The following discussion build some of the previous discussions , on this list, 
on such matters as positivism versus antipositivism, the socialist calculations 
debates and the relevance of Ronald Coase, and the nature of materialism itself.

Dialectical materialism arguably failed in the twentieth century not because it 
was too historical or too social, but because it hardened into a metaphysical 
dogma instead of remaining a flexible bridge between science and society. 
Philipp Frank, physicist, logical empiricist, and one of the most politically 
self-aware members of the Vienna Circle (outside of Otto Neurath), offers one 
possible way out. Against both Soviet scholasticism and Western “value-free” 
scientism, Frank argued that science is underdetermined by data alone and 
therefore requires a humanistic middle link : a socially articulated framework 
that connects formal theories to collective purposes (Frank, Modern Science and 
Its Philosophy ). Read this way, dialectical materialism is not a set of cosmic 
“laws,” but rather is a functional worldview-language, a way of coordinating 
scientific practice with emancipatory social goals rather than letting it drift 
toward technocratic or capitalist ends.

This immediately demystifies dialectics. The so-called “laws” of dialectical 
materialism: quantity into quality, unity of opposites, negation of the 
negation, are neither pseudo-scientific superlaws nor mystical Hegelian 
residues. They are heuristics : pattern-recognition tools that sensitize 
inquiry to nonlinear change, systemic contradiction, and historical 
transformation. Stephen Jay Gould explicitly defended dialectics in exactly 
this sense, treating it as a heuristic for understanding punctuated 
equilibrium, contingency, and emergence in evolutionary biology rather than as 
a predictive calculus ( The Panda’s Thumb ; Eight Little Piggies ). Frank would 
almost certainly have approved: dialectics becomes scientifically legitimate 
when it guides attention without dictating results. Jerome Ulman’s attempt to 
synthesize Marxism with B. F. Skinner’s radical behaviorism follows the same 
logic, stripping away metaphysical claims while preserving a materialist, 
anti-mentalist commitment to explanation grounded in observable practices and 
environmental structures.

Once dialectical materialism is reconstructed as a middle link rather than a 
metaphysics, its relevance to political economy becomes clearer, especially in 
the work of Oskar Lange and Ronald Coase. Lange showed that the mathematical 
tools of neoclassical economics were not inherently capitalist but could be 
redeployed within socialist planning as instruments of rational calculation ( 
On the Economic Theory of Socialism ). Coase, from the opposite ideological 
direction, demonstrated why planning already exists inside capitalism: firms 
are internal planned economies that arise whenever transaction costs make 
markets inefficient (“The Nature of the Firm”). Together, Lange and Coase 
reveal that the real question is not market versus planning , but which 
institutional form minimizes social friction under given conditions. Frank’s 
philosophy takes things a step further by explaining why this choice is never 
purely technical: transaction costs, property rights, and planning mechanisms 
only function within a prior social interpretation of value and purpose.

This synthesis reaches its sharpest contemporary relevance in the age of 
platform capitalism and algorithmic governance. Amazon, Alibaba, and Google are 
de facto planned economies, coordinating labor, logistics, and pricing 
internally through massive computational systems because it is more efficient 
than market exchange. This is a Coasean fact realized at Langean scale. What is 
missing is precisely what Frank insisted upon: the humanistic middle link. To 
what social ends are these private planning systems directed? Without an 
explicit dialectical-materialist framework—understood in Frank’s operational, 
non-dogmatic sense—science and technology default to serving capital 
accumulation rather than collective flourishing. A reconstructed dialectical 
materialism would not command scientists what to believe, but would openly 
declare why certain scientifically permissible paths are chosen over others.

In this form, dialectical materialism can survive both positivist dismissal and 
Cold War discrediting. It becomes neither a “super-science” nor a party 
catechism, but a philosophy of science for public purpose: empirically 
disciplined, historically informed, and unapologetically normative. Frank, 
Neurath, Gould, Ulman, Lange, and even Coase converge on a single 
lesson—science always operates within a social grammar. The only real choice is 
whether that grammar remains implicit and ideological, or explicit and 
democratically contestable.

----------
References
----------

*Philipp Frank*
---------------

* 

*Philipp Frank, Modern Science and Its Philosophy (1949)*
Full text via Internet Archive (borrowable, free account):
https://archive.org/details/modernscienceitsphilosophy

* 

*Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: “Philipp Frank”*
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/frank-philipp/

*Otto Neurath*
--------------

* 

*Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: “Otto Neurath”*
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/neurath/ ( 
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/neurath/ )

* 

*Otto Neurath, “Unified Science and Its Encyclopedic Integration”*
Open PDF hosted by the University of Vienna:
https://www.univie.ac.at/ivc/PDF/UnifiedScience.pdf

*Stephen Jay Gould*
-------------------

* 

*Stephen Jay Gould, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory (2002)*
Full text available for borrowing via Internet Archive:
https://archive.org/details/structureofevolu00goul

* 

*Stephen Jay Gould, “The Panda’s Thumb” (essay collection)*
Full text (borrowable):
https://archive.org/details/pandasthumbmore00goul

* 

*Gould on dialectics (primary essay: “Nurturing Nature”)*
Reprinted in Ever Since Darwin , available here:
https://archive.org/details/eversincedarwinr00goul

*Jerome Ulman*
--------------

* 

*Jerome Ulman, “Radical Behaviorism and Marxism”*
Unfortunately, *no fully open-access version is currently available*.
However, the argument is summarized and discussed in:

* 

Behavioral Science & Social Theory overview (open):
https://www.marxists.org/subject/psychology/behaviorism.htm

* Toward a Synthesis of Marx and Skinner 
https://www.academia.edu/32866179/TOWARD_A_SYNTHESIS_OF_MARX_AND_SKINNER

*Oskar Lange*
-------------

* 

*Oskar Lange, “On the Economic Theory of Socialism” (1936)*
Full text hosted by Marxists Internet Archive:
https://www.marxists.org/archive/lange/1936/market-socialism.htm

* 

*Wikipedia overview (surprisingly solid bibliography)*
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oskar_Lange ( 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oskar_Lange )

*Ronald Coase*
--------------

* 

*Ronald Coase, “The Nature of the Firm” (1937)*
Free full-text PDF via University of Chicago:
https://www.law.uchicago.edu/files/file/coase-nature.pdf

* 

*Ronald Coase, “The Problem of Social Cost” (1960)*
Free full-text PDF via University of Chicago:
https://www.law.uchicago.edu/files/file/coase-problem.pdf

* 

*Nobel Prize autobiography and lecture*
https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/economic-sciences/1991/coase/biographical/


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#40138): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/40138
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/117228881/21656
-=-=-
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/13617172/21656/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to