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"HB Acton's version of Marxism"

4 Comments -

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Blogger Paul D. Van Pelt said...

Sounds like an entertaining, if confusing book. Did the author believe his work would withstand professional scrutiny? Or did he simply want to write something---anything?
The title, and its' essential irrelevance to the content is curious. Not sure of motive, but this sounds like fictionalization of Marx's thinking. I am with Wittgenstein on this one: if you don't know about something, don't talk about it.
People are funny.

July 8, 2022 at 9:34 AM

Blogger Dan Little said...

I'm not sure what audience Acton had in mind. The philosophical content is primarily about Hegelian dialectics, which wasn't in vogue in British philosophy in the 1950s. (A prominent exception -- JN Findlay, a well-regarded South African/British philosopher published a book interpreting Hegel's philosophy in 1958.) And Acton appears to have spent effort reading the "Marxism-Leninism-Stalinism" literature, to cement the relationship between Marx and totalitarianism. Acton's book isn't a hack-job, but it's really wrong-headed. And Acton had some recognition in philosophy -- he was a member and eventually director of the Royal Institute of Philosophy, and longterm editor of the journal Philosophy. So the audience and purpose of the book is something of a mystery to me.

July 8, 2022 at 5:14 PM

Blogger Howie said...

A pragmatist like William James would analyze an idea by its effect; so Marxism/Leninism from that point of view is Marxism; ideas can't just fall of the page into the trenches of world history, can they?
I mean you can judge Christianity by the teachings of Christ and even Paul or by the actual Church and its flock.
I have a basic if not profound grasp of Marx, but at the very least he is irrelevant if he can't be really carried into the arena

July 9, 2022 at 6:50 PM

Blogger Dan Little said...

There are many ways of carrying forward Marx's critique of exploitation, domination, and alienation in capitalism -- the totalitarian ideology of Stalinism is one such scenario, but there are others. For example, if one puts the emphasis on workers' control and democratic socialism, then rather than state ownership of all productive wealth, independent workers' controlled firms might dominate the economy. And a legislative process strongly committed to social democracy -- strong social institutional provisioning of basic goods such as education, healthcare, and disability/unemployment security -- would also be a possible evolution of Marx's critique of capitalism. So we can't say that the "meaning" of Marx's thought is one particularly criminal implementation by a murderous crew of dictators -- Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin. Nordic social democracy is one such alternative.

July 10, 2022 at 10:16 AM

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