Re: Ilyenkov's concept of the ideal

From: Steve Gabosch (bebop101@comcast.net)
Date: Mon May 03 2004 - 13:08:58 PDT


Below is an edited version of the Ilyenkov article "The Concept of the
Ideal" that I posted in the CHAT course last year (I did this mainly for
myself, it is a very difficult article to read). To help study the article
which has no subheadings of its own, I added subheadings of my own, and
also numbered the paragraphs. The rest of the article is intact. If this
is hard to read in e-mail form (or loses italics and boldfacing) I have
also included a Word file attachment of the same thing.

- Steve

from: Problems of Dialectical Materialism
Evald Ilyenkov (1977)
The Concept of the Ideal

Source: Problems of Dialectical Materialism.
Publisher: Progress Publishers,
Transcribed for the Internet:: Andy Blunden

0.1 The original document this is taken from contained 143 paragraphs of
text with no sub-headings. As a study aid, each paragraph has been
numbered and subheadings have been added by Steve Gabosch, a student of
activity theory in the U.S. All lines beginning with a number are
additions to the original. Asterisks have been placed around words
italicised in the original in case the italics formatting is not recognised.

1- 6 The Term "Ideal" Does Not Equal "Existing in the Consciousness"
1
Before discussing the *concept* itself we must first consider the *terms*
“ideal” and “ideality”, that is to say, we must first define the range of
phenomena to which these terms may be applied, without analysing the
essence of these phenomena at this point.

2
Even this is not an easy task because usage in general, and scientific
usage in particular, is always something derivative of that very
“understanding of the essence of the question” whose exposition our
definition is intended to serve. The difficulty is by no means peculiar to
the given case. It arises whenever we discuss fairly complex matters
regarding which there is no generally accepted interpretation and,
consequently, no clear definition of the limits of the object under
discussion. In such cases discussion on the point at issue turns into an
argument about the “meaning of the term”, the limits of a particular
designation and, hence, about the formal attributes of phenomena that have
to be taken into consideration in a theoretical examination of the essence
of the question.

3
Returning to the subject of the “ideal”, it must be acknowledged that the
word “ideal” is used today mainly as a synonym for “conceivable”, as the
name for phenomena that are “immanent in the consciousness”, phenomena that
are represented, imagined or thought. If we accept this fairly stable
connotation, it follows that there is no point in talking about any
“ideality” of phenomena existing outside human consciousness. Given this
definition, everything that exists “outside the consciousness” and is
perceived as existing outside it is a material and only a material object.

4
At first sight this use of the term seems to be the only reasonable one.
But this is only at first sight.

5
Of course, it would be absurd and quite inadmissible from the standpoint of
any type of materialism to talk about anything “ideal” where no thinking
individual (“thinking” in the sense of “mental” or “brain” activity) is
involved. “Ideality” is a category inseparably linked with the notion that
human culture, human life activity is purposeful and, therefore, includes
the activity of the human brain, consciousness and will. This is axiomatic
and Marx, when contrasting his position regarding the “ideal” to Hegel’s
view, writes that the ideal is “nothing else than the material world
reflected by the human mind, and translated into forms of thought”.
[Capital, Afterword.]

6
It does not follow from this, however, that in the language of modern
materialism the term “ideal” equals “existing in the consciousness”, that
it is the name reserved for phenomena located in the head, in the brain
tissue, where, according to the ideas of modern science, “consciousness” is
realised.

7 - 13 The Marx-Hegel Concept Differs from the Popular Materialist Concept
of the Ideal
7
*In Capital* Marx defines the form of value in general as “purely ideal”
not on the grounds that it exists only “in the consciousness”, only in the
head of the commodity-owner, but on quite opposite grounds. The price or
the money form of value, like any form of value in general, is IDEAL
because it is totally distinct from the palpable, corporeal form of
commodity in which it is presented, we read in the chapter on “Money”.
[Capital, Vol. I, pp. 98-99.]

8
In other words, the form of value is IDEAL, although it exists outside
human consciousness and independently of it.

9
This use of the term may perplex the reader who is accustomed to the
terminology of popular essays on materialism and the relationship of the
material to the “ideal”. The ideal that exists outside people’s heads and
consciousness, as something completely objective, a reality of a special
kind that is independent of their consciousness and will, invisible,
impalpable and sensuously imperceptible, may seem to them something that is
only “imagined”, something “suprasensuous”.

10
The more sophisticated reader may, perhaps, suspect Marx of an unnecessary
flirtation with Hegelian terminology, with the “semantic tradition”
associated with the names of Plato, Schelling and Hegel, typical
representatives of “objective idealism”, i.e., of a conception according to
which the “ideal” exists as a special world of incorporeal entities
(“ideas”) that is outside and independent of man. He will be inclined to
reproach Marx for an unjustified or “incorrect” use of the term “ideal”, of
Hegelian “hypostatisation” of the phenomena of the consciousness and other
mortal sins, quite unforgivable in a materialist.

11
But the question is not so simple as that. It is not a matter of
terminology at all. But since terminology plays a most important role in
science, Marx uses the term “ideal” in a sense that is close to the
“Hegelian” interpretation just because it contains far more meaning than
does the popular pseudo-materialistic understanding of the ideal as a
phenomenon of consciousness, as a purely mental function. The point is that
intelligent (dialectical) idealism ­ the idealism of Plato and Hegel ­ is
far nearer the truth than popular materialism of the superficial and vulgar
type (what Lenin called silly materialism). In the Hegelian system, even
though in inverted form, the fact of the dialectical transformation of the
ideal into the material and vice versa was theoretically expressed, a fact
that was never suspected by “silly” materialism, which had got stuck on the
crude ­ undialectical ­ opposition of “things outside the consciousness” to
“things inside the consciousness”, of the “material” to the “ideal”.

12
The “popular” understanding of the ideal cannot imagine what insidious
traps the dialectics of these categories has laid for it in the given case.

13
Marx, on the other hand, who had been through the testing school of
Hegelian dialectics, discerned this flaw of the “popular” materialists. His
materialism had been enriched by all the achievements of philosophical
thought from Kant to Hegel. This explains the fact that in the Hegelian
notion of the ideal structure of the universe existing outside the human
head and outside the consciousness, he was able to see not simply
“idealistic nonsense”, not simply a philosophical version of the religious
fairy-tales about God (and this is all that vulgar materialism sees in the
Hegelian conception), but an idealistically inverted description of the
actual relationship of the “mind to Nature”, of the “ideal to the
material”, of “thought to being”. This also found its expression in
terminology.

14 We Must Consider the History of the Term "Ideal" from Kant through
Hegel to Marx
14
We must, therefore, briefly consider the history of the term “ideal” in the
development of German classical philosophy from Kant to Hegel, and the
moral that the “intelligent” (i.e., dialectical) materialist Marx was able
to draw from this history.

15 - 17 Kant's Concept of the Ideal Had Shortcomings
15
It all began when the founder of German classical philosophy, Immanuel
Kant, took as his point of departure the “popular” interpretation of the
concepts of the “ideal” and the “real” without suspecting what pitfalls he
had thus prepared for himself.

16
It is notable that in his Critique of Pure Reason Kant does not formulate
his understanding of “ideality”, but uses this term as a ready-made
predicate requiring no special explanation when he is defining space and
time and speaking of their “transcendental *ideality*”. This means that
“things” possess space-time determinacy only in the consciousness and
thanks to the consciousness, but not in themselves, outside and before
their appearance in the consciousness. Here “ideality” is clearly
understood as a synonym for the “pure” and the a priori nature of
*consciousness as such*, with no external connections. Kant attaches no
other meaning to the term “ideality”.

17
On the other hand, the “material” element of cognition is achieved by
sensations, which assure us of the *existence* (and only that!) of things
*outside consciousness*. Thus, all we know about “things in themselves” is
that they “exist”. The ideal is what exists exclusively in the
consciousness and thanks to the activity of the consciousness. And
conversely, that which exists only in consciousness is characterised as the
“ideal”. All clear and simple. A perfectly popular distinction. And what it
amounts to is that none of the facts we know and are aware of in things ­
their colour, geometrical form, taste, causal interdependence ­ may be
attributed to the things themselves. All these are merely attributes
provided by our own organisation, and not those of the things. In other
words, the “ideal” is everything that we know about the world except the
bare fact of its “existence”, its “being outside consciousness”. The latter
is non-ideal and, therefore, inaccessible to consciousness and knowledge,
transcendental, alien, and awareness of the fact that things, apart from
anything else, also “exist” (outside the consciousness) adds nothing
whatever to *our knowledge* of them. And it is this interpretation that
Kant illustrates with his famous example of the talers. It is one thing, he
writes, to have a hundred talers in one’s pocket, and quite another thing
to have them only in one’s consciousness, only in imagination, only in
dreams (i.e., from the standpoint of popular usage, only “ideal” talers).

