Marx and the Individual
November 2024 › Forums › General discussion › Marx and the Individual
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September 22, 2017 at 9:55 am #85739robbo203Participant
An interesting piece I came across which throws some light on some of the discussion recently on this forum
In particular. this:
While Marx acknowledged the relative autonomy of many humanly created social institutions and relations from the persons entering into and reproducing them, he simultaneously used the "individualistic" premises of his materialism to protest such fixed social relations. By placing social production under the control of the associated producers, communism would facilitate the return of social institutions and relations to the command of the individuals who in fact comprised them. In this sense, the real individual as a theoretical premise helped demystify the social order, Marx's theory then yielded an historical account of the genesis of social relations and institutions, and bore within itself a mandate for the conscious production of history and society by those individuals who had hitherto produced themselves, their society, and their history largely unconsciously.
and this:
Long after he had abandoned Feuerbach's nominalist methodology, Marx therefore retained the "real individual" as the critical premise—and ultimate promise—of social theory.
This would make Marx a proponent of Emergence theory as opposed to Holistic theory, on the one hand (where the "whole" – e.g. society – determines the parts – individuals) or Individualistic Theory , on the other (where the parts determine the whole i.e. reductionism). Hence statements by Marx such as “the free development of each is the condition of the free development of all" in The Communist Manifesto. Ths is a repudiaton of holistic theory and an endorsement of Emergentism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergence
There is also another good article I came across," Socialism and the Individual in Marx's Work" by Paresh Chattopadhyay which demolishes the silly argument that socialism will amount to a sort of beehive colony in which any notion of individual autonomy , freedom or self actualisation will disappear. On the contrary, socialism will provide the conditons in which these very things will come to fruition – not in oppostion to a sense of collective or social identity but paradoxically precisely through such an identity and by recognising our mutual interdependence as human beings
September 23, 2017 at 8:05 am #129428robbo203ParticipantSo it looks like Marx was a bit of an "individualust" at heart, after all. Lol to LBird http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/6515/1/PhD.Kandiyali.pdf
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