Maidansky - The Dialectical Logic of Evald Ilyenkov PDF
Maidansky - The Dialectical Logic of Evald Ilyenkov PDF
Maidansky - The Dialectical Logic of Evald Ilyenkov PDF
The Western mind on Russian soil - in this way one can succinctly
define the archetype which expressed itself in Ilyenkov's works. From his
childhood he was strongly attracted by western European, mainly German,
culture. His heroes were Spinoza, Hegel and Marx, and as regards music -
1 2
Richard Wagner. His favourite reading was Orwell's 1984.
The philosophy of llyenkov inherits its range of problems from the
Western philosophical classics and is saturated throughout with its logic. In
Russian philosophy the spirit of archaic collectivism always predominated.
Historically, it took two main forms: Orthodox religiosity (which found its
philosophical idealisation in the concept of sobornosf) and communitari-
anism (obsshinnosf). In this respect llyenkov was a non-typical Russian
philosopher, an outsider. Not surprisingly, he was at odds with the official
Russian version of Marxist philosophy, known as "Diamat."
Western philosophy owes its best achievements to following Spinoza's
precept: not to mock, lament, or execrate, but to understand. Russian phi
losophy disregarded this imperative, and cultivated an emotional percep
tion of the world to the detriment of logical reasoning. So, V. G. Belinsky
"smells the odour of blood" in the most abstract constructions of the Ger
man idealism. The theory of cognition was no more than the maidservant
of religious ethical or social political doctrines.
1
"There was not a single day when he did not listen to Wagner, even while he was typ
ing," his wife remembers. "Before going to sleep, instead of novels, he read the scores of
Wagner's operas" (.. (ed), .. , 2004,
p. 10).
2
llyenkov called this novel, forbidden in the Soviet Union, a "masterpiece." And he
translated it from a German edition for personal use.
538 ANDREY MAIDANSKY
3
.. , , " " 2 (1990),
. 68.
4
.. , -
, " " 2 (1990), pp. 42-56.
5
. Ilenkov, Dialettica di astratto e concreto nella conoscenza scientifica (Que
teoriche), "Critica Economica" 3 (1955), pp. 66-85.
THE DIALECTICAL LOGIC OF EVALD ILYENKOV AND WESTERN EUROPEAN MARXISM 539
away from the Diamat, but, unfortunately, they went in different directions,
these two critical currents of Marxist philosophy being mutually exclusive.
The "Italian affair" seems to have been paradigmatic for Ilyenkov's recep
tion in the West in the sense that even those who would have been expected
to embrace his ideas with sympathy, that is the representatives of Western
6
Marxism, do not in general seem to have known what to do with him.
Among Western Marxists, Georg Lukcs was closer than others to Ily
enkov's stance. The latter wrote an enthusiastic review, co-authored by his
7
two students, on Lukacs's book about young Hegel. They translated this
book into Russian, and soon a chapter concerning economic views of He
gel from the Jena period was published in "Voprosy filosofii." Sometime
earlier they wrote a letter to Lukcs asking his permission to publish their
translation and inquiring about the correlation between the concepts of En
tuerung and Entfremdung.
A few months later, in Autumn 1956, the Hungarian uprising took
place. Since Lukcs was the Minister of Culture in Imre Nagy's govern
ment, it became impossible to publish his works in Russian. Ten years later
Ilyenkov and his disciples made another attempt at translating Lukacs's
Young Hegel, but that second translation also could not appear in print in
8
Ilyenkov's lifetime.
Not so long ago a participant in that project, Professor Sergey Mareyev,
wrote a monograph about the history of Soviet philosophy, drawing a line
9
of "creative Marxism" from Lukcs to Ilyenkov. Indeed, there is much
in common between them in understanding the categories of dialectics.
Both philosophers were considered to be Hegelians and resisted the vulgar
stream in Marxism, and were at the receiving end of vicious attacks. But
their philosophical principles, starting already with their views on the sub
ject matter of philosophy, were considerably different.
Lukacs's philosophy always went far beyond the scope of logic and the
theory of cognition. The late Lukcs declared it openly. "During the last
6
V. Oittinen, Foreword, "Studies in East European Thought," vol. 57 (2005), p. 228.
He discussed this issue in detail in his lecture "Ilyenkov's Italian Affair" at Ilyenkov Read
ings 2004.
