Materialism: Difference between revisions

From Leftypedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(I corrected some inaccuracies and expanded on the definitions of dialectical and historical materialism.)
m (→‎External links: AWB Cat sort keys, replaced: Category:Materialism )
 
(12 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Materialism''' is the [[philosophical]] view that holds that matter is the ultimate foundation of reality. It is separate from economic materialism which is what many people think the word "materialism" refers to, being the attitude which emphasizes the acquiring and consuming of material goods. Materialism is usually considered in opposition to [[idealism]], which considers the mind and ideas to be primary. Materialism however views these things as mostly derived from matter; thus for example positing that the values, attitudes, and culture of a society and its individuals are derived from material factors like access to resources and geographic features like navigable rivers and mountains.
{{distinguish|Consumerism}}
'''Materialism''' is the [[philosophical]] position which holds that reality and human perception can be understood as direct results of the interactions of matter. Materialism is opposed to [[idealism]], which considers the mind, ideas, or ideal forms to be the origin of all phenomena. Materialism, in contrast, posits that these ideas themselves can or could be understood as proceeding from [[material conditions]]: for example, the origin of a society's values, attitudes, and culture are to be found ultimately in material factors like access to resources and geographic features like navigable rivers and mountains.


From materialism were developed [[historical materialism]] and [[dialectical materialism]], both of which were formulated by [[Karl Marx]] and [[Friedrich Engels]], as well as Joseph Dietzgen who formed dialectical materialism independently from Marx and Engels. The former is a theory which views history and its developments as transpiring on a material basis, and the latter is a philosophical method which examines [[dialectics]] materialistically, rather than idealistically as [[Hegel]] had done.
Materialism was developed independently in many ancient societies, including in [[Ancient Greece]] beginning with Thales and in [[India]] with the [[Carvaka|Carvaka school]]. [[Karl Marx]] and [[Friedrich Engels]] are two of the most significant materialist thinkers in modern history. Their materialist methods of analysis, now known as [[historical materialism]] and [[dialectical materialism]], remain relevant tools for analyzing [[history|human history]], [[ideology]], and [[economic]] development. Marxist [[dialectics]] is based on the idealist philosophy of [[G. W. F. Hegel]], but inverted, or as Marx put it, "turned right side up again".<ref>{{cite web | last=Marx | first=Karl | title=Capital Vol. I, Afterword to the Second German edition| website=Marxists Internet Archive | url=https://www.marxists.org/subject/dialectics/marx-engels/capital-afterward.htm | access-date=6 Aug 2023}}</ref> [[Joseph Dietzgen]], a [[German]] socialist, formulated a similar materialist philosophy of socialism indepently of Marx and Engels and was the first to coin the term "dialectical materialism".  


The ruling class of almost every society rejects materialism because of its progressive tendencies, as rulers are generally intent on preserving their status above all else; thus tending towards idealism as a basis on which to justify their position in society. There are a few exceptions however — the pre-revolutionary French bourgeoisie saw metaphysical materialism as a force that will bring them to power, embracing it. The working class at the dawn of capitalism was weak, poorly organized, with the very notion of dialectical materialism still in its infancy, let alone internalized by the proletariat who have not felt the contradictions of capitalism yet. This all naturally changed and capitalists eventually came to see materialism as a hostile force, turning to idealism like the rulers of systems past. What is constant however is that materialism is the philosophy of vanguard social forces, with idealism taking the opposite side; of being the thought form of the established, privileged sections of the population. The working class has only started to be conscious of materialism in the [[capitalist]] age, where it got organized in large collectives which facilitated the spread of ideas, broadened its interests, and united it in struggle, as well as providing more free time to think and organize. With this, workers can study materialist philosophy itself as well as social sciences in general, as many worker groups were organized to do before the Russian Revolution.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/whatisphilosophy1985 ''What Is Philosophy?'']. Galina Kirilenko, Lydia Korshunova. 1985. Pages 96–9</ref>
Most [[ruling class]]es throughout history have rejected or suppressed materialist analysis in favor of an idealist form of understanding, such as [[religion|religious]] or [[mysticism|mystical]] thought. In [[medieval Europe]], materialism and other forms of skepticism were derisively called "[[Epicurus|Epicureanism]]" and became a bogeyman used to attack commoners who questioned the power of the Church or the truth of its mysteries. However, the [[bourgeoisie]], because of their unprecedented dependence on the development of science and technology, viewed materialism as a natural weapon against the existing order of [[feudal]] and [[absolutism|absolutist]] society. From the late 17th century, bourgeois and progressive authors undertook a ruthless destruction of the idealist [[superstructure]], replacing [[Christianity]], the divine right of kings, and the authority of scripture with [[Deism]], [[atheism]], [[secularism]], [[Biblical criticism]], [[sociology]], [[political philosophy]], and [[political economy]]. It is important to note that rather than being reinforced by modern developments in science, this radical materialism was their prerequisite, making possible modes of inquiry which would have been impossible in the stagnant idealism of the feudal order. Just as the [[ancient Greek]] philosophers were able to make rapid scientific developments only after they had broken with the old conceptions of reality, this bold, axiomatic assertion of the materialist worldview opened the door to modern [[chemistry]], meteorology, [[atomism|atomic theory]], [[evolution|evolutionary biology]], neurology, cosmology, and geology, all of which reinforce modern materialist beliefs and the erosion of religious faith.