18 - 21 Kant's Example of the Talers Contradicted His Own Point
18
In Kant’s philosophy this example plays an extremely important role as one
of the arguments against the so-called “ontological proof of the existence
of God”. His argument runs as follows. It cannot be inferred from the
existence of an object *in the consciousness* that the object exists
*outside the consciousness*. God exists in people’s consciousness but it
does not follow from this that God exists “in fact”, outside consciousness.
After all, there are all kinds of things in people’s consciousness!
Centaurs, witches, ghosts, dragons with seven heads....

19
With this example, however, Kant gets himself into a very difficult
position. In fact, in a neighbouring country where the currency was not
talers but rubles or francs it would have been simply explained to him that
he had in his pocket not “real talers” but only pieces of paper with
symbols carrying an obligation only for Prussian subjects.... However, if
one acknowledges as “real” only what is authorised by the decrees of the
Prussian king and affirmed by his signature and seal, Kant’s example proves
what Kant wanted it to prove. If, on the other hand, one has a somewhat
wider notion of the “real” and the “ideal”, his example proves just the
opposite. Far from refuting, it actually affirms that very “ontological
proof” which Kant declared to be a typical example of the erroneous
inferring of the existence of a prototype outside the consciousness from
the existence of the type in the consciousness.

20
“The contrary is true. Kant’s example might have enforced the ontological
proof,” wrote Marx, who held a far more radical atheistic position than
Kant in relation to “God”. And he went on: “Real talers have the same
existence that the imagined gods have. Has a real taler any existence
except in the imagination, if only in the general or rather common
imagination of man? Bring paper money into a country where this use of
paper is unknown, and everyone will laugh at your subjective imagination.”

21
The reproach aimed at Kant does not, of course, derive from a desire to
change the meaning of the terms “ideal” and “real” after the Hegelian
fashion. Marx bases his argument on realisation of the fact that a
philosophical system which denotes as “real” everything that man perceives
as a thing existing outside his own consciousness, and “ideal” everything
that is not perceived in the form of such a thing, cannot draw critical
distinctions between the most fundamental illusions and errors of the human
race.

22 - 25 Similarities Between Talers, Fetishes and Adam's Rib
22
It is quite true that the “real talers” are in no way different from the
gods of the primitive religions, from the crude fetishes of the savage who
worships (precisely as his “god”!) an absolutely real and actual piece of
stone, a bronze idol or any other similar “external object”. The savage
does not by any means regard the object of his worship as a *symbol* of
“God”; for him this object in all its crude sensuously perceptible
corporeality is God, God himself, and no mere “representation” of him.

23
The very essence of fetishism is that it attributes to the object in its
immediately perceptible form properties that in fact do not belong to it
and have nothing in common with its sensuously perceptible external appearance.

24
When such an object (stone or bronze idol, etc.) ceases to be regarded as
“God himself” and acquires the meaning of an “external symbol” of this God,
when it is perceived not as the immediate subject of the action ascribed to
it, but merely as a “symbol” of something else outwardly in no way
resembling the symbol, then man’s consciousness takes a step forward on the
path to understanding the essence of things.

25
For this reason Kant himself and Hegel, who is completely in agreement with
him on this point, consider the Protestant version of Christianity to be a
higher stage in the development of the religious consciousness than the
archaic Catholicism, which had, indeed, not progressed very far from the
primitive fetishism of the idol-worshippers. The very thing that
distinguishes the Catholic from the Protestant is that the Catholic tends
to take everything depicted in religious paintings and Bible stories
*literally*, as an exact representation of events that occurred in “the
external world” (God as a benevolent old man with a beard and a shining
halo round his head, the birth of Eve as the actual conversion of Adam’s
rib into a human being, etc., etc.). The Protestant, on the other hand,
seeing “idolatry” in this interpretation, regards such events as allegories
that have an “internal”, purely ideal, moral meaning.

26 - 28 The Hegelians Critique Kant's Arguments About Talers and Gods
26
The Hegelians did, in fact, reproach Kant for playing into the hands of
Catholic idolatry with his example of the talers, for arguing against his
own Protestant sympathies and attitudes because the “external talers” (the
talers in his pocket) were only symbols in the general or rather common
imagination of man”, were only representatives (forms of external
expression, embodiment) of the “spirit”, just as religious paintings,
despite their sensuously perceptible reality, were only images produced by
human social self-consciousness, by the human spirit. In their essence they
were entirely ideal, although in their existence they were substantial,
material and were located, of course, outside the human head, outside the
consciousness of the individual, outside individual mental activity with
its transcendental mechanisms.

27
“Gods” and “talers” are phenomena of the same order, Hegel and the
Hegelians declared, and by this comparison the problem of the “ideal” and
its relationship to the “real”, to the materially substantial world was
posited in a way quite different from that of Kant. It was associated with
the problem of “alienation”, with the question of “reification” and
“de-reification”, of man’s “re-assimilation” of objects created by himself,
objects that through the action of some mysterious processes had been
transformed into a world not only of “external” *objective* formations but
formations that were also hostile to man.

28
Hence comes the following interpretation of Kant’s problem: “The proofs of
the existence of God are either mere *hollow tautologies*. Take for
instance the ontological proof. This only means: ‘that which 1 conceive for
myself in a real way (*realiter*) is a real concept for me’, something that
works on me. In this sense *all gods*, the pagan as well as the Christian
ones, have possessed a real existence. Did not the ancient Moloch reign?
Was not the Delphic Apollo a real power in the life of the Greeks? Kant’s
critique means nothing in this respect. If somebody imagines that he has a
hundred talers, if this concept is not for him an arbitrary, subjective
one, if he believes in it, then these hundred imagined talers have for him
the same value as a hundred real ones. For instance, he will incur debts on
the strength of his imagination, his imagination will *work, in the same
way as all humanity has incurred debts on its gods*.”

29 - 31 Social Consciousness Versus Individual Consciousness
29
When the question was posited in this way the category of the “ideal”
acquired quite a different meaning from that given to it by Kant, and this
was by no means due to some terminological whim of Hegel and the Hegelians.
It expressed the obvious fact that social consciousness is not simply the
many times repeated individual consciousness (just as the social organism
in general is not the many times repeated individual human organism), but
is, in fact, a historically formed and historically developing system of
“objective notions”, forms and patterns of the “objective spirit”, of the
“collective reason” of *mankind* (or more directly, “the people” with its
inimitable spiritual culture), all this being quite independent of
individual caprices of consciousness or will. This system comprises all the
general moral norms regulating people’s daily lives, the legal precepts,
the forms of state ­ political organisation of life, the ritually
legitimised patterns of activity in all spheres, the “rules” of life that
must be obeyed by all, the strict regulations of the guilds, and so on and
so forth, up to and including the grammatical and syntactical structures of
speech and language and the logical norms of reasoning.

30
All these structural forms and patterns of social consciousness
unambiguously oppose the individual consciousness and will as a special,
internally organised “reality”, as the completely “external” forms
determining that consciousness and will. It is a fact that every individual
must from childhood reckon far more carefully with demands and restrictions
than with the immediately perceptible appearance of external “things” and
situations or the organic attractions, desires and needs of his individual
body.

31
It is equally obvious that all these externally imposed patterns and forms
cannot be identified in the individual consciousness as “innate” patterns.
They are all *assimilated* in the course of upbringing and education ­ that
is, in the course of the individual’s assimilation of the intellectual
culture that is available and that took shape before him, without him and
independently of him ­ as the patterns and forms of *that* culture. These
are no “immanent” forms of individual mental activity. They are the forms
of the “other”, external “subject” that it assimilates.

32 - 36 Plato Laid the Basis for Seeing the Social-Collective As Laying
the Basis for the Ideal
32
This is why Hegel sees the main advantage of Plato’s teaching in the fact
that the question of the relationship of “spirit” to “nature” is for the
first time posited not on the narrow basis of the relations of the
“individual soul” to “everything else”, but on the basis of an
investigation of the universal (social-collective) “world of ideas” as
opposed to the “world of things”. In Plato’s doctrine “...the reality of
the spirit, insofar as it is opposed to nature, is presented in its highest
truth, presented as the organisation of a state”.

