Re: timescale question

From: Steve Gabosch (bebop101@comcast.net)
Date: Sat Nov 01 2003 - 19:57:22 PST


Hi Andy,

I am enjoying this exchange, but it is quickly spreading across numerous
topics! Soon, we will need to find a resting place. But here are some
thoughts on your very interesting previous post.

Steve had asked:
>>Returning to the original question, do you include the formulation of
>>scientific laws as something you *can* say about Nature?

Andy responded:
Yes. But correctly interpreting the meaning of scientific laws turns out to
be not as obvious as it seems at first.

Thank you. I agree. To be sure, any generalization - "natural law" - is
subject to further interpretations and refinements as human knowledge
(hopefully) progresses, and eventually whole systems of generalizations,
once thought to apply universally, become subjected to more and more
exceptions, more and more qualifications and limitations, more and more
critical interpretations - such as Newton's laws of mechanics, now a
special case of the larger and more universal field of quantum
mechanics. And so will be the fate of all scientific laws, including those
of quantum mechanics and even dialectical materialism. The parliament of
modern science is ever-revising its observations and theories, and no law,
no matter how deeply etched it might be in a stone tablet, is
absolute. There will always be better ways to understand things. Whether
we understand the meanings of these understandings and put them into
practice in time is the historic problem.

Andy remarked:
>Steve, I will respond to your points one at a time, but you might reflect
>on the observation that if you were to re-write your message inserting the
>word "God" in lieu of "Nature" and the names of the various Christian
>saints and prophets in lieu of the names of Marxist figures, it would read
>perfectly well as a defence of Christianity. Are we really disputing over
>the name of God?

No, I didn't at all think we were disputing the name of God, or, in
general, discussing the comparison of Marxism and scientific thinking in
general to religious ideology. I must admit, I didn't expect this
discussion to head in this kind of direction. It appears that you are
drawing parallels between dialectical materialism and religion. Is this
your intent?

>... why not say "Plekhanov, Stalin, Mao" instead of "Engels, Lenin,
>Vygotsky", after all it was Plekhanov who invented the term?

If I get your comment, you are pointing out that Plekhanov invented the
term dialectical materialism. Something in the back of my brain wants to
say it was Kautsky who first popularized it - somebody did - (another
tidbit for a dictionary of philosophical etymology) - but the point you
make is the same, Marx and Engels did not originally invent this term.

I would agree that Plekhanov belongs on the list of dialectical
materialists - which includes Engels, Lenin and Vygotsky - that adhere to
the "two great camps" thesis, but I personally draw the line at including
Stalin and Mao. I would not include Marxist philosophy on their list of
historic accomplishments - in my opinion, they did much damage and no good
to dialectical materialism as a mode of scientific thought.

>Steve said:
>>Andy, what do you believe happened in the post-world war two period - or
>>for that matter, since the latter half of the 19th century - that has
>>invalidated or rendered obsolete the positions of Engels, Lenin, Vygotsky
>>and others on the historic struggle between idealism and materialism in
>>science and philosophy?

Andy responded:
>One of the things we have learnt from Hegel is the concept of "Zeitgeist",
>and the way the focus of struggle changes in the course of history.
>Despite Engels' observation about "two great camps", this conception does
>not withstand an actual study of the history of philosophy. A reading of
>the history of philosophy (and even more science) shows that the focus of
>disputes changes from generation to generation.

As you stress, the precise focus of struggle certainly changes with the
course of history and from generation to generation, but this point does
not necessarily invalidate Engels' thesis that the struggle of the "two
great camps" of idealism and materialism is underlying philosophical debate
in general. What actual study of the history of philosophy in your opinion
provides contrary evidence to this traditional Marxist thesis? What
analysis does it not withstand?

Andy continued:
>"Materialism vs. Idealism" was indeed the focus of philosophical struggle
>in the wake of the collapse of Hegelianism in 1841, until sometime close
>to the beginning of the first world war, i.e., exactly that period when
>the classics of Marxism were written.

