Marxism and Moralism Anonymous 27-06-23 20:34:37 No. 19083 [View All]
How can Marxism be considered anything other than a moralist aka altruistic philosophy? What is the self-interest in helping the needy? How is it in anyone's self-interest to try to overthrow the system and create an egalitarian society vs spending their efforts trying to rise in the unjust hierarchical system we live under today?
103 posts and 10 image replies omitted. Anonymous 27-06-23 23:22:09 No. 19191
>>19176 >Long paragraph that didn't even reply to the quote. Yes I did, you just don't understand. Let me elaborate with an example.
Back in the day, it was "moral" to own human beings as slaves. Now (in most places of the world at least) it isn't. Marxists see morality as something that is influenced as a result of a society's connection to the economic "mode of production". It was "moral" to own slaves because slavery played an ultimate role in the economic stability of society so the ruling class used "morality" to justify slavery because it kept them the capitalists in control.
What I am saying is that Marxism does not use morality as a way of seeing/analyzing the world (therefore it isn't moralistic) because it sees morality as a byproduct of class society.
>Obviously the people lacking ability to provide for their needs.Read The Communist Manifesto or the Principles of Communism as well as some supplementary text/videos that help elaborate upon those works. It seems you don't know what I meant. "Needy" is a meaningless term in regards to the overall question. Why can't these people get what they need? Because the capitalist system keeps them from doing that. It twists them. It alienates them (and all of us as well). It kills them. Because that is how it works. But in doing so it creates the conditions for its own destruction, not of the self interest of one, but the necessity of the many.
>>19186 >easy Who said this is gonna be easy? it will be done nonetheless.
>Can you tell me with a straitght face that it's easier to topple capitalism than to accumulate wealth under capitalism? This is as silly as that "well you still live in society, curious" meme. People sell their labor for pay and some take those excess profits and become petty bourgeois. This does not erase the fact that capitalism creates way more workers than capitalists and therefore will eventually lead to clashes between these classes. So no, it won't be easy, but it will be done. And also it isn't easy for most workers to amass wealth under capitalism anyway, that is the whole fucking reason why they would overthrow the system.
Anonymous 27-06-23 23:27:54 No. 19192
>>19191 >Yes I did, you just don't understand. Let me elaborate with an example. Like I said to the other guy and we agreed morality and ethics and whatever is a semantic argument.
>>19191 >Why can't these people get what they need? Because the capitalist system keeps them from doing that. A lot of people have needs including cripples who can't provide anything for us under any system yet we provide for them according to our ability, why?
>Who said this is gonna be easy? it will be done nonetheless.No logic to that statement, like saying christ will return regardless,.
>>19191 >This is as silly as that "well you still live in society, curious" meme. People sell their labor for pay and some take those excess profits and become petty bourgeois. This does not erase the fact that capitalism creates way more workers than capitalists and therefore will eventually lead to clashes between these classes. So no, it won't be easy, but it will be done. And also it isn't easy for most workers to amass wealth under capitalism anyway, that is the whole fucking reason why they would overthrow the system. Fate is the domain of the religious.
Anonymous 27-06-23 23:57:54 No. 19194
Idk if OP dropped the drop or w/e but I think the focus a lot of people have here on productive forces and self interest as personal reasons to advocate and work for communism is pretty silly and gets too hung up on anti-moralism and anti-humanism. Marx describes labor-power as a commodity unique in that it is grounded in the "moral-historical subject", i.e. humans. The combination of terms here of moral and historical is crucial – morality is neither paramount nor transhistorical, but neither is it irrelevant to the perceptions, placement, and behavior of the historical human subject. I'll be less esoteric and just say, I am enraged by the range of exploitation and misery wrought towards the ends of capital accumulation. I feel and think that it's bad because it hurts people, it restricts them from flourishing. I dont think there is an essential human nature or default human morality, but I do think there is an obvious tendency to recoil at suffering and consider whether it can be prevented. There are also rational (though not necessarily correct) tendencies that justify and explain suffering as necessary, just, or inevitable. I think morality is the field on which those tendencies of human experience come into conflict in conscious expression, though it's not the battlefield where those conflicts can be properly judged, let alone won. That doesnt make morality as-such irrelevant or worth resentment, morality (or I would prefer "ethical instinct" as I explained earlier ITT) is a part of human experience that is like all others subject to the contingencies of material historical factors (one of which is the persistent reality of human life).
Anonymous 28-06-23 00:02:01 No. 19196
>>19194 >Idk if OP dropped the drop No clue what that means.
