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donderdag 29 mei 2014

(en) Britain, AFED Organise! #81 - Anarchism: Utopian or scientific by Wayne Price

Organise! is reprinting this article by Wayne Price which originally appeared in the US 
anarchist magazine The Utopian, because we feel it raises a number of important issues. 
---- Together with the revival of anarchism in the last decades, there has been an 
increased interest in Utopia. This is largely due to the crisis in Marxism, long the 
dominant set of ideas among the radical left. After the Soviet Union imploded and China 
turned to an openly market-based capitalism, Marxism became discredited for many. This 
resulted in a revived interest in Utopia from two apparently contradictory directions, for 
and against. What these views have in common is that they take utopianism seriously. 
Utopianism must be taken seriously if socialism is to get out of the dead end it has 
reached through established Marxism, but what revolutionary socialists need is much more 
than simply a return to Utopia.

On one side, there has been an in-
creased desire to find utopian aspects
of socialism, including Marxism
(Geoghegan, 1987). This includes
looking at the work of Walter Benja-
min or Ernst Bloch. There is a greater
concentration on Marx?s critique of
alienation and of his scattered hints
of what a communist society might
look like, as in his Critique of the
Gotha Program. More and more, so-
cialists refer to the utopian meanings
of their socialist faith, the original
vision of a liberated humanity. From
this point of view, the failure of
pseudo-socialism in the Communist-
run countries was supposedly due to
their downplaying utopianism.

Recognition of the value of utopian-
ism was made by the reformist Marx-
ist, Michael Harrington: ?Utopian
socialism...was a movement that
gave the first serious definition of
socialism as communitarian, moral,
feminist, committed to the trans-
formation of work, and profoundly
democratic. If there is to be 21st cen-
tury socialism worthy of the name,
it will...have to go 200 years into
the past to recover the practical and
theoretical ideals of the utopians?
(quoted in Hahnel, 2005, p. 139).

Especially interesting has been the
revival of the utopian project, that
is, the effort by radicals (influenced
by both anarchism and humanis-
tic Marxism) to work out how a
libertarian-democratic socialism
could work?what a post-capitalist
society might look like without
either markets or centralised, bureau-
cratic, planning. This includes the
?libertarian municipalism? of Murray
Bookchin and his ?social ecologist?
followers (Biehl, 1998; Bookchin,
1986) and Michael Albert and Robin
Hahnel?s ?participatory economics?
or ?parecon? (Albert, 2003; Hahnel,
2005).

On the other side, there are those
disillusioned ex-Marxists and
ex-socialists, who blame the totali-
tarianism of the Marxist states on a
supposed utopianism. The goal of
Marxist socialism was of a classless,
stateless, cooperative society, with
production for use rather than profit,
without alienated labour, without
national boundaries or wars?the
realisation of solidarity, equality,
and freedom. This goal (which is
the same as socialist anarchism) is
condemned as an impossibility, a
Utopia, which contradicts inborn hu-
man nature. Humans are supposedly
naturally competitive, aggressive, and
unequal. Attempts to force them to
fit a cooperative, benevolent, society,
it is said, can only be done by totali-
tarian means. Therefore, by this view,
the failure of socialism was due to
its utopianism. So this anti-socialist
trend also focuses on the inherent
utopianism of socialism.

Political critics have denounced
me as a utopian myself, perhaps
because I write for a journal titled
The Utopian. And indeed I am a
utopian...among other things. My
earliest political influences were such
books as Paul Goodman?s Uto-
pian Essays and Practical Proposals
(1962) and Martin Buber?s Paths in
Utopia (1958), and other works on
Utopia and utopian socialism. These
works started me on a path toward
anarchist- pacifism, and then to a
libertarian-democratic version of
Marxism, and finally to revolutionary
anarchism (in the libertarian social-
ist or anarchist-communist tradition,
which has been referred to as ?social-
ist anarchism?).

In common speech, ?utopian? means
ideas which are fantastically unreal-
istic, absurdly idealistic, and impos-
sibly dreamy. The anti-utopian spirit
is expressed in the movie ?Rudy,?
when a priest sneers at Rudy, a work-
ing class youth who wants to play
football for Notre Dame University
(I quote from memory), ?You?re a
dreamer. Nothing great was ever ac-
complished by a dreamer.? Actually,
nothing great was ever accomplished
except by dreamers?even though
dreaming, by itself, is never enough.

Originally, ?Utopia? was the title of a
16th century book by Thomas More,
which presented an ideal society,
partly seriously and partly humor-
ously. It comes from the Greek words
for ?no place.? The idea is the same
as Samuel Butler?s Erewhon, a pic-
ture of an ideal society whose name
is ?nowhere? spelled backwards. It is
as if the utopian authors agree that
such an ideal social system does not
exist anywhere and perhaps will not
exist anywhere. But the word is also
close to ?eutopia,? which means ?the
good place.? It took the horrors of
the twentieth century to produce
negative-utopias, or ?dystopias,?
such as Aldous Huxley?s Brave New
World, George Orwell?s 1984, or
Jack London?s even earlier The Iron
Heel.

