Historical
Materialism is the application of Marxist science to historical development.
The fundamental proposition of historical materialism can be summed up in a
sentence: "it is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence,
but, on the contrary, their social existence that determines their
consciousness." (Marx, in the Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of
Political Economy.)
What
does this mean? Readers of the Daily Mirror will be familiar with the
"Perishers" cartoon strip. In one incident the old dog, Wellington
wanders down to a pool full of crabs. The crabs speculate about the mysterious
divinity, the "eyeballs in the sky," which appears to them.
The
point is, that is actually how you would look at things if your universe were a
pond. Your consciousness is determined by your being. Thought is limited by the
range of experience of the species.
We
know very little about how primitive people thought, but we know what they
couldn't have been thinking about. They wouldn't have wandered about wondering
what the football results were, for instance. League football presupposes big
towns able to get crowds large enough to pay professional footballers and the
rest of the club staff. Industrial towns in their turn can only emerge when the
productivity of labour has developed to the point where a part of society can
be fed by the rest, and devote themselves to producing other requirements than
food.
In
other words, an extensive division of labour must exist. The other side of this
is that people must be accustomed to working for money and buying the things
they want from others - including tickets to the football - which, of course,
was not the case in primitive society.
So
this simple example shows how even things like professional football are
dependent on the way society makes its daily bread, on people's "social
existence".
After
all, what is mankind? The great idealist philosopher Hegel said that "man,
is a thinking being." Actually Hegel's view was a slightly more
sophisticated form of the usual religious view that man is endowed by his
Creator with a brain to admire His handiwork. It is true that thinking is one
way we are different from dung beetles, sticklebacks and lizards. But why did
humans develop the capacity to think?
Over
a hundred years ago, Engels pointed out that upright posture marked the
transition from ape to man, a completely materialist explanation. This view has
been confirmed by the more recent researches of anthropologists such as Leakey.
Upright posture liberated the hands for gripping with an opposable thumb. This
enabled tools to be used and developed.
Upright
posture also allowed early humans to rely more on the eyes, rather than the
other senses, for sensing the world around. The use of the hands developed the
powers of the brain through the medium of the eyes.
Engels
was a dialectical materialist. In no way did he minimise the importance of
thought - rather he explained how it arose. We can also see that Benjamin
Franklin, the eighteenth-century US politician and inventor, was much nearer a
materialist approach than Hegel when he defined man as a "tool-making
animal."
Darwin
showed a hundred years ago that there is a struggle for existence, and species
survive through natural selection. At first sight early humans didn't have a
lot going for them, compared with the speed of the cheetah, the strength of the
lion, or the sheer intimidating bulk of the elephant. Yet humans came to
dominate the planet and, more recently, to drive many of these more fearsome
animals to the point of extinction.
What
differentiates humanity from the lower animals is that, however self-reliant
animals such as lions may seem, they ultimately just take external nature
around them for granted, whereas, mankind progressively masters nature.
The
process whereby mankind masters nature is labour. At Marx's grave, Engels
stated that his friend's great discovery was that "mankind must first of
all eat, drink, have shelter and clothing, and therefore work before it can
pursue politics, science, art, religion etc."
While
we can't read the minds of our primitive human ancestors, we can make a pretty
good guess about what they were thinking most of the time - food. The struggle
against want has dominated history ever since.
Marxists
are often accused of being 'economic determinists'. Actually, Marxists are far
from denying the importance of ideas or the active role of individuals in
history. But precisely because we are active, we understand the limits of
individual activity, and the fact that the appropriate social conditions must
exist before our ideas and our activity can be effective.
Our
academic opponents are generally passive cynics who exalt individual activity
amid the port and walnuts from over-stuffed armchairs. We understand, with Marx
that people "make their own history...but under circumstances directly
encountered, given and transmitted from the past". We need to understand
how society is developing in order to intervene in the process. That is what we
mean when we say Marxism is the science of perspectives.
We
have seen that labour distinguishes mankind from the other animals - that
mankind progressively changes nature through labour, and in doing so changes
itself. It follows that there is a real measure of progress through all the
miseries and pitfalls of human history - the increasing ability of men and
women to master nature and subjugate it to their own requirements: in other
words, the increasing productivity of labour.
To
each stage in the development of the productive forces corresponds a certain
set of production relations. Production relation means the way people organise
themselves to gain their daily bread. Production relations are thus the
skeleton of every form of society. They provide the conditions of social
existence that determine human consciousness.
Marx
explained how the development of the productive forces brings into existence
different production relations, and different forms of class society.
By
a 'class' we mean a group of people in society with the same relationship to
the means of production. The class which owns and controls the means of
production rules society. This, at the same time, enables it to force the
oppressed or labouring class to toil in the rulers' interests. The labouring
class is forced to produce a surplus which the ruling class lives off.
Marx
explained:
"The
specific economic form in which unpaid surplus-labour is pumped out of the
direct producers determines the relationship of rulers and ruled, as it grows
directly out of production itself and, in turn, reacts upon it as a determining
element. Upon this, however, is founded the entire formation of the economic
community which grows up out of the production relations themselves; thereby
simultaneously its specific political form. It is always the direct
relationship of the owners of the conditions of production to the direct
producers-a relation always naturally corresponding to a definite stage in the
development of the methods of labour and thereby its social productivity-which
reveals the innermost secret, the hidden basis of the entire social structure,
and with it the political form of the relation of sovereignty and dependence,
in short the corresponding specific form of the state." (Capital, Vol. III.)
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