33
Here it must be observed that by the term “state” Plato understood not only
the political and legal superstructure, but also the sum-total of social
rules regulating the life of individuals within an organised society, the
“polis”, or any similar formation, everything that is now implied by the
broader term “culture”.

34
It is from Plato, therefore, that the tradition arises of examining the
*world of ideas* (he, in fact, gives us the concept of the “ideal world”)
as a stable and internally organised world of laws, rules and patterns
controlling the individual’s mental activity, the “individual soul”, as a
special, supernatural “objective reality” standing in opposition to every
individual and imperatively dictating to the individual how he should act
in any given situation. The immediate “external” force determining the
conduct of the individual is the “state”, which protects the whole system
of spiritual culture, the whole system of rights and obligations of every
citizen.

35
Here, in a semi-mystical, semi-mythological form was clearly established a
perfectly real fact, the fact of the dependence of the mental (and not only
mental) activity of the individual on the system of culture established
before him and completely independently of him, a system in which the
“spiritual life” of every individual begins and runs its course.

36
The question of the relationship of the “ideal” to the “substantially
material” was here presented as a question of the relationship of these
stable forms (patterns, stereotypes) of culture to the world of “individual
things”, which included not only “external things”, but also the physical
body of man himself.

37 - 38 The Need for a Clear Definition of Ideality Arises
37
As a matter of fact, it was only here that the necessity arose for a clear
definition of the category of “ideality” as opposed to the
undifferentiated, vague notion of the “psyche” in general, which might
equally well be interpreted as a wholly corporeal function of the
physically interpreted “ soul”, no matter to what organ this function was
actually ascribed ­ heart, liver or brain. Otherwise, “ideality” remains a
superfluous and completely unnecessary verbal label for the “psychic”. This
is what it was before Plato, the term “idea” being used, even by
Democritus, to designate a completely substantial form, the geometrical
outlines of a “thing”, a body, which was quite physically impressed on man,
in the physical body of his eyes. This usage which was characteristic of
the early, naive form of materialism cannot, of course, be used by the
materialism of today, which takes into consideration all the complexity of
the relationships between individual mental activity and the “world of things”.

38 - 41 Modern Materialist Psychology and the Concept of Ideality
38
For this reason in the vocabulary of modern materialistic psychology (and
not only philosophy) the category of “ideality” or the “ideal” defines not
mental activity in general, but only a certain phenomenon connected, of
course, with mental activity, but by no means merging with it.

39
“*Ideality* mainly characterises the idea or image insofar as they,
becoming objectivised in words “ [entering into the system of socially
evolved knowledge which for the individual is something that is given for
him. ­ E. I.], “in objective reality, thus acquire a relative independence,
separating themselves, as it were, from the mental activity of the
individual,” writes the Soviet psychologist S. L. Rubinstein.

40
Only in this interpretation does the category of “ideality” become a
specifically meaningful definition of a certain category of phenomena,
establishing the form of the process of reflection of objective reality in
mental activity, which is social and human in its origin and essence, in
the social-human consciousness, and ceases to be an unnecessary synonym for
mental activity in general.

41
With reference to the quotation from S. L. Rubinstein’s book it need only
be observed that the image is objectivised not only in words, and may enter
into the system of socially evolved knowledge not only in its verbal
expression. The image is objectivised just as well (and even more directly)
in sculptural, graphic and plastic forms and in the form of the
routine-ritual ways of dealing with things and people, so that it is
expressed not only in words, in speech and language, but also in drawings,
models and such symbolic objects as coats of arms, banners, dress,
utensils, or as money, including gold coins and paper money, IOUs, bonds or
credit notes.

42 - 43 Ilyenkov's Description of Ideality in General
42
“Ideality” in general is in the historically formed language of philosophy
a characteristic of the *materially established* (*objectivised*,
materialised, reified) *images of human social culture*, that is, the
historically formed modes of human social life, which confront the
individual possessing consciousness and will as a special “supernatural”
objective reality, as a special *object* comparable with material reality
and situated on one and the same spatial plane (and hence often identified
with it).

43
For this reason, purely for the sake of terminological accuracy, it is
pointless to apply this definition to purely individual mental states at
any given moment. The latter, with all their individually unique whims and
variations, are determined in effect by the numerous interconnections of
the most diverse factors up to and including transient states of the
organism and the peculiar features of its biochemical reactions (such as
allergy or colour-blindness, for instance), and, therefore, may be
considered on the plane of social-human culture as purely accidental.

44 - 44 Kant's Problems Understanding Ideality Versus Mental States
44
This is why we find Kant talking about the “ideality of space and time”,
but not about the “ideality” of the conscious sensations of weight, for
instance, in the muscles of the arm when one is carrying something; about
the “ideality” of the chain of cause and effect, but not about the ideality
of the fact that a rock with the sun shining on it becomes warmer (although
this fact is also consciously perceived). In Kant “ideality” becomes a
synonym for the “transcendental character” of universal forms of
sensuousness and reason, that is, patterns of cognitive activity that are
inherent in every “self” and thus have a completely impersonal character
and display, moreover, a compulsive force in relation to each separate
(“empirical”) “self”. This is why space and time, causal dependence and
“beauty” are for Kant “ideal”, while they are not mental states connected
with the unique and transitory physical states of the individual’s body.
Admittedly, as we have seen in the example of the “talers”, Kant does not
always adhere strictly to his terminology, although the reason for this is
certainly not carelessness (it would be difficult to reproach Kant for
that), but rather the dialectical trickiness of the problems that he
raises. But despite the instability of the terminological definition of the
categories, their objective dialectical content begins to show through ­
the very content that the Hegelian school provides with a far more adequate
definition. The point is that Kant could not fully overcome the notion of
“social consciousness” (“universal spirit”) as the many times repeated
individual consciousness.

45 - 59 Hegel's Concept of the Ideal
45
In Hegelian philosophy, however, the problem was stated in a fundamentally
different way. The social organism (the “culture” of the given people) is
by no means an abstraction expressing the “sameness” that may be discovered
in the mentality of every individual, an “abstract” inherent in each
individual, the “transcendentally psychological” pattern of individual life
activity. The historically built up and developing forms of the “universal
spirit” (“the spirit of the people”, the “objective spirit”), although
still understood by Hegel as certain stable patterns within whose framework
the mental activity of every individual proceeds, are none the less
regarded by him not as formal abstractions, not as abstractly universal
“attributes” inherent in every individual, taken separately. Hegel
(following Rousseau with his distinction between the “general will” and the
“universal will”) fully takes into account the obvious fact that in the
diverse collisions of differently orientated “individual wills” certain
results are born and crystallised which were never contained in any of them
separately, and that because of this *social consciousness* as an “entity”
is certainly not built up, as of bricks, from the “sameness” to be found in
each of its “parts” (individual selves, individual consciousnesses). And
this is where we are shown the path to an understanding of the fact that
all the patterns which Kant defined as “transcendentally inborn” forms of
operation of the individual mentality, as a priori “internal mechanisms”
inherent in every mentality, are actually forms of the self-consciousness
of *social man assimilated from without* by the individual (originally they
opposed him as “external” patterns of the movement of culture independent
of his will and consciousness), social man being understood as the
historically developing “aggregate of all social relations”.

46
It is these forms of the organisation of social (collectively realised)
human life activity that exist *before, outside and completely
independently* of the individual mentality, in one way or another
materially established in language, in ritually legitimised customs and
rights and, further, as “the organisation of a state” with all its material
attributes and organs for the protection of the traditional forms of life
that stand in opposition to the individual (the physical body of the
individual with his brain, liver, heart, hands and other organs) as an
entity organised “in itself and for itself”, as something ideal within
which all individual things acquire a different meaning and play a
different role from that which they had played “as themselves”, that is,
outside this entity. For this reason the “ideal” definition of any thing,
or the definition of any thing as a “disappearing” moment in the movement
of the “ideal world”, coincides in Hegel with the role and meaning of this
thing in social human culture, in the context of socially organised human
life activity, and not in the individual consciousness, which is here
regarded as something derived from the “universal spirit”.

47
It will readily be appreciated how much broader and more profound such a
positing of the question is in comparison with any conception that
designates as “ideal” everything that is “in the consciousness of the
individual”, and “material” or “real”, everything that is outside the
consciousness of the individual, everything that the given individual is
*not conscious of*, although this “everything” does exist in reality, and
thus draws between the “ideal” and the “real” a fundamentally dividing line
which turns them into “different worlds” that have “nothing in common” with
each other. It is clear that, given such a metaphysical division and
delimitation, the “ideal” and the “material” cannot and must not be
regarded as *opposites*. Here they are “different”, and that is all.