Utopia may be rejected as a program
for a perfect society, without con-
flicts or mistakes, managed by per-
fect people. There never will be such
a society; humans are inheritantly
finite and fallible and will always be
so (and right after a revolution, a new
society will have to be built by peo-
ple deeply marked by the distortions
of the old one). However, it is pos-
sible to think of Utopia as a program
for a society which makes it easier
for people to be good, which makes
their self- interest be in relative har-
mony with that of others, and which
limits the opportunities for people to
become corrupted by having power
over others. Utopia may be a vision
based on trends and possibilities
which exist right now in society and
which could come to fruition under
different social circumstances. If we
wish people to risk their lives and
families for a fundamental change,
socialist-anarchists have to be able
to present a vision of a new society
which is possible, workable, and
worth risking everything for.

Marxism and Utopianism

Much confusion has been caused
by the Marxists? use of ?utopian?
in a specialised way. This was first
spelled out in The Manifesto of the
Communist Party (or Communist
Manifesto) by Karl Marx and Frie-
drich Engels (1955) in the section
on ?Critical-Utopian Socialism and
Communism.? Their concepts was
elaborated in Engel?s Anti-D?hring:
Herr Eugen D?hring?s Revolution
in Science (1954). Parts of this
book were taken out during Engels?
lifetime and made into a famous
pamphlet, Socialism: Utopian and
Scientific. Sentences and paragraphs
which Engels added to the pamphlet
were then typically placed in brack-
ets in later editions of Anti-D?hring.
(There has been a controversy over
this book, with some Marxists
being embarrassed by the mechani-
cal flavour of Engels? exposition of
dialectics; they claim [absurdly in my
opinion] that Engels did not really
understand Marxism, or not as well
as they [the critics] do. In fact, Engels
went over the whole of the book with
Marx beforehand, and Marx wrote a
chapter for it, which he would hardly
have done if he had disapproved of
it. This is not to deny that Engels was
a different person from Marx, and
more of a populariser of their joint
views. But the mechanistic aspects
of Marxism which appear in Anti-
D?hring are a real aspect of Marx?s
thinking.)

Marx and Engels claimed that, at the
beginning of capitalism?s take-off,
there were a few brilliant thinkers
who had insights into the evils of
capitalism and the possibilities of
socialism. Such thinkers included
Henri de Saint- Simon, Charles
Fourier, and Robert Owen. Because
the class struggle of capital versus
labour had barely begun, these could
not have had a well-rounded theory
of how society operated. But, said
Marx and Engels, they could and did
have sharp insights into the evils and
problems of capitalism. They devel-
oped their insights into systems of
thought, which their later followers
organised into closed, quasi-religious
sects. Unable to make a fully ?scien-
tific? view of the world, they tended
to start from moral precepts and then
work out how a society might be
built on such ethical rules.

By the mid-19th century, Marx and
Engels argued, capitalism had devel-
oped much further. There was now
a large industrial working class (the
proletariat), engaged in class strug-
gle, and a new industrial technology
which potentially made possible a
world of plenty for all. It was now
possible to have an objective, ?sci-
entific,? analysis of how capitalism
worked, how it would develop, and
how the working class would replace
it with socialism. In this view, the
earlier socialists had been ?utopian,?
not because they were idealistic but
because they were premature, unable
(yet) to make a scientific analysis.

It has been often noted that Marx-
ism is a synthesis of three traditions:
German (Hegelian) philosophy, Brit-
ish economics, and mostly-French
socialism (the utopian socialists
and also Proudhon the anarchist).
Readers of Marx are often surprised
to discover that he did not condemn
the so-called utopians for their
advocacy of ideal societies in their
time. On the contrary, Engels and he
praised them as pioneers of social-
ism. They praised Saint-Simon for
raising the end of the state, which he
discussed, in Engels? words, as ?the
future conversion of political rule
over men [sic] into an administra-
tion of things and a direction of the
processes of production? (Engels,
1954, p. 358; this formulation has
problems which I will not get into).
They praised Fourier for his con-
demnation of capitalist ?civilisation?,
for his ?dialectical? approach, and
for his criticism of the oppression of
women under capitalism. ?He was
the first to declare that in any given
society the degree of woman?s eman-
cipation is the natural measure of
the general emancipation? (same, p.
359). (They did not go on to discuss
Fourier?s support for homosexuality
and other sexual variations.) They
praised Owen for his materialist phi-
losophy, his vision of communism,
and his criticism of marriage under
capitalism.

Engels and Marx noted that both
Fourier and Owen had proposed the
end of the current division of labour,
replacing it with a variety of occupa-
tions for each person, making labour
attractive, and developing everyone?s
productive potentialities. Similarly,
the two utopians had raised the goal
of an end to the division between
city and countryside, proposing the
spread of industry across the coun-
try, integrated with agriculture, in
communities of human scale. Engels
noted the ecological implications:
?The present poisoning of the air,
water, and land can be put an end to
only by the fusion of town and coun-
try...? (same, p. 411). Like anarchists,
he believed that this could only
happen in a socialist society; unlike
anarchists, he believed this required
centralised planning, needing ?one
single vast plan? (same).