7
See . , .. , .. , , "
," " " 5 (1956),
pp. 181-184.
8
See . , , ed. by
.. , .. , 1987.
9
.. , : - - ,
2008.
540 ANDREY MAIDANSKY
10
G. Lukcs, Zur Ontologie des gesellschaftlichen Seins. Prolegomena, in idem, W
vol. 13, 1: Halbband, ed. by von F. Benseier, Darmstadt 1984, p. 7.
11
G. Deila Volpe, Logica come scienza positiva, Messina 1950.
THE DIALECTICAL LOGIC OF EVALD ILYENKOV AND WESTERN EUROPEAN MARXISM 541
12
L. Colletti, Prefazione, in E.V. H'enkov, La dialettica dell astratto e del concre
nel Capitate di Marx, transl. by V. Strada, A. Sandretti, Milano 1961 (ristampa 1975),
p. XXII.
13
In the Potyomkin archive there remained a photo of 1964: Levi goes on a hiking trip
in the vicinities of Moscow in company with Ilyenkov. See <www.caute.tk/ilyenkov/arch/
avpl964a.jpg> (the last two men on the photo are Levi and Ilyenkov).
542 ANDREY MAIDANSKY
Next year, 1961, the Italian translation came out at last. The author of
the Foreword, Lucio Colletti, was not so well-known in those days (he was
the same age as Ilyenkov, born 1924). Three years later, in 1964, he left the
Communist Party and finally became a radical critic of Marxism la Karl
14
Popper. But in the 60s Colletti was still trying to cleanse Marxism of the
harmful effect of Hegelian dialectics.
In his verbose Foreword (52 pages!) he expounded his views on dialec
tics and Marx's theory of value. From attacking Hegel he moved to scath
ing criticism of the "archaic and contradictory metaphysics" of Diamat,
illustrated by the example of Soviet philosopher Mark Rosenthal's work
on the logic of Capital. Only at the very end does Colletti find four pages
for commenting on Ilyenkov's book. The assessment is rather benevolent:
"One could not fail to notice the seriousness and originality of Ilyenkov's
15
research, despite the somewhat scholastic linearity of his speech."
Colletti expresses the hope that Ilyenkov is not alone, and that his book
is a first swallow of a "young Soviet school of Marxism", performing the
"restitution of serious analysis of Marx's works."
Among these authors of the young generation Ilyenkov, for various rea
sons, seems to us the most interesting. First of all, because his book poses
a problem of the "logic" of Capital that did not receive due regard in the
whole Marxist literature, including the Soviet one. Secondly, because his
study embraces the very topics which have consistently been elaborated
for a long time by the line of development of theoretical Marxism in Italy:
the topic of determined, or historical, or concrete, abstractions in the works
16
of Marx.
Colletti means the line drawn by his teacher della Volpe. The latter op
posed the determined or historical abstractions in Galileo and Marx (astra-
zioni determinate storiche) the genesis of which Marx explored in the fa
mous Introduction to Grundrisse to Hegel's generic abstractions (astrazioni
generiche). Ilyenkov called these abstractions "concrete abstractions." If
formal abstraction grasps only likeness, uniform features of things, then
concrete abstraction fixes the concrete interconnection of things as mo
ments of a single whole. Due to these higher abstractions, facts which are
separated from the beginning "grow together" as it were into an "organic
unity," a "totality."
14
On the evolution of Colletti's views see O. Tambosi, Perche il marxismo ha fallito.
Lucio Colletti e la storia di una grande illusione, Milano 2001.
15
L. Colletti, Prefazione, p. LVI.
16
Ibidem.
THE DIALECTICAL LOGIC OF EVALD ILYENKOV AND WESTERN EUROPEAN MARXISM 543
17
"() Fare della logicafilosoficauna scienza storico-sperimentale" {Galvano Delia
Volpe Opere, Roma 1972-1973, vol. 4, p. 553).
18
.. , , (
), in idem, , 1991, . 123.