48
Hegel proceeds from the quite obvious fact that for the consciousness of
the individual the “real” and even the “crudely material” ­ certainly not
the “ideal” ­ is at first the whole grandiose *materially established
spiritual culture of the human race*, within which and by the assimilation
of which this individual awakens to “self-consciousness”. It is this that
confronts the individual as the thought of preceding generations realised
(“reified”, “objectified”, “alienated”) in sensuously perceptible “matter”
­ in language and visually perceptible images, in books and statues, in
wood and bronze, in the form of places of worship and instruments of
labour, in the designs of machines and state buildings, in the patterns of
scientific and moral systems, and so on. All these objects are in their
existence, in their “present being” substantial, “material”, but in their
essence, in their origin they are “ideal”, because they “embody” the
collective thinking of people, the “universal spirit” of mankind.

49
In other words, Hegel includes in the concept of the “ideal” everything
that another representative of idealism in philosophy (admittedly he never
acknowledged himself to be an “idealist”)A. A. Bogdanov ­ a century later
designated as “socially organised experience” with its stable, historically
crystallised patterns, standards, stereotypes, and “algorithms”. The
feature which both Hegel and Bogdanov have in common (as “idealists”) is
the notion that this world of “socially organised experience” is for the
individual the sole ,,object” which he “assimilates” and “cognises”, the
sole object with which he has any dealings.

50 - 53 The Secret Twist of Idealism
50
But the world existing before, outside and independently of the
consciousness and will in general (i.e., not only of the consciousness and
will of the *individual but* also of the social consciousness and the
socially organised “will”), the world as such, is taken into account by
this conception only insofar as it finds expression in universal forms of
consciousness and will, insofar as it is already “idealised”, already
assimilated in “experience”, already presented in the patterns and forms of
this “experience”, already included therein.

51
By this twist of thought, which characterises idealism in general (whether
it is Platonic, Berkeleian, Hegelian or that of Popper), the real material
world, existing before, outside and quite independently of “experience” and
before being expressed in the forms of this “experience” (including
language), is totally removed from the field of vision, and what begins to
figure under the designation of the “real world” is an already “idealised”
world, a world already assimilated by people, a world already shaped by
their activity, the world *as people know it*, as it is presented in the
existing forms of their culture. A world already expressed (presented) in
the forms of the existing human experience. And this world is declared to
be the only world about which anything at all can be said.

52
This secret of idealism shows up transparently in Hegel’s discussion of the
“ideality” of natural phenomena, in his presentation of nature as an
“ideal” being in itself. Underlying what he has to say about certain
natural phenomena is their description in the concepts and terms of the
physics of his day: “...because masses push and crush each other and there
is no vacuum between them, it is only in this *contact* that the ideality
of matter in general begins, and it is interesting to see how this
intrinsic character of matter emerges, for in general it is always
interesting to see the realisation of a concept.” Here Hegel is really
speaking not at all about nature as it is, but about nature as it is
presented (described) in the system of a definite physical theory, in the
system of its definitions established by its historically formed “language”.

53
It is this fact, incidentally, that explains the persistent survival of
such “semantic substitutions”; indeed, when we *are talking* about nature,
we are obliged to make use of the available language of natural science,
the “language of science” with its established and generally understood
“meanings”. It is this, specifically, which forms the basis of the
arguments of logical positivism, which quite consciously identifies
“nature” with the “language” in which people talk and write about nature.

54 - 57 The Distinction Between the Ideal and Real
54
It will be appreciated that the main difficulty and, therefore, the main
problem of philosophy is not to distinguish and counterpose everything that
is “in the consciousness of the individual” to everything that is outside
this individual consciousness (this is hardly ever difficult to do), but to
delimit the world of collectively acknowledged notions, that is, the whole
socially organised world of intellectual culture with all its stable and
materially established universal patterns, and the real world as it exists
outside and apart from its expression in these socially legitimised forms
of “experience”.

55
It is here and only here that the distinction between the “ideal” and the
“real” (“material”) acquires a serious scientific meaning because in
practice the two are usually confused. Pointing out the fact that the thing
and the form of the thing exist outside the individual consciousness and do
not depend on individual will still does not solve the problem of their
objectivity in its fully materialistic sense. And conversely, by no means
all that people do not know, are unaware of, do not perceive as the forms
of external things, is invention, the play of the imagination, a notion
that exists merely in man’s head. It is because of this that the “sensible
person”, to whose way of thinking Kant appeals with his example of the
talers, is more often than other people deluded into taking the
collectively acknowledged notions for objective reality, and the objective
reality revealed by scientific research for subjective invention existing
only in the heads of the “theoreticians”. It is the “sensible person”,
daily observing the sun rising in the East and setting in the West, who
protests that the system of Copernicus is an invention that contradicts the
“obvious facts”. And in exactly the same way the ordinary person, drawn
into the orbit of commodity-money relationships, regards money as a
perfectly material thing, and value, which in fact finds its external
expression in money, as a mere abstraction existing only in the heads of
the theoreticians, only “ideally”.

56
For this reason consistent materialism, faced with this kind of situation,
could not define the “ideal” as that which exists in the consciousness of
the individual, and the “material” as that which exists outside this
consciousness, as the sensuously perceived form of the external thing, as a
real corporeal form. The boundary between the two, between the “material”
and the “ideal”, between the “thing in itself” and its representation in
social consciousness could not pass along this line because, if it did,
materialism would be completely helpless when confronted with the
dialectics that Hegel had discovered in the relations between the
“material” and the “ideal” (particularly, in the phenomena of fetishism of
all kinds, from that of religion to that of commodity, and further, the
fetishism of words, of language, symbols and signs).

57
It is a fact that like the icon or the gold coin, any *word* (term or
combination of terms) is primarily a “thing” that exists outside the
consciousness of the individual, possesses perfectly real bodily properties
and is sensuously perceived. According to the old classification accepted
by everyone, including Kant, words clearly come under the category of the
“material” with just as much justification as stones or flowers, bread or a
bottle of wine, the guillotine or the printing press. Surely then, in
contrast to these things, what we call the “ideal” is their subjective
image in the head of the individual, in the individual consciousness.

58 - 60 The Relationships Created By Representation Are the Basis of the
Hegelian Concept of Ideality
58
But here we are immediately confronted with the trickiness of this
distinction, which is fully provided for by the Hegelian school and its
conception of the “materialisation”, the “alienation”, the “reification” of
universal notions. As a result of this process which takes place “behind
the back of the individual consciousness”, the individual is confronted in
the form of an “external thing” with people’s general (i.e., collectively
acknowledged) *representation*, which has absolutely nothing in common with
the sensuously perceived bodily form in which it is “represented”.

59
For example, the name “Peter” is in its sensuously perceived bodily form
absolutely unlike the real Peter, the person it designates, or the
sensuously represented image of Peter which other people have of him. The
relationship is the same between the gold coin and the goods that can be
bought with it, goods (commodities), whose universal *representative* is
the coin or (later) the banknote. The coin represents *not itself* but
“another” in the very sense in which a diplomat represents not his own
person but his country, which has authorised him to do so. The same may be
said of the word, the verbal symbol or sign, or any combination of such
signs and the syntactical pattern of this combination.

60
This relationship of *representation* is a relationship in which one
sensuously perceived thing performs the role or function of representative
of quite another thing, and, to be even more precise, the universal nature
of that other thing, that is, something “other” which in sensuous, bodily
terms is quite unlike it, and it was this relationship that in the Hegelian
terminological tradition acquired the title of “ideality”.

61 - 65 Marx's Use of the Term Ideal
61
In Capital Marx quite consciously uses the term “ideal” in this formal
meaning that it was given by Hegel, and not in the sense in which it was
used by the whole pre-Hegelian tradition, including Kant, although the
philosophical-theoretical interpretation of the range of phenomena which in
both cases is similarly designated “ideal” is diametrically opposed to its
Hegelian interpretation. The meaning of the term “ideal” in Marx and Hegel
is the same, but the concepts, i.e., the ways of understanding this “same”
meaning are profoundly different. After all, the word “concept” in
dialectically interpreted logic is a synonym for *understanding of the
essence of the matter*, the essence of phenomena which are only outlined by
a given term; it is by no means a synonym for “the meaning of the term”,
which may be formally interpreted as the sum-total of “attributes” of the
phenomena to which the term is applied.

62
It was for this reason that Marx, like any genuine theoretician, preferred
not to change the historically formed “meanings of terms”, the established
nomenclature of phenomena, but, while making strict and rigorous use of it,
proposed a quite different *understanding of* these phenomena that was
actually the opposite of the traditional understanding.