However, Marx and Engels critiqued
the earliest socialists because they
did not (and could not yet) base
their programs on the struggle of
the workers and oppressed. Instead
they looked to upper class saviours
to come along and aid the workers.

-------------------------------
?...Marx...did not con-
demn the so-called uto-
pians for their advocacy
of ideal societies in their
time. On the contrary, En-
gels and he praised them
as pioneers of socialism.?
-------------------------------
The infant class of workers existed
for them as a suffering class, not as a
class capable of changing the world.
Along with these criticisms of the
utopians (with which I agree), Marx
and Engels also, unfortunately criti-
cised them for their moral appeal.
Rather than making an appeal to the
self-interest of the workers, Marx
and Engels complained, the utopians
made broad appeals to justice and
moral values, which could attract
anyone from any class. Marx and
Engels rejected moral appeals. ?From
a scientific standpoint, this appeal
[by the utopians?WP] to morality
and justice does not help us an inch
further; moral indignation, however
justifiable, cannot serve economic
science as an argument, but only as
a symptom? (Engels, 1954, p. 207).
In their voluminous writings they
never say that people should be for
socialism because it is good, just, and
moral. Indeed, they never explain
why anyone should be for socialism
at all.

The Marxist Hal Draper accurately
summarizes Marx?s views: ?Marx
saw socialism as the outcome of
tendencies inherent in the capitalist
system...whereas the utopians saw
socialism simply as a Good Idea, an
abstract scheme without any histori-
cal context, needing only desire and
will to be put into practice..
..
?Marx and Engels habitually stated
their political aim not in terms of
a change in social system (social-
ism) but in terms of a change in
class power (proletarian rule)....For
Marx the political movement was in
the first place the movement of the
working classes to take over state
power, not primarily a movement for
a certain scheme to reorganise the
social structure? (Draper, 1990, pp.
18, 44; his emphasis).

But if socialism is just a matter of
class interest rather than the vision
of a better world, then the interest of
the capitalists is as justifiable as that
of the workers. Why should anyone
from the capitalist or middle classes
go over to the working class (as did
Marx and Engels)? Why should not
individual workers go over to the
side of the capitalists (as so many do,
such as union leaders)? Why should
workers risk a revolution without
some moral (and political and eco-
nomic) goals? Why should they fight
for ?class power? (let alone ?to take
over state power?!) without the goal
of ?a change in social system (social-
ism)??

Contrast the Marxist view with that
of Kropotkin: ?No struggle can be
successful if it does not render itself
a clear and concise account of its
aim. No destruction of the existing
order is possible, if at the time of the
overthrow, or of the struggle leading
to the overthrow, the idea of what
is to take the place of what is to be
destroyed is not always present in the
mind? (Kropotkin, 1975, p. 64).

Engels justified ?proletarian moral-
ity? because ?in the present [it]
represents the overthrow of the
present, represents the future...? (En-
gels, 1954, p. 131). But why should
we automatically support something
just because it leads to the future?
How do we decide that the future
will be good, will be what we should
want? Engels declares that it will only
be in a classless society that ?a really
human morality? will be possible.
This may be so, but it again begs the
question: why should we commit
ourselves to the goal of a classless
society of freedom and equality, of
really human values? None of this
makes sense unless we accept, in
some way, the historical values of
justice, compassion, and kindness, as
well as equality and freedom.

Instead, the founders of Marxism
argue that their ?science? tells them
that socialism is inevitable and
therefore, they imply, should be ac-
cepted. The Communist Manifesto
declares, ?What the bourgeoisie
therefore produces, above all, are
its own gravediggers. Its fall and the
victory of the proletariat are equally
inevitable? (Marx and Engels, 1955,
p. 22). To advance beyond the
utopian socialists, Engels wrote, ?...it
was necessary...to present the capi-
talistic method of production...and
its inevitableness during a particular
historical period and therefore, also,
its inevitable downfall...? (Engels,
1954, pp. 42-43).

Marx?s determinism, or (as I will call
it) ?inevitabilism,? is defended by his
claim to have created a ?scientific so-
cialism.? Some excuse Marx?s scient-
ism by pointing out that the German
word which is translated as ?science?
(Wissenschaft) means any body of
knowledge or study, including not
only chemistry but also philosophy
and literary criticism (Draper, 1990).
While this is true, it is also true that
Marx and Engels repeatedly com-
pared their theories to biology or
chemistry, saying that Marx?s dis-
coveries were comparable to those
of Darwin. Engels? Anti-D?hring
(1954) itself is the best-known
example of this equation of Marx?s
theories with the natural sciences.