==Pre-Marxist materialism==
However, just as every [[social formation]] had done before, [[bourgeois society]] became a fetter on human progress, giving way in bursts to superstition: first in 19th century [[Europe]] in the face of sweeping [[social revolution]]; continuously in the United States in response to the capitalist contradictions made unresolvable by the escape valve of westward expansion; eventually in the academic sphere in the form of [[postmodern]] reaction to the Marxist threat of the 20th century. Mainstream [[economics]] is often abstract and anti-empiricist, rendering it unable to predict [[crises]] or formulate useful policies. In the 21st century, the material promises of the 18th century [[bourgeois revolution]]s, including [[freedom]], [[equality]], and [[democracy]], have arguably been replaced by abstractions with no relation to the daily experience of the masses. Thus materialism remains a subversive force, inimical to bourgeois domination.
===Greek atomism===


===Early modern materialism===
Philosophical materialism is unrelated to "economic materialism" or "consumerism", a social belief which attaches success and status to the acquisition of [[commodities]]; incidentally, this social belief can itself be analyzed as a result of material factors.
 
==Ancient materialism==
===Western philosophy===
Thales taught that everything was reducible to one material substance or ''arche'', and identified this substance with water. Other authors argued that reality was reducible to fire, water, air, and earth, and sought explanations for biological phenomena in these substances. Aristotle also held materialistic ideas in contrast to the [[Platonic idealism]] of his teacher. The most important materialist school, however, was founded by Democritus and Epicurus, who argued that reality was reducible not only to substances, but finite particles of these substances, a theory known as atomism. The work of both authors is largely lost to us, mostly passed down indirectly in the poem ''De rerum natura'' by Lucretius, a follower of Democritus who wrote centuries later. Lucretius described multiple phenomena now known to be explainable only by atomic motion, including what is now known as the Brownian motion of particles:
 
{{Blockquote
|text=''For thou wilt mark here many a speck, impelled<br> By viewless blows, to change its little course,<br> And beaten backwards to return again,<br> Hither and thither in all directions round.<br> Lo, all their shifting movement is of old,<br> From the primeval atoms; for the same<br> Primordial seeds of things first move of self,<br> And then those bodies built of unions small<br> And nearest, as it were, unto the powers<br> Of the primeval atoms, are stirred up<br> By impulse of those atoms' unseen blows,<br> And these thereafter goad the next in size:<br> Thus motion ascends from the primevals on,<br> And stage by stage emerges to our sense,<br> Until those objects also move which we<br> Can mark in sunbeams, though it not appears<br> What blows do urge them.''<ref>{{cite book | last=Lucretius | title=Lucretius: Of The Nature of Things. A metrical translation by William Ellery Leonard | translator-last = Leonard | translator-first = William Ellery|year=2000 | oclc=79434549| website=Project Gutenberg | url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/785/785-h/785-h.htm}}</ref>}}
 
Medieval philosophers recognized the monumental importance of ancient philosophy and, rather than ignore it, attempted to co-opt thinkers like Aristotle and Plato into a Christian worldview. Epicureanism, however, was deemed irreconcilable and essentially banned from serious academic discussion.
 
====Islamic philosophy====
Ibn Ṭufayl was an important materialist thinker whose major work ''Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān'' influenced the Western materialism of the [[Renaissance]] era.
 