63
*In Capital*, when analysing money ­ that familiar and yet mysterious
category of social phenomena ­ Marx describes as “ideal” nothing more or
less than the value-form of the products of labour in general (*die
Wertform überhaupt*).

64
So the reader for whom the term “ideal” is a synonym for the “immanent in
the consciousness”, “existing only in the consciousness”, “only in people’s
ideas”, only in their “imagination” will misunderstand the idea expressed
by Marx because in this case it turns out [should be "seems" - SG] that
even Capital ­ which is nothing else but *a value-form* of the organisation
of the productive forces, a form of the functioning of the means of
production ­ also exists only in the consciousness, only in people’s
subjective imagination, and “not in reality”.

64.1 [Note by SG: the words "turns out" in the middle of the above
sentence appear to render the meaning of the sentence to be the opposite of
Ilyenkov's likely intention. Substituting "seems" or "appears" looks like
it easily fixes this confusion. I believe Ilyenkov is making the following
point: to disagree with Marx and say that money "exists only in the
consciousness" would lead one to say the same thing about capital - that it
also "exists only in the consciousness" - and this is position a follower
of Berkeley but not a materialist would take.]

65
Obviously only a follower of Berkeley could take the point in this way, and
certainly not a materialist.

66 - 69 Ideality in Use-Value and Exchange Value
66
According to Marx, the ideality of the form of value consists not, of
course, in the fact that this form represents a mental phenomenon existing
only in the brain of the commodity-owner or theoretician, but in the fact
that the corporeal palpable form of the thing (for example, a coat) is only
a form of expression of quite a different “thing” (linen, as a value) with
which it has nothing in common. The value of the linen is *represented*,
expressed, “embodied” in the form of a coat, and the form of the coat is
the “*ideal or represented* form” of the value of the linen.

67
“As a use-value, the linen is something palpably different from the coat;
as value, it is the same as the coat, and now has the appearance of a coat.
Thus the linen acquires a value-form different from its physical form. The
fact that it is value, is made manifest by its equality with the coat, just
as the sheep’s nature of a Christian is shown in his resemblance to the
Lamb of God.” [Capital, Vol. I, p. 58.]

68
This is a completely objective relationship, within which the “bodily form
of commodity B becomes the value-form of commodity A, or the body of
commodity B acts as a mirror to the value of commodity A”, [Capital, Vol.
I, p. 59.] the authorised representative of its “value” nature, of the
“substance” which is “embodied” both here and there.

69
This is why the form of value or value-form is *ideal*, that is to say, it
is something quite different from the palpable form of the thing in which
it is *represented*, expressed, “embodied”, “alienated”.

70 - 73 Is It Consciousness and Will That Is Being Represented?
70
What is this “other”, this difference, which is expressed or represented
here? People’s consciousness? Their will? By no means. On the contrary,
both will and consciousness are determined by this objective ideal form,
and the thing that it expresses, “represents” is a definite social
relationship between people which in their eyes assumes the fantastic form
of a relationship between things.

71
In other words, what is “represented” here *as a thing is* the form of
people’s activity, the form of life activity which they perform together,
which has taken shape “behind the back of consciousness” and is materially
established in the form of the relationship between things described above.

72
This and only this creates the ideality of such a “thing”, its
sensuous-supersensuous character.

73
Here ideal form actually does stand in opposition to individual
consciousness and individual will as the *form of the external thing*
(remember Kant’s talers) and is necessarily perceived precisely as the form
of the external thing, not its palpable form, but as the form of another
equally palpable thing that it represents, expresses, embodies, differing,
however, from the palpable corporeality of both things and having nothing
in common with their sensuously perceptible physical nature. What is
embodied and “represented” here is a definite form of labour, a definite
form of human objective activity, that is to say, the transformation of
nature by social man.

74 - 79 The Answer To the Riddle of Ideality
74
It is here that we find the answer to the riddle of “ideality”. Ideality,
according to Marx, is nothing else but the form of social human activity
represented in the thing. Or, conversely, the form of human activity
represented *as a thing*, as an object.

75
“Ideality” is a kind of stamp impressed on the substance of nature by
social human life activity, a form of the functioning of the physical thing
in the process of this activity. So all the things involved in the social
process acquire a new “form of existence” that is not included in their
physical nature and differs from it completely ­ their ideal form.

76
So, there can be no talk of “ideality” where there are no people socially
producing and reproducing their material life, that is to say, individuals
working collectively and, therefore, necessarily possessing consciousness
and will. But this does not mean that the “ideality of things” is a product
of their *conscious will*, that it is “immanent in the consciousness” and
exists only in the consciousness. Quite the reverse, the individual’s
consciousness and will are functions of the ideality of things, their
comprehended, *conscious ideality*.

77
Ideality, thus, has a purely social nature and origin. It is the form of a
thing, but it is outside this thing, and in the activity of man, as a *form
of this activity*. Or conversely, it is the form of a person’s activity but
outside this person, *as a form of the thing*. Here, then, is the key to
the whole mystery that has provided a real basis for all kinds of
idealistic constructions and conceptions both of man and of a world beyond
man, from Plato to Carnap and Popper. “Ideality” constantly escapes, slips
away from the metaphysically single-valued theoretical fixation. As soon as
it is fixed as the “form of the thing” it begins to tease the theoretician
with its “immateriality”, its “functional” character and appears only as a
form of “pure activity”. On the other hand, as soon as one attempts to fix
it “as such”, as purified of all the traces of palpable corporeality, it
turns out that this attempt is fundamentally doomed to failure, that after
such a purification there will be nothing but phantasmal emptiness, an
indefinable vacuum.

78
And indeed, as Hegel understood so well, it is absurd to speak of
,activity” that is not realised in anything definite, is not “embodied” in
something corporeal, if only in words, speech, language. If such ,activity”
exists, it cannot be in reality but only in *possibility, only*
potentially, and, therefore, not as activity but as its opposite, as
*inactivity*, as the absence of activity.

79
So, according to Hegel, the “spirit”, as something ideal, as something
opposed to the world of corporeally established forms, cannot “reflect” at
all (i.e., become aware of the forms of its own structure) unless it
preliminarily opposes “itself to itself”, as an ,object”, a thing that
differs from itself.

80 - 85 Marx's Development of Hegel's Concept of Ideality
80
When speaking of value-form as the ideal form of a thing, Marx by no means
accidentally uses the comparison of the mirror: “In a sort of way, it is
with man as with commodities. Since he comes into the world neither with a
looking glass in his hand, nor as a Fichtean philosopher, to whom ‘I am I’
is sufficient, man first sees and recognises himself in other men. Peter
only establishes his own identity as a man by first comparing himself with
Paul as being of like kind. And thereby Paul, just as he stands in his
Pauline personality, becomes to Peter the type of the genus homo.”
[Capital, Vol. I, p. 59.]

81
Here Marx plainly indicates the parallel between his theory of the
“ideality” of the value-form and Hegel’s understanding of “ideality”, which
takes into account the dialectics of the emergence of the collective
self-awareness of the human race. Yes, Hegel understood the situation far
more broadly and profoundly than the “Fichtean philosopher”; he established
the fact that “spirit”, before it could examine itself, must shed its
unblemished purity and phantasmal nature, and must itself turn *into an
object* and in the form of this object oppose itself to itself. At first in
the form of the Word, in the form of verbal “embodiment”, and then in the
form of instruments of labour, statues, machines, guns, churches,
factories, constitutions and states, in the form of the grandiose
“inorganic body of man”, in the form of the sensuously perceptible body of
civilisation which for him serves only as a glass in which he can examine
himself, his “other being”, and know through this examination his own “pure
ideality”, understanding himself as “pure activity”. Hegel realised full
well that ideality as “pure activity” is not directly given and cannot be
given “as such”, immediately in all its purity and undisturbed perfection;
it can be known only through analysis of its “embodiments”, through its
reflection in the glass of palpable reality, in the glass of the system of
things (their forms and relationships) created by the activity of “pure
spirit”. By their fruits ye shall know them-and not otherwise.

82
The ideal forms of the world are, according to Hegel, forms of activity
*realised* in some material. If they are not realised in some palpable
material, they remain invisible and unknown for the active spirit itself,
the spirit cannot become aware of them. In order to examine them they must
be “reified”, that is, turned into the forms and relations of *things*.
Only in this case does ideality exist, does it possess *present* being;
only as a reified and reifiable form of activity, a form of activity that
has become and is becoming the form of an object, a palpable thing outside
consciousness, and in no case as a transcendental-psychological pattern of
consciousness, not as the internal pattern of the “self”, distinguishing
itself from itself within itself, as it turned out with the “Fichtean
philosopher”.