The Limits of Marxist Inevitablism

Sometimes this inevitabilism is
modified by statements that there
is an alternative, either socialism
or the degeneration of society, the
destruction of all social classes. The
Communist Manifesto states in its
beginning that historic class struggles
?...each time ended, either in a revo-
lutionary reconstitution of society
at large, or in the common ruin of
the contending classes? (Marx &
Engels, 1955, p. 9). They were prob-
ably thinking of the collapse of the
Roman Empire; however, that these
alternatives exist is not repeated in
the Manifesto. Engels declared, ?...if
the whole of modern society is not
to perish, a revolution in the mode
of production and distribution must
take place, a revolution which will
put an end to all class distinctions?
(1954, p. 218; my emphasis). Rosa
Luxemburg summarized this as the
alternatives of ?socialism or barba-
rism.?

In this day of economic decline and
the worldwide spread of nuclear
weapons, these probably are the
alternatives. For example, to a great
extent the economic crisis of capital-
ism has turned into an ecological
and environmental crisis. One report
concludes, ?It may seem impossible
to imagine that a technologically
advanced society could choose, in
essence, to destroy itself, but that
is what we are now in the process
of doing? (Kolbert, 2005, p. 63). It
may still be possible to permanently
reverse this biological self-destruc-
tion, if we replace capitalism with a
cooperative social system. But this is
a choice, not an inevitable future. It
is hard to see how it can be addressed
without an appeal to the very moral
standards which Marx and Engels
had ruled out.

From the beginning, the Marxist
view of utopianism and scientific
socialism had certain limitations.
For one thing, with all his rejection
of moral appeals, Marx?s writings
breathe with a moral indignation,
a deep love of freedom and justice,
and a burning hatred of suffering
and oppression. This does Marx
credit, but it makes his objection to
moral appeals into hypocrisy. This
weakness of Marxism, its lack of an
explicit moral viewpoint, has often
been pointed out, by supporters and
opponents of Marxism, on the right
and on the left.

For another thing, these early social-
ists did not call themselves utopians.
They emphasised that they were
being scientific and materialistic.
Saint-Simon is usually recognized
as one of the founders of modern
sociology. ?The utopian socialists
saw themselves as social scientists.
?Utopian? was for them a pejorative
term....Time and again in their work
they asserted their hard-headed,
scientific, realistic, and practical ap-
proach to society....The description
of their work as ?utopian? is therefore
a retrospective judgment and not a
self-definition?(Geoghegan, 1987, p.
8).

Anarchist thinkers, who were politi-
cally closer to these early socialists
than were Marx and Engels, also
emphasized how scientific they were.
Proudhon insisted he was being sci-
entific. Unlike Marx, Kropotkin tried
to develop a naturalistic ethics. But
Kropotkin (who had been a geolo-
gist) also claimed that anarchism
was the conclusion of scientific
understanding of the world, as he
wrote in his essay ?Modern Science
and Anarchism.? ?Anarchism is a
world concept based on a mechani-
cal explanation of all phenomena,
embracing the whole of nature....Its
method of investigation is that of the
exact natural sciences? (Kropotkin,
1975, p. 60). Therefore he rejected
describing anarchism with ?the word
?Utopia?? (same, p. 66).

Malatesta was to criticize Kropotkin
for this very scientism, which he felt
left out the importance of will and
consciousness. ?Kropotkin, who
was very critical of the fatalism of
the Marxists, was himself the victim
of mechanistic fatalism, which is far
more inhibiting....Since, according
to his philosophy, that which occurs
must necessarily occur, so also the
communist-anarchism he desired
must inevitably triumph as if by a law
of nature? (Malatesta, 1984, pp. 263,
265). So, rather than being simply
utopian, anarchists were just as capa-
ble of scientism and inevitablism as
Marxists, although there were some,
such as Malatesta, who opposed this
approach.

The Rejection of Scientific Socialism

The revival of moral and utopian
thinking has been based on a rejec-
tion of Marxist ?scientific social-
ism.? Robin Hahnel,co-inventer of
?parecon,? has concluded, ?...New
evidence from the past 30 years
has weakened the case for scientific
socialism even further and greatly
strengthened the case for utopian
socialism...? (2005, p. 390). It has
been argued that Marx?s suppos-
edly scientific predictions did not
work out as he expected, that his
so-called science has been a bust.
The capitalist countries have (it is
said) become prosperous and stable,
with attenuated business cycles and a
well-off working class?at least in the
industrialised, imperialist, countries.
The working class has not become
revolutionary. There have been no
workers? revolutions. The revolutions
led by Marxists which did happen,
became miserable totalitarian states,
oppressors of their workers, and
nothing like the socialist democra-
cies Marx and Engels had envisaged.
These criticisms of Marxism have led
many to accept capitalism and others
to look for alternate approaches to
socialism?including the present
spread of anarchism.

There is a great deal of truth in these
criticisms of ?Marxist science.?
World War II was followed by a capi-
talist boom, up until the late sixties.
The great revolutions of Russia and
China, as well as others led by Marx-
ists, ended up with new bureaucratic
ruling classes, rather than human
liberation (although they did not be-
come a new type of society but were,
rather, statified versions of capital-
ism). There have been no successful
working class revolutions, since the
ambiguous Russian revolution of
1917. There is no longer a working
class with a significant revolutionary
movement, anywhere, certainly not
in the United States.