19
L. Colletti, Prefazione, pp. LVII-LVIII.
544 ANDREY MAIDANSKY
Yes, llyenkov still did not fully break off with Diamat and Hegel, Col-
letti maintained. In his book there remained preserved some unextirpated
remnants of Hegelianism. First and foremost, it is a statement about the ob
jective reality of contradictions. A t this point Colletti disagreed with llyen
kov fundamentally and irreconcilably. The latter, for his part, appraised the
absolute prohibition of contradictions in scientific thought as an atavism of
the formal, Aristotelian-scholastic logic.
"In the end it always turns out that an attempt to construct a theory
without contradictions leads to the piling up of new contradictions that are
still more absurd and insoluble than those that were apparently got rid of.
(...) The dialectical method, dialectical logic demand that, far from fearing
contradictions in the theoretical definition of the object, one must delib
erately search for these contradictions and record them precisely - to find
their rational resolution, of course, not to pile up mountains of antimonies
and paradoxes in theoretical definitions of things.
And the only way of attaining a rational resolution of contradictions
in theoretical definition is through tracing the mode in which they are re
solved in the movement of the objective reality, the movement and devel
,20
ment of the world of things 'in themselves. "
In the contemporary Western scholarship one can meet with a rather high
appraisal of The Dialectics of the Abstract and the Concrete. For instance,
in the article llyenkov at Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Centur
Philosophers, the renowned expert on Soviet philosophy James P. Scanlan
states that it "became a kind of handbook for the rising generation," and its
author achieved a reputation for being "the most influential Soviet inter
21
preter of Marx's dialectical method in the post-Stalin period."
The author and editor of monographs on classical German philosophy
Nectarios G . Limnatis (Cyprus - Hofstra University, USA) mentions that
llyenkov gave rise to studies of dialectics in the Capital. His work was
continued later in German literature (R. Bubner, H . J. Krahl, F. Kuhne,
R. Meiners, G . Quass, J. Zeleny), and in the English-speaking and French
literature ( M . E. Meaney, F. Moseley, T. Smith, H . Uchida, R. Fausto) dur
ing the past two decades. Time has confirmed Ilyenkov's stand in his con
troversy with Colletti: "The Hegelianism of Marx's opus magnum is now
22
universally acknowledged."
20
E.V. llyenkov, The Dialectics of the Abstract and the Concrete in Scientific Theo
cal Thought, transl. by S. Syrovatkin, Delhi 2008, pp. 243-244.
21
St.C. Brown, D. Collinson, R. Wilkinson (eds), Biographical Dictionary of Twenti
eth-Century Philosophers, London 1996, p. 362.
22
N. Limnatis, German idealism and the problem of knowledge: Kant, Fichte, Sc
THE DIALECTICAL LOGIC OF EVALD ILYENKOV AND WESTERN EUROPEAN MARXISM 545
Besides, in Limnatis's opinion, Ilyenkov presents "by far the best inter
pretation of contradiction in the international bibliography," as well as "the
best, most extensive, yet sadly unappreciated treatment" of the concepts of
23
abstract and concrete in Hegel.
In the middle of the 1960s Ilyenkov took part in the Hegel congresses
at Salzburg and Prague, and received an invitation to the symposium Marx
and the Western World at Notre Dame University. The Soviet officials did
not let him go to the U S A , but his (truncated, as usual) text was, nonethe
24
less, sent and printed in the collection of the symposium papers.
In all of the three reports Ilyenkov speaks about the alienation created
by the social division of labour, and about the conditions for its elimi
nation. Alienation under socialism exists, and continues, Ilyenkov insists.
The form of property, established by the socialist revolution, is only a "for
mal-juridical negation" of private property. In other words, the property,
belonging to the socialist state, is "public" only formally, in the purely
juridical respect. While actually, in economic practice, the socialist form
of property continues to be private.
The real overcoming of alienation is a process of transformation of pri
vate property "into the actual property of each individual, each member of
that society." And it does not boil down to monopolisation of private prop
erty by the state as "the impersonal organism, opposing each and every
25
individual it is composed from."
Such passages had no chance of passing censorship, so they were de
leted from Ilyenkov's American paper. The organisers of symposium were
informed that the author could not arrive because of his "hospitalisation."