83
As the internal pattern of the activity of *consciousness*, as a pattern
“immanent in the consciousness”, ideality can have only an illusory, only a
phantasmal existence. It becomes real only in the course of its
reification, objectification (and deobjectification), alienation and the
sublation of alienation. How much more reasonable and realistic this
interpretation was, compared with that of Kant and Fichte, is self-evident.
It embraced the actual dialectics of people’s developing
“self-consciousness”, it embraced the actual phases and metamorphoses in
whose succession alone the “ideality” of the world exists.

84
It is for this reason that Marx joins Hegel in respect of terminology, and
not Kant or Fichte, who tried to solve the problem of “ideality” (i.e.,
activity) while remaining “inside consciousness”, without venturing into
the external sensuously perceptible corporeal world, the world of the
palpable forms and relations of things.

85
This Hegelian definition of the term “ideality” took in the whole range of
phenomena within which the “ideal”, understood as *the corporeally embodied
form of the activity of social* man, really exists.

86 - 89 Fathoming the Miracles of the Commodity
86
Without an understanding of this circumstance it would be totally
impossible to fathom the miracles performed before man’s eyes by the
COMMODITY, the commodity form of the product, particularly in its money
form, in the form of the notorious “real talers”, “real rubles”, or “real
dollars”, things which, as soon as we have the slightest theoretical
understanding of them, immediately turn out to be not “real” at all, but
“ideal” through and through, things whose category quite unambiguously
includes *words*, the units of *language*, and many other “things”. Things
which, while being wholly “material”, palpable formations, acquire all
their “meaning” (function and role) from “spirit” and even owe to it their
specific bodily existence .... Outside spirit and without it there cannot
even be words, there is merely a vibration of the air.

87
The mysteriousness of this category of “things”, the secret of their
“ideality”, their sensuous-supersensuous character was first revealed by
Marx in the course of his analysis of the commodity (value) form of the
product.

88
Marx characterises the commodity form as an IDEAL form, i.e., as a form
that has absolutely nothing in common with the real palpable form of the
body in which it is represented (i.e., expressed, materialised, reified,
alienated, realised), and by means of which it “exists”, possesses “present
being”.

89
It is “ideal” because it does not include a single atom of the substance of
the body in which it is represented, because it is the form of quite
*another body*. And this other body is present here not bodily, materially
(“bodily” it is at quite a different point in space), but only once again
“ideally”, and here there is not a single atom of its substance. Chemical
analysis of a gold coin will not reveal a single molecule of boot-polish,
and vice versa. Nevertheless, a gold coin represents (expresses) the value
of a hundred tins of boot-polish precisely by its weight and gleam. And, of
course, this act of representation is performed not in the consciousness of
the seller of boot-polish, but outside his consciousness in any “sense” of
this word, outside his head, in the space of the market, and without his
having even the slightest suspicion of the mysterious nature of the money
form and the essence of the price of boot-polish.... Everyone can spend
money without knowing what money is.

90 The Ideal Is Objective
90
For this very reason the person who confidently uses his native language to
express the most subtle and complex circumstances of life finds himself in
a very difficult position if he takes it into his head to acquire
consciousness of the relationship between the “sign” and the “meaning”. The
consciousness which he may derive from linguistic studies in the present
state of the science of linguistics is more likely to place him in the
position of the centipede who was unwise enough to ask himself which foot
he steps off on. And the whole difficulty which has caused so much bother
to philosophy as well lies in the fact that “ideal forms”, like the
value-form, the form of thought or syntactical form, have always arisen,
taken shape and developed, turned into something objective, completely
independent of anyone’s consciousness, in the course of processes that
occur not at all in the “head”, but most definitely outside it ­ although
not without its participation.

91 - 93 Idealism's Concept of Ideality Flows From The Objectivity of Ideality
91
If things were different, the “idealism” of Plato and Hegel would, indeed,
be a most strange aberration, quite unworthy of minds of such calibre and
such influence. The *objectivity* of the “ideal form” is no fantasy of
Plato’s or Hegel’s, but an indisputable and stubborn fact. A fact that such
impressive thinkers as Aristotle, Descartes, Spinoza, Kant, Hegel and
Einstein, not to mention thousands of lesser spirits, racked their brains
over throughout the centuries.

92
“Idealism” is not a consequence of some elementary mistake committed by a
naive schoolboy who saw a terrible ghost that was not there. Idealism is a
completely sober statement of the objectivity of ideal form, that is, the
fact of its existence in the space of human culture independently of the
will and consciousness of individuals ­ a statement that was, however, left
without an adequate scientific explanation.

93
This statement of the fact without its scientific materialist explanation
is what idealism is. In the given case materialism consists precisely in
the scientific explanation of this fact and not in ignoring it. Formally
this fact looks just as it was described by the thinkers of the “Platonic
line” ­ a form of movement of physically palpable bodies which is objective
despite its obvious incorporeality. An incorporeal form controlling the
fate of entirely corporeal forms, determining whether they are to be, or
not to be, a form, like some fleshless, and yet all-powerful “soul” of
things. A form that preserves itself in the most diverse corporeal
embodiments and does not coincide with a single one of them. A form of
which it cannot be said WHERE EXACTLY it “exists”.

94 - 103 The Concept of the Ideal in Classical Political Economy
94
A completely rational, non-mystical understanding of the “ideal” (as the
“ideal form” of the real, substantially material world) was evolved in
general form by Marx in the course of his constructive critical mastering
of the Hegelian conception of ideality, and particularised (as the solution
to the question of the form of value) through his criticism of political
economy, that is to say, of the classical labour theory of value. The
ideality of value-form is a typical and characteristic case of ideality in
general, and Marx’s conception of it serves as a concrete illustration of
all the advantages of the dialectical materialist view of ideality, of the
“ideal”.

95
Value-form is understood in Capital precisely as the reified form
(represented as, or “representing”, the thing, the relationship of things)
of social human life activity. Directly it does present itself to us as the
“physically palpable” embodiment of *something “other”, but* this “other”
cannot be some physically palpable matter.

96
The only alternative, it appears, is to assume some kind of *bodiless
substance*, some kind of “insubstantial substance”. And classical
philosophy here proposed a logical enough solution: such a strange
“substance” can be only activity ­ “pure activity”, “pure form-creating
activity”. But in the sphere of economic activity this substance was,
naturally, decoded as *labour*, as man’s physical labour transforming the
physical body of nature, while “value” became *realised* labour, the
“embodied” act of labour.

97
So it was precisely in political economy that scientific thought made its
first decisive step towards discovering the essence of “ideality”. Already
Smith and Ricardo, men fairly far removed from philosophy, clearly
perceived the “substance” of the mysterious value definitions *in labour*.

98
Value, however, though understood from the standpoint of its “substance”,
remained a mystery with regard to its “form”. The classical theory of value
could not explain why this substance expressed itself as it did, and not in
some other way. Incidentally, the classical bourgeois tradition was not
particularly interested in this question. And Marx clearly demonstrated the
reason for its indifference to the subject. At all events, deduction of the
form of value from its “substance” remained an insuperable task for
bourgeois science. The *ideality* of this form continued to be as
mysterious and mystical as ever.

99
However, since the theoreticians found themselves in direct confrontation
with the mysterious ­ physically impalpable ­ properties of this form, they
had recourse again and again to the well-known ways of interpreting
“ideality”. Hence, the idea of the existence of “ideal atoms of value”,
which were highly reminiscent of Leibniz’s monads, the immaterial and
unextended quanta of “spiritual substance”.

100
Marx, as an economist, was helped by the fact that he knew a lot more about
philosophy than Smith and Ricardo.

101
It was when he saw in the Fichtean-Hegelian conception of *ideality as
“pure activity”* an abstractly mystifying description of the real,
physically palpable labour of social man, the process of the physical
transformation of physical nature performed by man’s physical body, that he
gained the theoretical key to the riddle of the ideality of value-form.

102
The value of a thing presented itself as the reified labour of man and,
therefore, the *form of value* turned out to be nothing else but the
reified *form* of this labour, a form of human life activity.

103
And the fact that this is by no means *the form of the thing as it is*
(i.e., the thing in its natural determinateness) but a *form of social
human labour* or of the form-creating activity of social man embodied in
the substance of nature ­ it was this fact that provided the solution to
the riddle of *ideality*. The ideal form of a thing is not the form of the
thing “in itself”, but a form of social human life activity regarded as
*the form of a thing*.