However, there is also a great deal
of untruth in these common views.
In particular, the post-World War
II boom has been over for some
time. From the seventies onward,
the world economy has been going
downhill?with fluctuations up and
down, and with lopsided and uneven
development in different parts of the
world. But the overall direction has
been negative. Writing about the de-
cline of the U.S. economy, the edito-
rial page of the New York Times, the
voice of a major wing of the U.S. rul-
ing class, predicts a general worsen-
ing of the U.S. economy. Under the
headline, ?Before the Fall,? it wrote
about the weakening of the dollar
and the U.S. economy, and predicted,
?The economic repercussions could
unfold gradually, resulting in a long,
slow decline in living standards. Or
there could be a quick unravelling,
with the hallmarks of an uncon-
trolled fiscal crisis. Or the pain could
fall somewhere in between? (April
2, 2005). One libertarian Marxist,
Loren Goldner, has written of the
breakdown of capitalism in our time,
?If there is today a ?crisis of Marxism,?
it cannot be in the ?analytic-scientific?
side of Marx?s prognosis of capitalist
breakdown crisis, wherein current
developments appear as a page out of
vol. III of Capital? (Goldner, 2000,
p. 70).

The image of a fat and happy capi-
talism with a fat and happy work-
ing class comes from the fifties and
sixties (and was not fully true even
then). It became the dominant con-
ception of the left during the radicali-
zation of the sixties. It justified the
liberalism and reformism which was
the main trend among U.S. leftists. It
also justified the Stalinist politics of
the many who became subjectively
revolutionary. These revolutionaries
admired Cuba, China, and North
Vietnam. In these countries middle-
class intellectuals led revolutions
in which the workers played minor
roles at best, and then established the
leaders as new, bureaucratic, classes
who exploited the workers (and
peasants) in a state-capitalist fashion.
These radicals regarded themselves
as Marxists, as did such theoreticians
as Herbert Marcuse, while more or
less consciously abandoning any
belief in a working class revolution
in either the industrialised nations or
the oppressed countries.

While the image of a perpetu-
ally prosperous capitalism has been
shown to be false, this does not
?prove? that ?Marx was right.? How-
ever correct Marx was in his ?analyt-
ic-scientific analysis? of capitalism,
it should now be clear that socialism
is not inevitable. There is no way
to be absolutely sure that socialism
will come before nuclear war or
ecological catastrophe or perhaps a
perpetual capitalism that grinds on
and on until it produces ?the com-
mon ruin of the contending classes.?
At best we are dealing with prob-
abilities, which are almost irrelevant
in terms of making commitments to
one side or the other. ?Marxist scien-
tific socialism? is not the issue, in the
abstract, but whether or not to make
a class analysis of current society and
to commit to working class revolu-
tion for a better social system. Loren
Goldner concludes that the real crisis
of socialism is not in terms of Marx-
ist science. Rather it is ?...a crisis of
the working-class movement itself,
and of the working class? sense, still
relatively strong in the 1930?s, that it
is the class of the future? (Goldner,
2000, p. 70).

A Revival of Utopian Socialism and Its Class Limitations

The rejection of ?scientific social-
ism? has often led to a socialism
which claims to be based essentially
on moral principles, on a universal
appeal for a better society, rejecting
appeals to class self-interest. This is a
return to utopianism. In rejecting the
weaknesses and strengths of Marx-
ism, these thinkers revive both the
strengths and weaknesses of utopian-
ism. Such views have been developed
by theoreticians with Marxist back-
grounds, sometimes giving them-
selves good-sounding names such as
?post-Marxists,? ?pluralists,? or ?radi-
cal democrats? (there is a thorough
review in Wood, 1998). Similarly,
the theoreticians of ?participatory
economics? start with abstract moral
principles and develop an economic
system which would fulfil them,
without any discussion of how such a
society would develop out of capi-
talism (Albert, 2003). I have heard
Michael Albert presenting his system
(at a work- shop at the Global Left
Forum 2005), beginning by describ-
ing ?parecon? (he rejects the label
?socialism?) as happening ?after the
bump.? The ?bump? is his term for
the change of systems, covering re-
form or revolution or whatever. How
the change happens is not important
to his vision.

There are also many who come out
of the anarchist tradition who reject
a ?scientific? approach for one based
solely on morality and abstract
values. Perhaps the purest example
is the ?social ecology?/?libertarian
municipalist? program developed
primarily by Murray Bookchin.
These views are clearly summarised
by Chuck Morse (2001). Writing in
opposition to reformists within the
global justice movement, he rightly
proposes a revolutionary perspec-
tive. However, he also rejects the
class perspective of ?many anarcho-
syndicalists and communists? who
accepted ?the analysis of capital-
ism advanced by late 19th century
and early 20th century socialists,?
presumably Marx as well as the
anarchist-syndicalists. They believed,
he claims, that ?capitalism creates an
industrial proletariat that must, in
turn, fight for its interests as a class...
not only...for immediate benefits
but also against the social order that
has produced it as a class...? (Morse,
2001, p. 26).

