************************************
In Memoriam: Kai Nielsen (1926-2021)
************************************

By: Phil Gasper ( https://newpol.org/authors/gasper-phil/ ) May 2, 2021
Facebook ( https://newpol.org/#facebook ) Twitter ( https://newpol.org/#twitter 
) Email ( https://newpol.org/#email )
[PDF] ( 
https://newpol.org/in-memoriam-kai-nielsen-1926-2021/?fbclid=IwAR2R3zsvIf0xRQUmbABYJvs4ZRwIy62ZyA3Q6bAONbGakOQn1nm0PDjdv6Y&print=pdf
 ) [Print] ( 
https://newpol.org/in-memoriam-kai-nielsen-1926-2021/?fbclid=IwAR2R3zsvIf0xRQUmbABYJvs4ZRwIy62ZyA3Q6bAONbGakOQn1nm0PDjdv6Y&print=print
 )

The Marxist philosopher Kai Nielsen, for many years a sponsor of New Politics , 
passed away on March 29 in Montreal, only a few weeks away from what would have 
been his 95 th birthday.

Kai was born in Michigan and grew up in northern Illinois. He served in the 
Merchant Marine in the Pacific at the end of World War Two, before studying at 
St. Ambrose College in Iowa and the University of North Carolina. He was a 
graduate student at Duke University and was awarded his Ph.D. in 1959 for a 
thesis on moral reasoning.

In those days, Kai later reminisced, academic jobs were easy to find, and he 
became an assistant professor first at Hamilton College in upstate New York and 
shortly afterwards in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at Amherst 
College in Massachusetts. But Kai was a convinced atheist, which did not go 
down well with his department chair. So, when Sidney Hook paid a visit to 
Amherst and offered Kai a job at New York University, he gladly accepted.

Kai was a prolific writer. In the 1950s and 1960s he published a stream of 
articles on ethics, philosophy of religion (especially on the case for 
atheism), and the nature of philosophy itself (a topic known as 
meta-philosophy). These were issues that continued to fascinate him for the 
rest of his life, but as the sixties progressed, Kai’s attention was 
increasingly drawn to social and political questions, and to Marxism.

By the end of the 1960s Kai was a full professor and chair of the NYU 
Philosophy Department, but he was also frustrated by the continuing Vietnam War 
and disillusioned with politics in the United States. When he was given the 
opportunity to move to the University of Calgary in Canada at the beginning of 
the 1970s, he took it.

By this time, Kai was writing on topics such as civil disobedience, the ethics 
of revolution, and US foreign policy. In 1975, he published “ Class Conflict, 
Marxism, and the Good-Reasons Approach ( 
https://www.kainielsen.org/uploads/1/1/9/0/119098149/nielsen_kai_-_class_conflict_marxism_and_the_good-reasons_approach.pdf
 ) ,” the first of many articles on Marxist philosophy. As Kai summarized the 
article, he examined “a central problem about Marxism and morality. Marx, on 
the one hand, exposes moralism and exhibits the ideological functions of 
morality and, on the other, requires objectively true moral norms for his 
critique of capitalism and defense of socialism. I set forth a way of looking 
at Marx and Marxism which shows how two apparently conflicting elements in 
Marxism form a coherent whole.” Fourteen years later, in his book Marxism and 
the Moral Point of View: Morality, Ideology, and Historical Materialism , Kai 
gave his longest and most detailed answers to these questions.

I met Kai when I was a philosophy graduate student at Calgary in the early 
1980s. In fact, he was the first person with whom I studied Marx. On my first 
day in the department, I walked into his seminar on “Marx and Morality” in 
which, in addition to Marx, we read a collection of papers that were soon to be 
published in a special issue ( 
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/canadian-journal-of-philosophy-supplementary-volume/volume/5FEC475FC4F6E93EBC8300D68537A69D
 ) of the Canadian Journal of Philosophy , which Kai was editing. It was a 
wonderful introduction to Marxism and to serious philosophical discussion. Kai 
came prepared each week with a long commentary on the readings. After he had 
read that aloud, the debate would begin, with Kai inviting—and relishing the 
chance to respond to—disagreements.

During my time at Calgary, I grew to know Kai as a warm and generous person, 
who often held informal department gatherings and discussion groups at his 
home. Kai was also always engaged with contemporary political issues. I 
remember him bringing the Canadian journalist Stan Persky, who had just 
returned from Poland and was writing a book on the Solidarność trade union 
movement’s challenge to the regime, to speak on campus shortly after the Polish 
government had declared martial law.

Kai continued to teach at Calgary until his retirement in the 1990s, at which 
point he moved to Montreal. But soon he was teaching again part-time at 
Concordia University. Kai also remained politically active. After initially 
being skeptical, he became a strong supporter of Quebec sovereignty. And his 
commitment to socialism never wavered. A younger colleague recalls accompanying 
Kai to the April 2001 global justice protests in Quebec City against the Free 
Trade Area of the Americas:

“We were tear gassed a couple of times and I did my best to keep Kai from 
getting crushed by the crowds (he was in his seventies). During a parade that 
was part of the protest we stood on the edge of the road and Kai raised his 
fist in the air in solidarity as the labor union and Marxist banners went by, 
his eyes full of tears, memories, and hopes for a better world.”

Kai continued to write well into his nineties. By the time he died, he had 
published 21 books (and edited several more) and over 400 professional 
articles. He also left behind several unpublished book manuscripts and dozens 
of unpublished articles, including many on socialism, Marxism, and contemporary 
politics. Much of this work is collected on his website ( 
https://www.kainielsen.org/ ).

In his own words, Kai attempted to articulate a conception of a “meaningful and 
desirable life” for everyone and to show that this conception is compatible 
with reality. “I speak here of a conception of a flourishing world for all 
where there will be no poor. I want such a world. I seek again and again in 
various ways to clearly … articulate what this world would be like and how it 
could be achieved.”

New Politics has lost a friend and the world is a poorer place without him.

Posted In Memoriam ( https://newpol.org/category/in-memoriam/ )
About Author
Phil Gasper is a member of the New Politics editorial board.


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#8328): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/8328
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/82547766/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES & NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
#4 Do not exceed five posts a day.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/21656/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to