to the distinction between the
principal aspect and the non-principal aspect of a contradiction; in
studying the universality of contradiction and the struggle of opposites
in contradiction, we must give attention to the distinction between the
different forms of struggle." 12
"...forms of struggle, differ according to the differences in the nature
of the contradictions. Some contradictions are characterised by open
antagonism, others are not. In accordance with the concrete development
of things, some contradictions which were originally non-antagonistic
develop into antagonistic ones, while others which were originally
antagonistic develop into non-antagonistic ones."
13
Mao continued
always to develop the theory of contradictions in practice. Particularly
during the period of socialist construction, Mao gave further clarity on
the nature and handling of social contradictions, particularly regarding
contradictions among the people. He stressed that despite the victory of
the revolution it was wrong to think that contradictions no longer
existed in Chinese society. He stated,
"We are
confronted with two types of social contradictions – those between
ourselves and the enemy and those among the people. The two are totally
different in nature..."
"The
contradictions between ourselves and the enemy are antagonistic
contradictions. Within the ranks of the people, the contradictions among
the working people are non-antagonistic, while those between the
exploited and the exploiting classes have a non-antagonistic as well as
an antagonistic aspect." 14
Mao further gave a detailed exposition of the methods of handling the
contradictions among the people in a socialist society.
During the
Cultural Revolution too Mao placed constant stress on the correct
handling of contradictions as he saw this as the only guarantee for the
success of socialism. Thus it was warned at the Ninth CPC Congress in
1969, "We must correctly understand and handle class contradictions and
class struggle, distinguish the contradictions between ourselves and the
enemy from those among the people, and handle them correctly. Otherwise
a socialist country like ours will turn into its opposite and
degenerate, and a capitalist restoration will take place."
15
He enriched
the Marxist theory of knowledge in the course of elaborating the
relations of production and knowledge. He vividly explained the
dialectical relations between the perceptual and conceptual stages of
knowledge. He elaborated the process of development of knowledge through
two stages on the basis of practice.
It was
however Mao who elaborated and refined the Marxist theory of knowledge
particularly with regard to the relation between knowledge and practice
, between knowing and doing. He detailed the process of cognition from
lower to higher levels and its transformation of reality through
practice.
"Discover the
truth through practice, and again through practice verify and develop
the truth. Start from perceptual knowledge and actively develop it into
rational knowledge; then start from rational knowledge and actively
guide revolutionary practice to change both the subjective and the
objective world. Practice, knowledge, again practice, and again
knowledge. This form repeats itself in endless cycles, and with each
cycle the content of practice and knowledge rises to a higher level.
such is the whole of the dialectical-materialist theory of knowledge,
and such is the dialectical-materialist theory of the unity of knowing
and doing." 24
Bourgeois
intellectuals distort Marxism alleging that it is nothing but economic
determinism. But Marx and Engels had very clearly explained the
dialectical relations between base and superstructure. Mao clearly
pointed out in his analysis of contradictions the dialectical relations
between these and also the decisive role that superstructure play in
some situations.
"The
principal aspect is the one playing the leading role in the
contradiction. The nature of a thing is determined mainly by the
principal aspect of a contradiction, the aspect which has gained the
dominant position.
"But this
situation is not static; the principal and the non-principal aspects of
a contradiction transform themselves into each other and the nature of
the thing changes accordingly………
"Some people
think that this is not true of certain contradictions. For instance, in
the contradiction between the productive forces and the relations of
production, the productive forces are the principal aspect; in the
contradiction between theory and practice, practice is the principal
aspect; in the contradiction between the economic base and the
superstructure, the economic base is the principal aspect; and there is
no change in their respective positions. This is the mechanical
materialist conception, not the dialectical materialist conception.
True, the productive forces, practice and the economic base generally
play the principal and decisive role; whoever denies this is not
materialist. But it must also be admitted that in certain conditions,
such aspects as the relations of the production, theory and the
superstructure in turn manifest themselves in the principal and decisive
role." 28
Throughout
the period of socialist construction and particularly during the
Cultural Revolution, Mao always tried to maintain the correct
dialectical balance in approach between economic base and
superstructure, economics and politics. He tried to correct Stalin’s
incorrect approach of totally neglecting the superstructure and
concentrating only on technology, by emphasising the linking of planning
with politics-in-command, by looking not only at production relations,
but also at the superstructure, at politics, at the role of people. This
was the essence of the slogan, ‘Grasp Revolution, Promote Production.’
Thus the
Report of the Ninth CPC Congress in 1969 said,
"‘Grasp
revolution, promote production’ – this principle is absolutely correct.
It correctly explains the relationship between revolution and
production, between consciousness and matter, between the superstructure
and the economic basis, and between the relations of production and the
productive forces...Politics is the concentrated expression of
economics. If we fail to make revolution in the superstructure, fail to
arouse the broad masses of the workers and peasants, fail to criticise
the revisionist line, fail to expose the handful of renegades, enemy
agents, capitalist-roaders in power and counter-revolutionaries, and
fail to consolidate the leadership of the proletariat, how can we
further consolidate the socialist economic base and further develop the
socialist productive forces? This is not to replace production by
revolution, but to use revolution to command production, promote it and
lead it forward." 29
This,
therefore, was, under Mao’s guidance, the correct dialectical
application of the materialist conception of history. |