Western Philosophy of Social Science

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Transcription:

Western Philosophy of Social Science Lecture 5. Analytic Marxism Professor Daniel Little University of Michigan-Dearborn delittle@umd.umich.edu www-personal.umd.umich.edu/~delittle/

Western Marxism 1960s-1980s in western Europe, Great Britain, and the United States An intellectual-political development Not driven by a political party. No intellectual orthodoxy; many diverse approaches. Generally aimed at developing more adequate ways of understanding modern society and offering critique of modern society. Loosely linked to progressive parties of the left; social democratic parties.

Reading Marx freshly My perspective since beginning to read Marx in the 1960s: this is a complex thinker with many lines of thought; not all coherent or consistent with each other; worthy of careful study and criticism. Don t assume that Marx s theories and philosophical views were fully consistent and developed; observe his intellectual development through the many threads and stages of his development.

Reading Marx freshly Read Capital for the sociological, philosophical, and institutional insights that it develops; don t assume that these ideas all flow from a single unified vision of Marxism. Read historical materialism as a suggestive set of ideas about the factors that drive historical development; observations (often imperfect) of the development of other historical epochs (classical slavery, feudalism, China), but not a systematic theory of history

Reading Marx freshly Read Marx s humanism as a suggestive set of philosophical ideas about human development and the good of human life. In short: read Marx as a serious, disciplined and fertile intellectual, observing a complex and rapidly changing social world, with a critical perspective that leads him to be a penetrating critic of the existing and evolving social order of 19 th century Europe.

Marx s thought Humanism and alienation Historical materialism Marx s intellectual development Post-Hegelian philosophy (Feuerbach) French socialist writings English political economy A social science study of capitalism A conception of socialism

The historical context The 19 th century revolutions in thought and society French Revolution and its aftermath Industrial revolution Rapid, difficult change, both socially, politically and economically

What is alienation? The Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts The paradox of capitalist political economy: wealth => poverty Critique of political economy Four forms of alienation: alienation from the product process species being alienation from other human beings

Alienation and property Private property and the division of labor Commodification of social products Consumption and production Control and domination The labor process as coerced forced labor: 61-62

What is a full human being? Freedom and human self-expression The social individual What is labor? Objectificaton of the self through intelligent manipulation of nature The aesthetic model of self-realization: sculpture Self-realization through free productive social labor The Hegel inheritance: freedom as objective human circumstance

Analytic Marxism 1970s in United States and Britain Philosophers and social scientists give new attention to Marx s writings There is a political element (Vietnam, American inequalities of wealth and poverty) But there is intellectual open-mindedness: treat the ideas as serious pieces of analysis, to be criticized, analyzed, and developed

Rational choice Marxism The view that Marx s economics assume a rational-choice model of agents: workers, capitalists, state officials Marx s explanations involve identifying central institutions (e.g. the system of capitalist profit and wage labor) and the rational strategies that are available to the players; And Marx provides an aggregative explanation of the macro-consequences of these incentives and institutions. E.g.: Marx s derivation of falling rate of profit.

Rational choice Marxism Philosophers, sociologists, and economists pursued this line of thought as a basis for analyzing and extending Marx s theories. Leading contributors: G.A. Cohen, John Roemer, Jon Elster, Adam Przeworski, Erik Olin Wright, Allan Buchanan, Allen Wood, others

Justice and exploitation The beginnings of analytic Marxism (1971) focused on the question, Does Marx have a theory of justice? Does Marx believe that capitalism is unjust? If so, on what basis? What is the moral theory that underlies this judgment? There were rigorous efforts to express an interpretation of Marx s concept of exploitation. There were efforts to interpret Marx s writings about alienation and human nature in a philosophically adequate way.

A theory of history Class conflict Tension between the forces and relations of production The metaphor of dialectic within a given mode of production

An approach to social science theory Be empirical: study the best available sources on such things as British industry, French feudal economy, classical slavery Be scientifically critical: question assumptions; test the consistency of interpretations; evaluate ideas in terms of their ability to explain the social world. Bring ideas into engagement with the needs of the underclass; allow theory to be a tool for social improvement; allow theory to reveal underlying conflicts.

Moral ideas in Marxism? Justice and exploitation Human nature and alienation

The relevance of Marx s thought in the 21 st century Be critical; test, weigh, and criticize Marx s ideas. This gives his work the intellectual respect it deserves. Recognize that it is a limited perspective just as is the perspective of any brilliant, insightful observer of a complex social reality. It highlights some aspects and overlooks others altogether. And, of course, the social world is fundamentally different from the world of 19 th century British capitalism.

Relevance Emphasis on power, exploitation, domination, and alienation still appears relevant Emphasis on the idea that social arrangements are flexible enough to serve as tools of domination Emphasis on the idea that great economic systems create groups with substantial economic interests, who are in turn positioned to employ the instruments of power to their advantage Emphasis on the basic democracy of the majority: mass society permits the emergence of powerful voices for the dominated.

END