104 -105 The Platonic-Hegelian Conception of Ideality
104
And since in its developed stages human life activity always has a
purposeful, i.e., consciously willed character, “ideality” presents itself
as a *form of consciousness and will*, as the law guiding man’s
consciousness and will, as the objectively compulsory pattern of
consciously willed activity. This is why it turns out to be so easy to
portray the “ideal” exclusively as a form of consciousness and
self-consciousness, exclusively as the “transcendental” pattern of the
psyche and the will that realises this pattern.

105
And if this is so, the Platonic-Hegelian conception of “ideality” begins to
appear as merely an impermissible projection of the forms of consciousness
and will (forms of thought) on to the “external world”. And the “criticism”
of Hegel amounts merely to reproaches for his having “ontologised”,
“hypostatised” the purely subjective forms of human mental activity. This
leads to the quite logical conclusion that all categories of thought
(“quantity”, “measure”, “necessity”, “essence”, and so on and so forth) are
only “ideal”, that is, only transcendental-psychological patterns of the
subject’s activity and nothing else.

106 - 110 A Discussion of a Passage in Marx's 1844 Manuscripts
106
Marx, of course, had quite a different conception. According to him all the
logical categories without exception are only the *idealised* (i.e.,
converted into forms of human life activity, activity that is primarily
external and sensuously objective, and then also “spiritual”), universal
forms of existence of objective reality, of the external world. And,
certainly, not projections of the forms of the mental world on to the
“physical world”. A conception, as can easily be seen, which is just the
reverse in the sequence of its “theoretical deduction”.

107
This interpretation of “ideality” is in Marx based, above all, on the
materialist understanding of the specific nature of the social human
relationship to the world (and the fundamental difference between this and
the animals’ relationship to the world, the purely biological
relationship): “The animal is immediately one with its life activity. It
does not distinguish itself from it. It is *its life activity*. Man makes
his life activity itself the object of his will and of his consciousness.”
[Marx, Estranged Labour, 1844]

108
This means that the animal’s activity is directed only towards external
objects. The activity of man, on the other hand, is directed *not only* on
them, but also on his own forms of life activity. It is activity directed
*upon itself*, what German classical philosophy presented as the specific
feature of the “spirit”, as “reflection”, as “self-consciousness”.

109
In the above passage quoted from Marx’s early works he does not emphasise
sufficiently the fundamentally important detail that distinguishes his
position from the Fichtean-Hegelian interpretation of “reflection” (the
relationship to oneself as to “another”). In view of this the passage may
be understood to mean that man acquires a new, second plane of life
activity precisely because he possesses *consciousness and will*, which the
animal does not possess.

110
But this is just the opposite of the case. Consciousness and will appear in
man only because he already possesses a special plane of life activity that
is absent in the animal world-activity directed towards the mastering of
forms of life activity that are specifically social, purely social in
origin and essence, and, therefore, not biologically encoded in him.

111 - 118 What Newborn Babies Are Confronted With
111
The animal that has just been born is confronted with the external world.
The forms of its life activity are inborn along with the morphology of its
body and it does not have to perform any special activity in order to
“master” them. It needs only to *exercise* the forms of behaviour encoded
in it. Development consists only in the development of instincts,
congenital reactions to things and situations. The environment *merely
corrects* this development.

112
Man is quite a different matter. The child that has just been born is
confronted ­ outside itself ­ not only by the external world, but also by a
very complex system of culture, which requires of him “modes of behaviour”
for which there is genetically (morphologically) “no code” in his body.
Here it is not a matter of *adjusting ready-made patterns of behaviour*,
but of *assimilating* modes of life activity that do not *bear any
relationship at all* to the biologically necessary forms of the reactions
of his organism to things and situations.

113
This applies even to the “behavioural acts” directly connected with the
satisfaction of biologically inborn needs: the need for food is
biologically encoded in man, but the need to eat it with the help of a
plate, knife, fork and spoon, sitting on a chair, at a table, etc., etc.,
is no more congenital in him than the syntactical forms of the language in
which he learns to speak. In relation to the morphology of the human body
these are as purely and externally *conventional* as the rules of chess.

114
These are pure forms of the external (existing outside the individual body)
world, forms of the organisation of this world, which he has yet to convert
into the forms of his individual life activity, into the patterns and modes
of his activity, in order to become a man.

115
And it is this world of the forms of social human life activity that
confronts the newborn child (to be more exact, the biological organism of
the species Homo Sapiens) as the objectivity to which he is compelled to
*adapt* all his “behaviour”, all the functions of his organic body, as the
object towards assimilation of which his elders guide all his activity.

116
The existence of this specifically human object ­ the world of things
created by man for man, and, therefore, things whose forms *are reified
forms of human activity* (labour), and certainly not the forms naturally
inherent in them ­ is the condition for the existence *of consciousness and
will* And certainly not the reverse, it is not consciousness and will that
are the condition and prerequisite for the existence of this unique object,
let alone its “cause”.

117
The consciousness and will that arise in the mind of the human individual
are the direct consequence of the fact that what he is confronted by as the
object of his life activity is not nature as such, but nature that has been
transformed by the labour of previous generations, shaped by human labour,
nature in the forms of human life activity.

118
Consciousness and will become necessary forms of mental activity only where
the individual is compelled to control his own organic body in answer not
to the organic (natural) demands of this body but to demands presented from
outside, by the “rules” accepted in the society in which he was born. It is
only in these conditions that the individual is compelled to distinguish
*himself from his own organic body*. These rules are not passed on to him
by birth, through his “genes”, but are imposed upon him from outside,
dictated by culture, and not by nature.

119 - 123 Consciousness and Will Are Effects Not Causes of Ideality
119
It is only here that there appears the *relationship to oneself* as to a
*single representative of “another”*, a relationship unknown to the
animals. The human individual is obliged to subordinate his own actions to
certain “rules” and “patterns” which he has to assimilate as *a special
object* in order to make them rules and patterns of the life activity of
his own body.

120
At first they confront him *as an external object*, as the forms and
relationships of things created and recreated by human labour. It is by
mastering the objects of nature in the forms created and recreated by human
labour that the individual becomes for the first time a man, becomes a
representative of the “human race”, whereas before this he was merely a
representative of a biological species.

121
The existence of this purely social legacy of forms of life activity, that
is to say, a legacy of forms that are in no way transmitted through the
genes, through the morphology of the organic body, but only through
education, only through assimilation of the available culture, only through
a process in the course of which the individual’s organic body changes into
a representative of the RACE (i.e., the whole specific aggregate of people
connected by the ties of social relationships) ­ it is only the existence
of this specific relationship that brings about consciousness and will as
specifically human forms of mental activity.

122
Consciousness only arises where the individual is compelled to *look at
himself as if from the side* ­ *as* if with the eyes of *another person*,
the eyes *of all other people* ­ only where he is compelled to correlate
his individual actions with the actions of another man, that is to say,
only within the framework of collectively performed life activity. Strictly
speaking, it is only here that there is any need for WILL, in the sense of
the ability to forcibly subordinate one’s own inclinations and urges to a
certain law, a certain demand dictated not by the individual organics of
one’s own body, but by the organisation of the “collective body”, the
collective, that has formed around a certain common task.

123
It is here and only here that there arises the IDEAL plane of life activity
unknown to the animal. Consciousness and will are not the “cause” of the
manifestation of this new plane of relationships between the individual and
the external world, but only the *mental forms of its expression*, in other
words, its *effect*. And, moreover, not an accidental but a necessary form
of its manifestation, its expression, its realisation.

124 - 126 Ideality and Psychology
124
We shall go no further in examining consciousness and will (and their
relationship to “ideality”) because here we begin to enter the special
field of psychology. But the problem of “ideality” in its general form is
equally significant for psychology, linguistics, and any socio-historical
discipline, and naturally goes beyond the bounds of psychology as such and
must be regarded independently of purely psychological (or purely
politico-economic) details.

125
Psychology must necessarily proceed from the fact that between the
individual consciousness and objective reality there exists the “mediating
link” of the historically formed culture, which acts as the prerequisite
and condition of individual mental activity. This comprises the economic
and legal forms of human relationships, the forms of everyday life and
forms of language, and so on. For the individual’s mental activity
(consciousness and will of the individual) this culture appears immediately
as a “system of meanings”, which have been “reified” and confront him quite
objectively as “non-psychological”, extra-psychological reality. [This
question is examined in greater detail in A. N. Leontyev’s article
“Activity and Consciousness” included in this volume.]