>>19194 >but I think the focus a lot of people have here on productive forces and self interest as personal reasons to advocate and work for communism is pretty silly and gets too hung up on anti-moralism and anti-humanism. I agree.
As for the rest of your post, I think it's easy to say that any empathic human can imagine themselves "in the shoes" of any other human potentially and therefore wish them better shoes.
Anonymous 28-06-23 00:50:57 No. 19212
>>19196 Typo, meant "dropped the thread". Though now it seems like they (you?) just didnt respond to my former post
>As for the rest of your post, I think it's easy to say that any empathic human can imagine themselves "in the shoes" of any other human potentially and therefore wish them better shoes.Of course. The distinction I'm making is that to wish them better shoes is, even if it is morality (conceding to you that it may be, I believe it is a sort of pre-moral ethical impulse), is not where morality ends. Many people in our world, as it exists, would (rationally) believe it immoral to give them money to buy shoes (theyll use it for vices, or maybe theres more pressing needs than shoes, etc), and even if it is considered moral to give them shoes outright, this needs to be done within a certain moral(!) framework, namely the donation of individuals or religious bodies, because it is considered immoral to prioritize the shoes of one over the autonomy of another (the latter would necessarily be curtailed by a leveraging of social power towards the provision of basic needs like shoes, food, etc for all). And particularly dogmatic individualists and capitalists will even insist that giving anything away to a needy stranger without some kind of equivelant exchange is immoral, because it will only tend towards reinforcing the reasons theyre needy to begin with (here lack of ambition, misperception of how the world really works, learned helplessness, etc). Even if I reject it, that is certainly a rational moral framework, and it is one that is not even always poorly suited to helping people, even if it does so by encouraging a nearly sociopathic relationship to others. On the other hand, if the wealthy began to supply their children with shoes by raiding orphanges supply as part of a strange fashion trend, I would of course say that that is a despicable way of providing the barefooted with shoes, and I would feel entirely consistent in that judgement despite being technically inconsistent with the former moral precept that sometimes its okay to help some at the expense of others.
I am not trying to be obtuse, but as I see it this is the significant difference. Morality is not wishing that the barefooted had shoes, it's the way in which you would find it acceptable to shoe them.
Anonymous 28-06-23 02:45:44 No. 19218
>>19083 >What is the self-interest in helping the needy? If you are prole the needy are potential competitors who driven by misery will be willing to work for less and less money, driving down your wage, even if they do not directly compete with you, they will compete with people who driven by lower wages will move to other sectors, including yours, lowering overall wages, so as a prole it is in your direct interest to ensure that no only poverty is not a thing, but that all matters high exploitative conditions are also not a thing i.e. slaves. Thus it is in your direct interest to have the whole working class improve at once. Your interests as worker are directly tied to your class, even if your interests as a person are to become a capitalist
>>19083 >How is it in anyone's self-interest to try to overthrow the system and create an egalitarian society vs spending their efforts trying to rise in the unjust hierarchical system we live under today? Why does it gotta be just one? Proles try to do both, they try to become capitalist and also improve their conditions as workers through collective action. However, in our current system, it is imposible for everyone to become capitalists, thus the majority of people continue to pursue improving their lives through collective action instead of the opposite, due to them failing. Then, it comes to be that eventually a sector who is class concious appearss, and fights for the collective improving of conditions of the class as a whole, i.e. a communist party. confronted with the realization that crisis ensure there is a minimum level of poverty always, the majorty of people are driven to overthrow class society
Anonymous 28-06-23 03:00:45 No. 19219
>>19218 So to answer your question, Marxism is not moralistic because it merely gets ahead of the curve, and realises that the only way for the proles to truly improve their conditions is to fight collectively and crush the bourgeois. It does not say this is good, or moral, but only that it is the only way to get out of the cycle of exploitation of capital
Also if you respnd only to this comment, and not to the one I made above, I will swat your house at 1 am
Anonymous 28-06-23 03:46:26 No. 19221
>>19083 All economics and sociology implies some moral element. The subject matter is about intrinsically moral agents, human beings.
You're regurgitating a sparknotes, lo-fi rendition of Marx's thought, which in its actual substance is descriptive and analytical. There is Marx the theorist and Marx the revolutionary. The theorist described the laws of history and the internal contradictions of capitalism. The revolutionary felt that the poor and exploited should fix things for themselves. Theory and praxis are famously related in marxism, but they are two different things.
The praxis side of things obviously has to do with moral emotions of injustice and retribution, because that's what animates human beings. The theoretical side is conceptual and intellectual.
Anonymous 28-06-23 06:51:25 No. 19222
>>19183 >spark a revolution Who said I care about sparking a revolution?