Instead, ?it is possible to imagine
revolution in a democratic populist
sense, in which people draw upon
shared values (as opposed to class
interests) to overthrow elites. This
vision of revolution is not prem-
ised upon the exacerbation of class
conflict, but rather the emergence of
a democratic sentiment that rejects
exclusive, non-participatory social
institutions ... focusing on the ideals,
not class positions, of activists within
the movement.... This value-based
approach is a precept of any revolu-
tionary democratic politics? (same,
pp. 27, 29).

As Morse says, the views of Marx
and the anarchist-syndicalists were
indeed developed in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries. There-
fore they bear the imprint of their
time, including their scientistic and
determinist concept of social sci-
ence. Nevertheless, the social system
which they first analysed, at the time
when it took off, remains the basic
social system of today?despite its
development and changes. Morse
still calls it ?capitalism? rather than
calling it some new form of soci-
ety (such as ?neo-feudalism?) or
claiming that the problem was not
capitalism but something else (such
as ?industrialism? or ?civilisation?).
This is not to deny that the analysis
of capitalism has to be expanded to
cover later developments and must
be integrated with analyses of gender,
race, sexual orientation, ecology, and
other areas, but capitalism remains as
a system of commodity production,
market exchange, competition of
capitals, the law of value, the selling
and buying of the human ability to
labour (treating working capacity
as a commodity), and the use of
workers to produce a surplus for the
capitalists (that is, exploitation). In
its essence, capitalism, as capitalism,
remains the capital-labour relation-
ship as it was analysed a century and
a half ago.

Morse notes that this 19th cen-
tury theory postulated a working
class ?that must fight.? The ?must?
is the important point. Implicitly
but correctly, he is criticizing the
dominant interpretation of Marxism
(one rooted in Marx?s work) that it
is ?inevitable? that the workers will
come to fight for socialist revolution.
It is not inevitable. Such determin-
ism is essentially authoritarian. How
can an oppressed class create a self-
conscious and self-organised society
through the automatic processes of
history? To fight their exploitation,
the workers need to want something
new. If they are to be free, they must
cease to submit to the laws of history
and become conscious of what they
can achieve.

This does not mean a rejection of all
objective analysis, however. Sailors
may take a sailboat to different ports,
depending on their goals, but only
by using their knowledge of wind
and seas, not by ignoring this scien-
tific knowledge. But the seafarers?
knowledge does not decide their
goal.




Marxist analysis (consistent with
anarchist goals) may be interpreted
(or re-interpreted) differently than
in an inevitablist manner. It could
be said that Marx demonstrated that
there is a tendency for workers to
rebel against their exploitation?
what else? But there are also counter-
tendencies. For example, better-off
workers tend to become bought off
and to accept the system. Poorer,
worse-off, workers tend to become
overwhelmed and demoralized, to
give up. Bookchin argues that factory
discipline itself teaches the workers
to accept hierarchy. Which tenden-
cies will win out: struggle, to the
point of revolution, or acceptance
of capitalist authority? We do not
know; it is not inevitable. As Morse
writes, ?many anarcho-syndicalists
and communists? have believed
that it is inevitable that the workers
?must fight,? and eventually make a
socialist revolution. Others, such as
Bookchin, argue that it is inevitable
that the workers, as workers, will not
make a revolution. Both are wrong. It
is a living choice for the workers.

Elaborating on the ideas of
Bookchin, Morse, as quoted, rejects
a working class orientation. Instead
he calls for a ?vision of revolution...
premised upon...the emergence of
a democratic sentiment...focusing
on...ideals, not class positions...?
(same, p. 27). As stated here, this is
rather vacuous, but this would not
be a valid criticism, since Bookchin
has elsewhere worked out a utopian
vision of a post-capitalist,(small-c)
communist, society?a federation
of communes managed by directly
democratic assemblies (Biehl, 1998;
--------------------------------------
?Lacking a social analysis,
the ethical vision approach
lacks a strategy for imple-
menting its (worthwhile)
goals.?
--------------------------------------


Bookchin, 1986). This is done in
much greater detail than Marx or
Engels ever did. Bookchin deserves
credit for this.

However, the social ecologists? ethi-
cal approach, as described here, has
certain weaknesses. To begin with, it
has no study of how capitalist society
works, what are its contradictions
and conflicts. This is not a matter of
reviving the mechanical ?science?
and determinism of the worst of
Marxism. It is making a theoretical
analysis of society, including eco-
nomic and other factors (race, gen-
der, ecology, etc.), laying the basis for
a strategy for bringing utopian goals
into reality. It is true that Bookchin
has made an analysis of society in
terms of a supposed conflict, the
remnants of town and community
versus the national state, but it is
hard to take this seriously as the basic
conflict of society.

