[Marxism-Thaxis] Lenin on Dialectics
Charles Brown cbrown at michiganlegal.org 
Wed Mar 9 07:53:10 MST 2005 

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KARL MARX


A Brief Biographical Sketch with an Exposition on Marxism
http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1914/granat/ch02.htm#s2 

By Vladimir Lenin

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Dialectics


As the most comprehensive and profound doctrine of development, and the
richest in content, Hegelian dialectics was considered by Marx and Engels
the greatest achievement of classical German philosophy. They thought that
any other formulation of the principle of development, of evolution, was
one-sided and poor in content, and could only distort and mutilate the
actual course of development (which often proceeds by leaps, and via
catastrophes and revolutions) in Nature and in society. "Marx and I were
pretty well the only people to rescue conscious dialectics [from the
destruction of idealism, including Hegelianism] and apply it in the
materialist conception of Nature.... Nature is the proof of dialectics, and
it must be said for modern natural science that it has furnished extremely
rich [this was written before the discovery of radium, electrons, the
transmutation of elements, etc.!] and daily increasing materials for this
test, and has thus proved that in the last analysis Nature's process is
dialectical and not metaphysical. [6]
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1914/granat/ch02.htm#n6> 

"The great basic thought," Engels writes, "that the world is not to be
comprehended as a complex of ready-made things, but as a complex of
processes, in which the things apparently stable no less than their mind
images in our heads, the concepts, go through an uninterrupted change of
coming into being and passing away... this great fundamental thought has,
especially since the time of Hegel, so thoroughly permeated ordinary
consciousness that in this generality it is now scarcely ever contradicted.
But to acknowledge this fundamental thought in words and to apply it in
reality in detail to each domain of investigation are two different
things.... For dialectical philosophy nothing is final, absolute, sacred. It
reveals the transitory character of everything and in everything; nothing
can endure before it except the uninterrupted process of becoming and of
passing away, of endless ascendancy from the lower to the higher. And
dialectical philosophy itself is nothing more than the mere reflection of
this process in the thinking brain." Thus, according to Marx, dialectics is
"the science of the general laws of motion, both of the external world and
of human thought." [7]
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1914/granat/ch02.htm#n7> 

This revolutionary aspect of Hegel's philosophy was adopted and developed by
Marx. Dialectical materialism "does not need any philosophy standing above
the other sciences." From previous philosophy there remains "the science of
thought and its laws -- formal logic and dialectics." [8]
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1914/granat/ch02.htm#n8>
Dialectics, as understood by Marx, and also in conformity with Hegel,
includes what is now called the theory of knowledge, or epistemology,
studying and generalizing the original and development of knowledge, the
transition from non-knowledge to knowledge.

In our times, the idea of development, of evolution, has almost completely
penetrated social consciousness, only in other ways, and not through
Hegelian philosophy. Still, this idea, as formulated by Marx and Engels on
the basis of Hegels' philosophy, is far more comprehensive and far richer in
content than the current idea of evolution is. A development that repeats,
as it were, stages that have already been passed, but repeats them in a
different way, on a higher basis ("the negation of the negation"), a
development, so to speak, that proceeds in spirals, not in a straight line;
a development by leaps, catastrophes, and revolutions; "breaks in
continuity"; the transformation of quantity into quality; inner impulses
towards development, imparted by the contradiction and conflict of the
various forces and tendencies acting on a given body, or within a given
phenomenon, or within a given society; the interdependence and the closest
and indissoluble connection between all aspects of any phenomenon (history
constantly revealing ever new aspects), a connection that provides a
uniform, and universal process of motion, one that follows definite
laws-these are some of the features of dialectics as a doctrine of
development that is richer than the conventional one. (Cf. Marx's letter to
Engels of January 8, 1868, in which he ridicules Stein's "wooden
trichotomies," which it would be absurd to confuse with materialist
dialectics.) 
 





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