1. I care about Marxian class analysis but am not an orthodox Marxist.
2. I care way more about damaging the power of the capitalist class and asserting my will to power on them than creating any socialist utopia "overnight."
Anonymous 28-06-23 07:02:04 No. 19223
>How can Marxism be considered anything other than a moralist aka altruistic philosophy? "Moralism" in the context of Marxism is typically a critique of observations like "World War II happened because Hitler was evil." While the vast majority of people would agree that Hitler was evil, the explanation is moralizing; at a basic level, a Marxist would approach this by looking into the underlying forces in (economic) practice that resulted in the Nazi Party and figures like Hitler. Another usage of "moralism" is in opposition to hypostasizing moral judgments/values despite changes in the situation. In this sense, Marxists tend to be close to a historicist form of moral realism, although there's no necessary link between Marxism and moral realism. It's something like an elective affinity. As for "ethics," there is a distinction in (continental) philosophy between "social" morality/mores (in German philosophy, Sittlichkeit ) and individual morality (Moralität ). Hegel treats the two separately throughout his works, and it's given particular emphasis in his Philosophy of Right . This is also to be distinguished from ethics overall as a topic in philosophy, which deals with values and behavior without necessarily amounting to an "ethical system." Heidegger discusses ethics in the "subject matter" sense often enough, but not in terms of a system for moral prescriptions in the way that Bentham and Kant did.>How is it in anyone's self-interest to try to overthrow the system and create an egalitarian society vs spending their efforts trying to rise in the unjust hierarchical system we live under today? If I believe (rightly or wrongly) that it's essentially impossible to "rise in the unjust hierarchical system," overthrowing that system will be more in my self-interest. "Self-interest" by itself doesn't imply a common judgment of rightness of means or ends; this is the basic problem with the question. One can be a Marxist out of selfishness or altruism. Similarly, a moral system constructed on the basis of self-interest doesn't necessarily imply selfishness; Spinoza's own ethical system is both constructed on the basis of self-interest and altruistic. Whether one is a Marxist out of selfishness or whether one's moral system is constructed out of self-interest is irrelevant so far as Marxism is concerned. Individuals may have altruistic reasons for adopting Marxism, but they may not, and it doesn't matter either way.
Anonymous 28-06-23 10:44:01 No. 19225
>>19224 (cont.)
Basically, Nazi Germany is the fault of American colonialism and German reactards. Hitler's ideas weren't even formulated by him in the first place, his schizo brain has just collected all the reactionary ideas that were prevailent in our retarded society at the time.
Anonymous 28-06-23 11:40:21 No. 19230
>>19227 >You give a random guy food and he might someday give something back I mean, kindness seems like an immediate return to me. Many people seem to like it when you treat them kindly.
But what do I know? I have no feelings. Regardless, that's not altruism if you just enjoy seeing happy faces and don't like getting people angry or sad. Altruism is when you make it your sacred duty to help the Humanity. Altruism commands you to help everyone and everything and sacrifice your well-being for the sake of others, which can be suicidal. Patriotic soldiers are the most altruistic people out there.
Anonymous 28-06-23 13:58:10 No. 19231
>>19230 Yes, altruism isn't seeding low cost gratitude investments. I think martyrdom is a different question. One can give more over a lifetime than they can give in onetime sacrifice of their life usually.
Back to the topic of the thread. If we're talking about logic, then treason is logical at any point where it's opportune. You fight for communism, but the capitalists decide to buy you out for more than you'd ever get under communism, doesn't it logically self-interestedly make sense to sell out?
Anonymous 28-06-23 15:14:03 No. 19232
>>19231 >One can give more over a lifetime than they can give in onetime sacrifice of their life usually Do you just assume that to conscious egoists life has so little value that sacrificing it isn't a loss for them at all? You're thinking of the self-interest in purely market terms. Self-interest is never limited to a mere accumulation of capital, it has no limits.
People are already egoistic.
<But the one who acts from love of filthy profit indeed does it on his own behalf, since in any case there is nothing that one does not do for his own sake, among other things, everything done for the glory of God; but because he seeks profit, he is a slave of profit, not beyond profit; he is one who belongs to profit, to the moneybag, not to himself; he is not his own. Doesn’t a person whom the passion of greed rules follow this master’s orders, and if one time a weak good-naturedness creeps over him, doesn’t this appear as an exceptional case of precisely the same sort as when devout believers are sometimes abandoned by their Lord’s guidance and beguiled by the wiles of the “devil?” So a greedy person is not a self-owned person, but a slave, and he can do nothing for his own sake, without at the same time doing it for his master’s sake—precisely like the God-fearing person. Unique IPs: 22