One of the simple ways to
dismiss Marx is to say that his communist society could never exist because
human nature is greedy and competitive—or at least, that some people’s human
nature is greedy and competitive. This assumes that Marx establishes the grounds
of communism on a speculation about human nature being generous and
cooperative. People who assume that haven’t read or haven’t understood Marx.
A secondary assumption about Marx that is used against
him in ignorance is that Marx presumed that the establishment of a communist
society was inevitable and the necessary outcome of history. This is also not
true. What he does argue, in Capital,
is that capitalism will not be able to endure its own contradictions, for
instance, the contradiction that capitalist accumulation depends on the
exploitation of labor as its necessarily diminishing source of wealth.
I am not sure from what writing by Marx, if any, the
argument from human nature is supposed to come. I would guess the 1844 Manuscripts, and the analysis of
alienated labor that refers to capitalist production alienating labor from
“species-being.” I would make the point that in this early stuff, Marx has
still not fully formed his own philosophical architecture, and continues to
borrow from Hegel and the Young Hegelians (viz., “species-being” is from Ludwig
Feuerbach). Even so, the inchoate concept of labor is the only extent to which
there is something like a human nature invoked in the 1844 Manuscripts. What makes humans human is that we work, and that
our work is the basis for our social world. Nothing determines that one form or
another of that work is inevitable or natural. Alienation is not unnatural. The
estranged form of labor is not estranged from human nature, it is estranged from the worker.
By the time he wrote Capital,
Marx retained only the most basic Hegelian logic of contradiction, but in a
form that’s hardly recognizable. In Capital,
Marx analyzes historical documents, contemporary economic and social
conditions in England, and writings by capitalist economists, to demonstrate
the multiple contradictions inherent in capitalism. These are bound to fail not
because of some alleged human nature but simply because they are
contradictions. For instance, the familiar boom-bust cycles in capitalist
economies are inevitable, because they are driven by the capitalist’s demand
for accumulation of wealth, the need to generate surplus-value through unpaid
labor, and the need to sell the commodities produced with that labor at their
cost (including the profit created by not paying labor). When there’s a boom,
production increases, leading to stockpiles of unsold commodities, which drives
down prices, which drives down profit, which leads to lower employment or lower
wages, which leads to decreased purchases of commodities by consumers. The boom
creates the bust. The bust creates hoards of unemployed capital that needs to
be spent in order to accumulate wealth, and the cycle starts again. The
capitalists themselves do not need to be particularly poor examples of human
beings (other than, you know, the unconscionable willingness to exploit
workers) in order to be compelled to play their roles as cheap buyers of other
people’s work, often with other people’s money. That’s the game, and individual
capitalists are no more in control of what they do to play the game than are
the workers they exploit. Marx does not need to say anything about human nature
to demonstrate this. He only needs to show that the cycles have repeated in
obvious sequences with the same obvious results—and that’s easy to do when the British
business and bourgeois economic communities and the British Parliament keep
such detailed records and testimony about economic conditions.
And not to be gloomy and doomy about it, but the
catastrophic end of capitalism doesn’t necessarily lead to communism. It could
just be catastrophe.
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