===Eastern philosophy===
The [[India]]n [[Carvaka]] school has been considered materialist and even atheistic. In addition, some strains of [[Buddhist]] thought approach atheism.{{cn}}{{instances}}
 
Chinese philosophy taught of five basic elements: the four Western elements plus metal. [[Confucius|Confucian]]ism and [[Taoism]] both have materialistic elements and share an emphasis on living experience rather than life after death. Wang Chong, a Confucian from the 1st century AD, had already begun to criticize the mysticism which had sprung up around Confucius in the two centuries since his death and asserted that there were no phenomena beyond what could be observed, including spirits and an afterlife.<ref>See {{cite book | editor-last=Flynn | editor-first=Tom | title=The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief | date=2007 | p=808-?| entry=Wang Ch'ung|entry-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fsZ26vQxJKMC&q=unbelief+in+china#v=onepage&q=%22wang%20ch'ung%22&f=false|postscript=none}} and {{cite book | editor-last=Flynn | editor-first=Tom | title=The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief | date=2007 | pp=172–3| entry=China, unbelief in|entry-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fsZ26vQxJKMC&q=unbelief+in+china#v=snippet&q=%22The%20word%20universally%20acknowledged%22&f=false | isbn=978-1-59102-391-3}}</ref>
 
==Early modern and modern era==
===Spinoza===
===David Hume===
===Feuerbach===
===Feuerbach===
{{hatnote|Main article: [[Feuerbach]]}}
{{hatnote|Main article: [[Feuerbach]]}}
Line 21: Line 42:
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.
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.


==See also==
* ''[[Guns, Germs and Steel]]'' by Jared Diamond, a materialist analysis of history which remains popular but controversial
* [[Historical materialism]]
* [[Idealism]]
* [[Ludwig Feuerbach]]
==References==
{{reflist}}
==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/help/mean09.htm ''A very brief history of materialism'' on Marxists.org]
* [https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/help/mean09.htm ''A very brief history of materialism'' on Marxists.org]
* [https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1938/09.htm Stalin, ''Dialectical and Historical Materialism'']
* [https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1938/09.htm Stalin, ''Dialectical and Historical Materialism'']


==References==
[[Category:Philosophy]]
 
[[Category:Materialism| ]]
[[Category: Philosophy]]
[[Category: Materialism]]
<references />
<references />

Latest revision as of 20:54, 4 September 2023

Materialism is the philosophical position which holds that reality and human perception can be understood as direct results of the interactions of matter. Materialism is opposed to idealism, which considers the mind, ideas, or ideal forms to be the origin of all phenomena. Materialism, in contrast, posits that these ideas themselves can or could be understood as proceeding from material conditions: for example, the origin of a society's values, attitudes, and culture are to be found ultimately in material factors like access to resources and geographic features like navigable rivers and mountains.

Materialism was developed independently in many ancient societies, including in Ancient Greece beginning with Thales and in India with the Carvaka school. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels are two of the most significant materialist thinkers in modern history. Their materialist methods of analysis, now known as historical materialism and dialectical materialism, remain relevant tools for analyzing human history, ideology, and economic development. Marxist dialectics is based on the idealist philosophy of G. W. F. Hegel, but inverted, or as Marx put it, "turned right side up again".[1] Joseph Dietzgen, a German socialist, formulated a similar materialist philosophy of socialism indepently of Marx and Engels and was the first to coin the term "dialectical materialism".

Most ruling classes throughout history have rejected or suppressed materialist analysis in favor of an idealist form of understanding, such as religious or mystical thought. In medieval Europe, materialism and other forms of skepticism were derisively called "Epicureanism" and became a bogeyman used to attack commoners who questioned the power of the Church or the truth of its mysteries. However, the bourgeoisie, because of their unprecedented dependence on the development of science and technology, viewed materialism as a natural weapon against the existing order of feudal and absolutist society. From the late 17th century, bourgeois and progressive authors undertook a ruthless destruction of the idealist superstructure, replacing Christianity, the divine right of kings, and the authority of scripture with Deism, atheism, secularism, Biblical criticism, sociology, political philosophy, and political economy. It is important to note that rather than being reinforced by modern developments in science, this radical materialism was their prerequisite, making possible modes of inquiry which would have been impossible in the stagnant idealism of the feudal order. Just as the ancient Greek philosophers were able to make rapid scientific developments only after they had broken with the old conceptions of reality, this bold, axiomatic assertion of the materialist worldview opened the door to modern chemistry, meteorology, atomic theory, evolutionary biology, neurology, cosmology, and geology, all of which reinforce modern materialist beliefs and the erosion of religious faith.