Lacking a social analysis, the ethical
vision approach lacks a strategy for
implementing its (worthwhile) goals.
More specifically, it lacks an agent,
a social force which could overturn
capitalism and replace it with a new
society. All it has are people who are
idealistic, of every class and sector
of society. From this point of view,
there is no reason why socialism
could not have been implemented at
any time in human existence, from
hunter-gatherer society until now,
since people have always had moral
values and visions of a better world.
Bookchin has argued that a free so-
ciety is possible now since it is only
now that we have the technology to
possibly create a society of plenty for
all, including enough time without
toil for people to participate in the
managing of society (a view which
was raised by Marx). However, this
still leaves the question of who will
make the revolution.

As opposed to this vague appeal to
idealists, Marx and Engels, and later
the anarchist-syndicalists as well as
most anarchist- communists, looked
to the struggle of the workers. This
did not necessarily mean ignor-
ing the struggles of other sectors of
society, such as women and ?racial?
groupings. I have already noted how
Engels valued the utopians? criti-
cisms of the oppression of women. In
the same work, he commented, ?It is
significant of the specifically bour-
geois character of these human rights
that the American constitution, the
first to recognize the rights of man
[sic], in the same breath confirms the
slavery of the coloured races existing
in America; class privileges are pro-
scribed, race privileges sanctioned?
(Engels, 1954, pp. 147-148). Not
that Marx and Engels had a sufficient
analysis of either gender or race, but
it is now possible to see the interac-
tion and overlap of racial, gendered,
and other forms of oppression with
the economic exploitation of the
working class.

However, the working class has a
particular strategic importance for
revolutionaries. Of all the oppressed
groupings, only the workers can
stop society in its tracks, due to their
potential control of the means of
production. And only the working
class can start society up again by oc-
cupying the workplaces and working
them in a different way. This does not
make workers, as workers, more op-
pressed than, say, physically disabled
people, or women, as women (two
categories which mostly overlap
with the working class). It just points
up the workers? potential strategic
power.

Unlike the capitalists or the ?middle
class? managers who work for them,
the workers (that is, most of the
population, when they go to work
for some boss) do not have anyone
under them to exploit. They do not
live off of the exploitation of others.
The workers have a direct interest
in ending the system of exploita-
tion?that is, the pumping of wealth
from them to the capitalist rulers.
Ellen Meiksins Wood argues against
the views of certain ex-Marxists who
have rejected a working class orien-
tation in favour of an ethical- only
approach similar to that of Morse
and Bookchin (Bookchin himself
being an ex-Marxist who has rejected
a working class orientation):

The implication is that workers are
no more affected by capitalist ex-
ploitation than are any other human
beings who are not themselves the
direct objects of exploitation. This
also implies that capitalists derive
no fundamental advantage from
the exploitation of workers, that
the workers derive no fundamental
disadvantage from their exploitation
by capital, that the workers would
derive no fundamental advantage
from ceasing to be exploited, that the
condition of being exploited does
not entail an ?interest? in the cessa-
tion of class exploitation, that the
relations between capital and labour
have no fundamental consequences
for the whole structure of social
and political power, and that the
conflicting interests between capital
and labour are all in the eye of the
beholder. (Wood, 1998, p. 61)

Contrary to the middle class myth
of working class quiescence, workers
do struggle against capital. Every day
there is a tug-of-war, a guerrilla con-
flict, in every workplace, sometimes
breaking out into open rebellion but
mostly kept at a low simmer. From
time to time there have been great
eruptions when workers rose up and
demonstrated the possibility of over-
throwing capitalism and its state, of
replacing these institutions with the
self-management of society. I will not
review the history of workers? revolu-
tionary upheavals here, but workers
have shown more ability to strug-
gle in the brief history of industrial
capitalism (about 200 years) than
any other oppressed class in history.
Without slighting other oppressions,
the struggle of the workers should be
a major focus of any revolutionary
strategy.

Utopianism or Science...or Both?

In Utopianism and Marxism, Ge-
oghegan concludes, ?The distinc-
tion between utopian and scientific
socialism has, on balance, been an
unfortunate one for the Marx-
ist tradition? (1987, p. 134). He
demonstrates how both wings of
Marxism?social democracy and
Leninism?have been affected by
their mechanical scientism and their
rejection of visionary utopianism. He
recommends that Marxists look into
the alternate tradition of anarchism,
as well as other traditions, such as
democratic liberalism, feminism, and
Gay liberation. However, it seems
to me that a Marxism which accepts
utopianism and the insights of anar-
chism, radical democracy, feminism,
and Gay liberation would cease to be
Marxism, even if much remained of
Marx?s project (especially his class
analysis). That is, the particular syn-
thesis of ideas which Marx created
would be drastically reorganised. An-
archists too have historically some-
times been too scientistic or have
more often been anti-theoretical and
anti-intellectual, but it is anarchism
which has been more open to both a
moral vision and a theoretical analy-
sis of capitalism. However, there is a
great deal of overlap between class-
struggle anarchism and libertarian
Marxism.