From the text of the Prague paper Hegel and "Alienation" one can see
that Ilyenkov carefully watched the heated debates on this topic among
European philosophers. However, his attempts to take part in those debates
failed: the manuscripts in which Ilyenkov replied to Colletti's criticism,
argued against Adorno and Marcuse, or went for the popular Polish phi
26
losopher Adam Schaff, were not published in Ilyenkov's lifetime. Cen-
sors tightly blocked his efforts to initiate a dialogue with the European
philosophical community.
In any event, llyenkov could hardly fit into the general trend of evolu
tion of the Marxist thought. Most likely, he would have remained an out
sider in the West too. The Western trendsetters in Marxism either rejected
dialectics in favour of formal logic or tried to accommodate dialectics to
formal logic; they removed dialectics from nature and restricted its sphere
of applicability to "social being."
For llyenkov, formal logic was the science of the symbolic forms of ex
pression of thought. In the field of language the laws of formal logic work
perfectly. "But speaking is not thinking, - otherwise the greatest talker
27
should be the greatest thinker." llyenkov liked to quote these "somewhat
rough, but completely fair" words of Feuerbach. Dialectical logic teaches
us to produce thoughts, and formal logic teaches only to express though
correctly. If dialectics is a method of cognition of things, then formal logic
knows about real things no more than arithmetic knows about the number
of stars in heaven.
In the 1960s, along with a galaxy of young French Marxists - P. Mache-
rey, A . Matheron, E. Balibar, B . Rousset, inspired by Louis Althusser, lly
enkov begins to devise the theme of Spinoza as a precursor of Marx. Both
Althusser and llyenkov appreciated Spinoza for his endeavour to think
concretely, and both criticised Hegel's dialectics for the "mystifying" of
relationship between the abstract and the concrete, the ideal and the real.
But French Marxists searched in Spinoza's texts for an antidote for Hege
lian dialectics, whereas llyenkov inscribes Spinoza's name into the history
of dialectical logic along with Hegel and Marx.
In the West, since 1980s, the wave of popularity of the psychologist-
Spinozist L . S. Vygotsky has grown. llyenkov shared and developed Vy-
gotsky's cultural-historical theory of the formation of personality. Most of
his late works were devoted directly to the problems of psychology and
28
pedagogy, starting from the general notions of psyche and personality and
up to the methodology of education of deaf-blind children. Among the Eu
ropean scholars who know and appreciate Ilyenkov's works, psychologists
27
"Aber Sprechen ist nicht Denken, - sonst mte der grte Schwtzer der grte
Denker sein" (L. Feuerbach, Smtliche Werke, Leipzig 1846, vol. 2, p. 199).
28
A collection of Ilyenkov's texts on these matters has recently appeared (see "Journal
of Russian and East European Psychology," vol. 45, 4 (2007)), and the extensive manu
script Psychology was translated into English not long ago ("Russian Studies in Philoso
phy," vol. 48, 4 (2010), pp. 13-35).
THE DIALECTICAL LOGIC OF EVALD ILYENKOV AND WESTERN EUROPEAN MARXISM 547
29
D. Bakhurst, Consciousness and Revolution in Soviet Philosophy: From the B
sheviks to EvaldIlyenkov, Cambridge 1991; V. Oittinen (ed), EvaldIlyenkov's Philosoph
Revisited, Helsinki 2000.
30
S. Sayers, Review q/'Bakhurst, D. Consciousness and Revolution in Soviet Philo
phy, "Canadian Slavonic Papers", vol. 34, 1-2 (1992), p. 176.
31
This work had been published partially in English already during Ilyenkov's lifetime
(see The Concept of the Ideal, in A.N. Leontiev (ed), Philosophy in the USSR: Problems
Dialectical Materialism, transl. by R. Daglish, Moscow 1977, pp. 71-99), while the author
could not have seen it printed in his native language. And three posthumous Russian publi
cations of The Dialectics of the Ideal also appeared with abridgements, not too considerable
though.
548 ANDREY MAIDANSKY
of commentaries on the same topic. Thus, today we see a not so quick but
consistent advancement of Ilyenkov's ideas in the West.
Bibliography
15 1
STUD1A K U L T U R O Z N A W C Z E j
Badania
Russian Thought
in Europe
RECEPTION, POLEMICS,
DEVELOPEMENT
Edited by
Teresa Obolevich
Tomasz
Jzef Bremer
Akademia Ignatianum
Wydawnictwo WAM
Krakow 2013