However, just as every social formation had done before, bourgeois society became a fetter on human progress, giving way in bursts to superstition: first in 19th century Europe in the face of sweeping social revolution; continuously in the United States in response to the capitalist contradictions made unresolvable by the escape valve of westward expansion; eventually in the academic sphere in the form of postmodern reaction to the Marxist threat of the 20th century. Mainstream economics is often abstract and anti-empiricist, rendering it unable to predict crises or formulate useful policies. In the 21st century, the material promises of the 18th century bourgeois revolutions, including freedom, equality, and democracy, have arguably been replaced by abstractions with no relation to the daily experience of the masses. Thus materialism remains a subversive force, inimical to bourgeois domination.

Philosophical materialism is unrelated to "economic materialism" or "consumerism", a social belief which attaches success and status to the acquisition of commodities; incidentally, this social belief can itself be analyzed as a result of material factors.

Ancient materialism

Western philosophy

Thales taught that everything was reducible to one material substance or arche, and identified this substance with water. Other authors argued that reality was reducible to fire, water, air, and earth, and sought explanations for biological phenomena in these substances. Aristotle also held materialistic ideas in contrast to the Platonic idealism of his teacher. The most important materialist school, however, was founded by Democritus and Epicurus, who argued that reality was reducible not only to substances, but finite particles of these substances, a theory known as atomism. The work of both authors is largely lost to us, mostly passed down indirectly in the poem De rerum natura by Lucretius, a follower of Democritus who wrote centuries later. Lucretius described multiple phenomena now known to be explainable only by atomic motion, including what is now known as the Brownian motion of particles:

For thou wilt mark here many a speck, impelled
By viewless blows, to change its little course,
And beaten backwards to return again,
Hither and thither in all directions round.
Lo, all their shifting movement is of old,
From the primeval atoms; for the same
Primordial seeds of things first move of self,
And then those bodies built of unions small
And nearest, as it were, unto the powers
Of the primeval atoms, are stirred up
By impulse of those atoms' unseen blows,
And these thereafter goad the next in size:
Thus motion ascends from the primevals on,
And stage by stage emerges to our sense,
Until those objects also move which we
Can mark in sunbeams, though it not appears
What blows do urge them.
[2]

Medieval philosophers recognized the monumental importance of ancient philosophy and, rather than ignore it, attempted to co-opt thinkers like Aristotle and Plato into a Christian worldview. Epicureanism, however, was deemed irreconcilable and essentially banned from serious academic discussion.

Islamic philosophy

Ibn Ṭufayl was an important materialist thinker whose major work Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān influenced the Western materialism of the Renaissance era.

Eastern philosophy

The Indian Carvaka school has been considered materialist and even atheistic. In addition, some strains of Buddhist thought approach atheism.[citation needed][instances needed]

Chinese philosophy taught of five basic elements: the four Western elements plus metal. Confucianism and Taoism both have materialistic elements and share an emphasis on living experience rather than life after death. Wang Chong, a Confucian from the 1st century AD, had already begun to criticize the mysticism which had sprung up around Confucius in the two centuries since his death and asserted that there were no phenomena beyond what could be observed, including spirits and an afterlife.[3]

Early modern and modern era

Spinoza

David Hume

Feuerbach

Marxist materialism

Dialectical materialism

Dialectical materialism is the adaption of Hegel's dialectics to Feuerbach's materialism. It is called dialectical materialism because its approach to the phenomena of nature, its method of studying and apprehending them, is dialectical, while its interpretation of the phenomena of nature, its conception of these phenomena, its theory, is materialistic.

Historical materialism

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.

See also

References

  1. Marx, Karl. "Capital Vol. I, Afterword to the Second German edition". Marxists Internet Archive. Retrieved 6 Aug 2023.
  2. Lucretius (2000). Template:Citation/make link. Template:Citation/identifier. https://www.gutenberg.org/files/785/785-h/785-h.htm.  Lucretius (2000). Lucretius: Of The Nature of Things. A metrical translation by William Ellery Leonard. Project Gutenberg. Translated by Leonard, William Ellery. OCLC 79434549.
  3. See Flynn, Tom, ed. (2007). Template:Citation/make linknone  Flynn, Tom, ed. (2007). "Wang Ch'ung". The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief. p. 808-? and Flynn, Tom, ed. (2007). Template:Citation/make link. Template:Citation/identifier.  Flynn, Tom, ed. (2007). "China, unbelief in". The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief. pp. 172–3. ISBN 978-1-59102-391-3.

External links