126
Hence interpretation of the problem of “ideality” in its purely
psychological aspect does not bring us much nearer to a correct
understanding of it because the secret of ideality is then sought not where
it actually arises: not in space, where the history of the real
relationships between social man and nature is enacted, but in the human
head, in the material relationships between nerve endings. And this is just
as absurd an undertaking as the idea of discovering the form of value by
chemical analysis of the gold or banknotes in which this form presents
itself to the eye and sense of touch.

127 - 129 Naive Idealism Versus Scientific Materialism
127
The riddle and solution to the problem of “idealism” is to be found in the
peculiar features of mental activity of the subject, who cannot distinguish
between *two fundamentally different and even opposed categories of
phenomena* of which he is sensuously aware as existing outside his brain:
the natural properties of things, on the one hand, and those of their
properties which they owe not to nature but to the social human labour
embodied in these things, on the other.

128
This is the point where such opposites as crudely naive materialism and no
less crudely naive idealism directly merge. That is to say, where the
material is directly identified with the ideal and vice versa, where all
that exists outside the head, outside mental activity, is regarded as
“material” and everything that is “in the head”, “in the consciousness”; is
described as “ideal”.

129 - 136 Ideality Is Created by Labour
129
Real, scientific materialism lies not in declaring everything that is
outside the brain of the individual to be “primary”, in describing this
“primary” as “material”, and declaring all that is “in the head” to be
“secondary” and “ideal”. Scientific materialism lies in the ability to
distinguish the fundamental borderline in the composition of palpable,
sensuously perceptible “things” and “phenomena”, to see the difference and
opposition between the “material” and the “ideal” there and not somewhere else.

130
The “ideal” plane of reality comprises only that which is *created by
labour* both in man himself and in the part of nature in which he lives and
acts, that which daily and hourly, ever since man has existed, is produced
and reproduced by his own social human ­ and, therefore, purposeful ­
transforming activity.

131
So one cannot speak of the existence of an “ideal plane” in the animal (or
in an uncivilised, purely biologically developed “man”) without departing
from the strictly established philosophical meaning of the term.

132
Man acquires the “ideal” plane of life activity only through mastering the
historically developed forms of social activity, only together with the
*social* plane of existence, only together with *culture*. “Ideality” is
nothing but an aspect of culture, one of its dimensions, determining
factors, properties. In relation to mental activity it is just as much an
*objective* component as mountains and trees, the moon and the firmament,
as the processes of metabolism in the individual’s organic body. This is
why people often confuse the “ideal” with the “material”, taking the one
for the other. This is why idealism is not the fruit of some
misapprehension, but the legitimate and natural fruit of a world where
things acquire human properties while people are reduced to the level of a
material force, where things are endowed with “spirit”, while human beings
are utterly deprived of it. The objective reality of “ideal forms” is no
mere invention of the idealists, as it seems to the pseudo-materialists who
recognise, on one side, the “external world” and on the other, only the
“conscious brain” (or “consciousness as a property and function of the
brain”). This pseudo-materialism, despite all its good intentions, has both
feet firmly planted in the same mystical swamp of fetishism as its opponent
­ principled idealism. This is also fetishism, only not that of the bronze
idol or the “Logos”, but a fetishism of a nervous tissue, a fetishism of
neurons, axons and DNAS, which in fact possess as little of the “ideal” as
any pebble lying on the road. Just as little as the “value” of the diamond
that has not yet been discovered, no matter how huge and heavy it might be.

133
“Ideality” is, indeed, necessarily connected with consciousness and will,
but not at all in the way that the old, pre-Marxist materialism describes
this connection. It is not ideality that is an “aspect”, or “form of
manifestation” of the conscious-will sphere but, on the contrary, the
conscious-will character of the human mentality is a form of manifestation,
an “aspect” or mental manifestation of the *ideal* (i.e.,
socio-historically generated) *plane of relationships between* man *and
nature*.

134
Ideality is a characteristic of *things*, not as they are determined by
nature but as they are determined by *labour*, the transforming and
form-creating activity of social man, his *purposeful*, sensuously
objective activity.

135
The ideal form is the form of a thing created by social human labour. Or,
conversely, the form of labour realised in the substance of nature,
“embodied” in it, “alienated” in it, “realised” in it and, therefore,
presenting itself to man the creator as *the form of a thing* or a
relationship between things in which man, his labour, has placed them.

136 - 139 A Summation of the Idealist and Materialist Concepts of Ideality
136
In the process of labour man, while remaining a natural being, transforms
both external things and (in doing so) his own “natural” body, shapes
natural matter (including the matter of his own nervous system and the
brain, which is its centre), converting it into a “means” and “organ” of
his purposeful life activity. This is why he looks upon “nature” (matter)
from the very first as material in which his aims are, embodied”, and as
the “means” of their realisation. This is why he *sees* in nature primarily
what is suitable for this role, what plays or may play the part of a means
towards his ends, in other words, what he has already drawn into the
process of his purposeful activity.

137
Thus at first he directs his gaze at the stars exclusively as a natural
clock, calendar and compass, as *instruments* of his life activity. He
observes their “natural” properties and regularities only insofar as they
are properties and regularities of the material in *which his activity is
being performed*, and with these “natural” features he must, therefore,
reckon as a completely objective *component of his activity* which is in no
way dependent on his will and consciousness.

138
But it is for this very reason that he takes the results of his
transforming activity (the forms and relations of things given by himself)
as the forms and relations of things as they are. This gives rise to
fetishism of every kind and shade, one of the varieties of which was and
still is *philosophical idealism*, the doctrine which regards the ideal
forms of things (i.e., the forms of human activity embodied in things) as
the eternal, primordial and “absolute” forms of the universe, and takes
into account all the rest only insofar as this “all the rest”, that is to
say, all the actual diversity of the world has already been drawn into the
process of labour, already been made the means, instrument and material of
realisation of purposeful activity, already been refracted through the
grandiose prism of “ideal forms” (forms of human activity), is already
presented (*represented*) in these forms, already shaped by them.

139
For this reason the “ideal” exists *only in man*. Outside man and beyond
him there can be nothing “ideal”. Man, however, is to be understood not as
one individual with a brain, but as a real aggregate of real people
collectively realising their specifically human life activity, as the
“aggregate of all social relations” arising between people around one
common task, around the process of the social production of their life. It
is “inside” man *thus understood* that the ideal exists, because “inside”
*man thus understood are all the things* that “mediate” the individuals
that are socially producing their life: *words, books, statues, churches,
community centres, television towers*, and (above all!) *the instruments of
labour*, from the stone axe and the bone needle to the modern automated
factory and the computer. It is in these “things” that the ideal exists as
the “subjective”, purposeful form-creating life activity of social man,
embodied in the material of nature.

140 - 142 Conclusion 1: Ideality Exists Only When Things and Activity Are
Mutually Transformed
140
The ideal form is a form of a thing, but a form that is outside the thing,
and is to be found in man as a form of his dynamic life activity, *as goals
and needs*. Or conversely, it is a form of man’s life activity, but outside
man, in the form of the thing he creates. “Ideality” as such exists only in
the constant succession and replacement of these two forms of its “external
embodiment” and does not coincide with either of them taken separately. It
exists only through the unceasing process of the transformation of the form
*of activity ­ into the form of a thing and back ­ the form of a thing into
the form of activity* (of social man, of course).

141
Try to identify the “ideal” with any one of these two forms of its
immediate existence ­ and it no longer exists. All you have left is the
“substantial”, entirely material body and its bodily functioning. The “form
of activity” as such turns out to be bodily encoded in the nervous system,
in intricate neuro-dynamic stereotypes and “cerebral mechanisms” by the
pattern of the external action of the material human organism, of the
individual’s body. And you will discover nothing “ideal” in that body. The
form of the thing created by man, taken out of the process of social life
activity, out of the process of man-nature metabolism, also turns out to be
simply the material form of the thing, the physical shape of an external
body and nothing more. A *word*, taken out of the organism of human
intercourse, turns out to be nothing more than an acoustic or optical
phenomenon. “In itself” it is no more “ideal” than the human brain.

142
And only in the reciprocating movement of the two opposing “metamorphoses”
­ forms of activity and forms of things in their dialectically
contradictory mutual transformations ­ DOES THE IDEAL EXIST.

143 Conclusion 2: Regarding the Philosophical Development of the Concept
of Ideality in History
143
Therefore, it was only DIALECTICAL materialism that was able to solve the
problem of the ideality of things.

143.1 --- end ---





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