This sentence points once more to the need to distinguish a "focus" from an
"underlying debate." I would agree that the focus of the struggle did
shift, but in my thinking, while the forms of the discussion moved to new
parameters, the underlying debate between the ideologies of idealism and
materialism has remained the essential point of contention. In your
comments, you agree that this was the case up to a point, but then things
changed. What do you believe happened just before WWI that changed this
situation?

Andy continued:
>Now Marx, Engels and Lenin are beyond criticism in taking a clear position
>in the forefront of the philosophical dispute of their day, but it gives
>no glory to their followers to repeat these arguments in a later period.
>Need I explain that this does not mean that failing to join in this
>ancient battle means joining the enemy (i.e., idealist) camp; it simply
>means to fight the battle of today rather than the battle of the day
>before yesterday.

Once again, I suspect we are wrestling here with distinctions of form and
content. If the idealist camp is still the "enemy", isn't there still a
battle? I suggest these essentially opposed conceptions of the world are
still at the root and comprise the essential content of contemporary
scientific and philosophical debate. I am with Engels, Vygotsky and their
followers on this. But I am certainly interested in arguments to the
contrary, and I welcome your thoughts on this.

At the same time, and to emphasize the very valid point I believe you are
making, the forms and foci of this debate have indeed shifted since the
19th century and with the successive generations. So here is my take, see
what you think. As the 20th century rolled on, many forms of what I would
call mechanical and objectivist materialism became dominant in many
quarters of scientific reasoning, replacing the openly idealist tendencies
predominant in the late 19th century, especially in the social
sciences. This has accelerated in recent decades, to the point where it
might be valid to argue that objectivist-mechanical materialism in social
science is the new form of philosophical idealism. A common methodology
associated with this trend of materialism - which I am suggesting is a form
of idealism in disguise - is to promote biological explanations for social
activity. Hence, a major focus in modern social science philosophy today
is on the role of biology in human affairs. Two popular contemporary
trends provide examples: one, the tendency to look at the human genome as a
direct cause of human behavior and ailment; another, the tendency to seek
explanations of modern behavior in speculations about how and why
bio-psychological characteristics originally evolved.

This view attempts to take into account both the general historic truth of
the struggle of "two great camps" thesis as well as the specific changing
forms and foci of their ideological debates. Thoughts?

Andy said:
>My point is that in the sense in which the word "Nature" is used in
>philosophy (as opposed to meaning "the birds and the bees", etc), it means
>exactly the same thing as "God".

As you surmised, I am not religious, and I do not mean God when I say
Nature. Perhaps I create a problem when I capitalize the "n" in
nature. In doing so, I may be guilty of trying to sound pretentiously
Philosophical. But by Nature I really just mean the Birds and the
Bees. So, please, let me restate my original question as: "is nature
lawful?". Asking "is Nature lawful" may have gotten us off Track - I mean,
track. :-))

>Steve said:
>>As I understand it, reification is the process of treating thoughts as
>>real objects and acting accordingly. Surely, I am misreading your
>>statement if I take it to mean that the process of reification in general
>>is a valid practical guide to day-to-day action. What am I missing in
>>your statement?
Andy responded:
>No you did not misread me. If I treat a policeman with the respect due to
>the law, I am being wise. Equally well I don't step in front of the thing
>I call "bus" (unless its indicators are blinking).

Andy a few sentences later said:
>If I were to act as if socialist society had arrived, and not bother about
>earning a wage or paying for what I take from the shop I would have a very
>bad life.

The last example demonstrates why the process of reification in general
cannot in my opinion be a reliable guide to day-to-day action. In
reification, thoughts, including false thoughts about what rules a society
expects us to follow, may not serve us well in practical action. From the
materialist point of view, much more practical than treating abstract
thoughts as real, is thinking concretely about reality. As for stepping in
front of a bus with its indicators blinking: the assumption that a blinking
turn signal means that a bus is actually turning is another example of
reification - the substitution of a semiotic sign for a real event. As any
wise pedestrian knows, it is best to observe the real motion of the bus
before proceeding. :-))

Thanks for your posts, Andy.
- Steve



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