I reject having to choose between
either utopianism or science (using
?science? to mean an analysis of soci-
ety, done as realistically as possible,
and not an attempt to treat society
as if it were chemistry). I will not
choose between raising moral issues
and appealing to the self-interest of
oppressed people. I reject the alter-
natives of either a moral vision or a
practical strategy. I refuse to choose
between Utopia and support for
workers? class struggles.

What is the Utopia of socialist anar-
chism? It has many interpretations,
but some things seem central: It
includes a cooperative economy with
production for use, which is planned
democratically, from the bottom up.
It means the end of the division (in
industry and in society as a whole)
between mental and manual labour,
between those who give orders and
those who carry them out. This
would be part of a complete reor-
ganisation of technology to create
an ecologically sustainable society.
It includes an economy and polity
managed by direct democracy, in
assemblies and councils, at work-
places and in communities. It has
no state, that is, no bureaucractic-
military machine with specialised
layers of police, soldiers, bureaucrats,
lobbyists, and politicians, standing
above the rest of the population. If
defence of the people is needed, this
would be done by the people? the
armed people?in a popular mili-
tia. Instead of a state, local councils
would be federated at the regional,
national, continental, and interna-
tional levels, wherever needed. In
this freely federated world, there
would be no national borders. The
socialist vision has always been that
of a classless society and the most
exploited class has an interest in win-
ning this. Whether the working class
will seek this vision remains an open
question, in my opinion?neither a
guaranteed outcome nor a guarantee
that it will not. It is a choice, not an
inevitability.

In his Paths in Utopia, the Jewish
theologian Martin Buber (1958)
compares two types of eschatologi-
cal prophecy. One is the prediction
of apocalypse, an inevitable end of
days which is running on a strict
timetable. God and the devil will
fight and God will win. Human
choice is reduced to a minimum...
people may decide individually to be
on the automatically winning side or
to be on the guaranteed losing side.
That?s it. Such a view is presented
in the Left Behind novels, express-
ing a conservative interpretation of
Christianity. In a secular fashion,
it also appears in the mainstream
interpretation of Marxism (and
also in aspects of Kropotkin?s anar-
chism). In comparison, Buber says,
the prophets of the Old Testament
presented the people with a collec-
tive choice. Disaster was looming,
the prophets warned, but it could be
averted. To do so, the people would
have to change their ways and follow
an alternate path. Prophecy was a
challenge, not an inevitable predic-
tion. Human choice could make a
difference.

Leaving theology aside, today there
is a prophetic challenge. It is both
?utopian? and ?scientific.? Humanity
faces probable disasters: increasing
wars (including eventual nuclear
wars), ecological and environmental
catastrophe, economic decline, and
threats to democracy and freedom.
But an alternate society, a utopian
goal, may be envisioned, with a dif-
ferent way for humans to relate to
each other?if not a perfect society
--------------------------------
?The socialist vision has
always been that of a class-
less society and the most
exploited class has an
interest in winning this.
Whether the working class
will seek this vision re-
mains an open question,
in my opinion?neither a
guaranteed outcome nor a
guarantee that it will not.
It is a choice, not an inevi-
tability.?
------------------------------
than one that is much better. There
exists the technology to make it
possible. There exists a social class
whose self-interest may lead it to
struggle for this goal, alongside of
other oppressed groupings. Those
who accept this analysis, and who
believe in the values of this goal, may
choose to take up the challenge?
and to raise it for others. It is a matter
not only of prediction but of moral
commitment.

References

Albert, Michael (2003). Parecon:
Life after capitalism.NY: Verso.

Biehl, Janet (1998). The politics of
social ecology; Libertarian munici-
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Montreal: Black Rose Books.

Bookchin, Murray (1986). The limits
of the city. Montreal: Black Rose
Books.

Buber, Martin (1958). Paths in uto-
pia. (R. F. C. Hull, trans.). Boston:
Beacon Press.

Draper, Hal (1990). Karl Marx?s the-
ory of revolution; Vol. IV: Critique
of other socialisms. NY: Monthly
Review.

Engels, Frederick (1954). Anti-D?h-
ring; Herr Eugen D?hring?s revolu-
tion in science. Moscow: Foreign
Languages Publishing House.

Geoghegan, Vincent (1987). Uto-
pianism and Marxism. London &
NY: Methuen.

Goldner, Loren (2000). Ubu saved
from drowning: Class strug- gle and
statist containment in Portugul and
Spain, 1974- 1977. Cambridge MA:
Queequeg Publications.

Goodman, Paul (1962). Utopian
essays and practical proposals. NY:
Random House.

Hahnel, Robin (2005). Economic
justice and democracy; From com-
petition to cooperation. NY/Lon-
don: Routledge.

Kolbert, Elizabeth (2005, May 9).
The climate of man?III.What can
be done? The New Yorker. Pp. 52-63.

Kropotkin, Peter (1975). The es-
sential Kropotkin. (Emile Capouya
& Keitha Tompkins, eds.). NY:
Liveright.

Malatesta, Errico (1984). Errico
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(Vernon Richards, ed.). London:
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Marx, Karl, & Engels, Friedrich
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