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Hegel and Marx. 3 October 2008. Dialectic. Undifferentiated unity (e.g., the family, early civilizations) Disunity (e.g., civil society, later civilizations) Differentiated unity (e.g., the state, contemporary German civilization). Recognition. The master and the slave
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Hegel and Marx 3 October 2008
Dialectic • Undifferentiated unity (e.g., the family, early civilizations) • Disunity (e.g., civil society, later civilizations) • Differentiated unity (e.g., the state, contemporary German civilization)
Recognition • The master and the slave • The master wants to force recognition from the slave • But the only way the recognition is worth anything is if the slave is free to give it • Genuine recognition always requires the freedom of the other
States and Sovereignty • States are sovereign insofar as they can receive recognition, which is only given by other states • But the sovereignty of states also reflects their status as the embodiment of real values
Hegel’s critique of Kant • War is part of the rational process of history and a possibility that is inherent in sovereignty • The “purpose” of war is not to lead to perpetual peace, but to preserve and enhance a particular manifestation of spirit, a cultural identity in rational form
Hegel’s Critique of Kant • Without the possibility of war (of existential conflict), the state would disintegrate into civil society • A federation of states could not eliminate this possibility without also eliminating sovereignty
War and the state • War enhances shared values – the unity of the state • Lifts people out of their concern with material possessions characteristic of civil society: promotes civic virtue (as “selflessness”) • Enhances the unity of the state which is likely to fragment by prolonged peace
Limits on war • War should be limited by the fact of mutual recognition: it ought to come to an end in a way that preserves the possibility of peace • Hostility in modern war should be abstract, not individualized • War is a conflict between states, and hence militaries as the class of people who have the function of warmaking in the state and embody its courage • Yet war can always devolve into a war of survival; this is necessary for war to serve its function
Limits on war • The treatment of soldiers, etc. depends merely on customs, but these customs embody valid conceptions of right in a historical time period • In modern times war is limited in the European context through common customs, etc.
Limits on war • War is not to be justified with reference to its general salutary effects in any particular case • The justification of any particular war will always have to do with the specific “welfare” of a state, but not with the abstract preservation of a state’s unity
The historical process • History is the World’s Court of Judgment: the rise and fall of states in history reveals the judgment of spirit • In every age, certain states rise to be the representatives of dominant cultural forms that embody certain moments of the historical process • Hegel identifies “Oriental” states, Greece, Rome, and the German states as important stages in the development towards ever more differentiated unity
Some problems • Hegel predicts that modern warfare will be more “rational” because more abstract and less individualized • The “individuality” or “sovereignty” of the state is in tension with the idea that war must, and can, be limited • The idea of a historical unfolding of the spirit leading to the ethical state seems to lead to perpetual peace anyway (“The End of History”)
Marx • Marx “inverts” Hegel • Existing states do not embody any special values; they represent dominant classes • History unfolds in a rational process towards greater freedom and rationality, but through a conflict of classes over resources rather than a conflict of ideas over recognition
The individual and society • In all hitherto existing forms of society (including Hegel’s rational state), the individual is alienated from his social existence • Only in communist society can the individual be reconciled to the community without losing his or her individuality
Marx and Rousseau • Early forms of society start as undifferentiated unities (e.g., no division of labor) • The division of labor introduces conflict and exploitation • But the rationality of history ensures that such conflict will eventually be healed
Forms of society • Each form of society is characterized by its mode of production, the way in which labor is typically divided so as to produce and reproduce human life
Forms of society • Each mode of production involves some characteristic and deep-seated conflict: • Between slaves and masters in slave societies • Between lord and peasant in feudal society • Between capital and labor in capitalist society
Forms of society • Yet each new form of society represents an advance in freedom • Feudal societies are freer, in important ways, than slave societies • Capitalist societies are freer, in important ways, than feudal societies
Forms of society • And each form of society prepares the way for the next • So feudal society paves the way for the development of capitalism • And capitalism paves the way for the development of communism
Capitalism • Capitalism is characterized by the conflict between capital and labor • Labor is alienated from its products and exploited by capital • Human beings fail to control their joint activity
Capitalism • Yet capitalism is an advance over other forms of society • The productive forces unleashed by capitalism increase the possibilities for human self-realization, even if they restrict them to the capitalists • The formal freedom of choice afforded to labor is a real increase in freedom
Communism • Communism represents the socialization of the means of production • It heals the alienation of labor from its products: there is no more conflict between capital and labor • It represents the conscious control of social life by its producers • It represents an ideal of self-realization • It may or may not be brought about by violent revolution
Capitalism and war • War is ultimately caused by the same conflicts that characterize a mode of production, and can only be eliminated by their elimination • Capitalism leads to war • But it also leads to the conditions for the elimination of war: global capitalism is the precondition of communism
Marx and perpetual peace? • Like Kant, Marx subscribes to a version of the perpetual peace thesis • Like Hegel, Marx believes one can say that history is essentially rational • Unlike Hegel, Marx believes one can predict the future: communism, and hence perpetual peace, is inevitable