10.10.24

The marxists

 

Even ideas that were at one time firmly established have a history of their truth and not a mere afterlife; they do not remain inherently indifferent to what befalls them.

Theodor W. Adorno

Many of those who reject (or more accurately, ignore) marxist ways of thinking about human affairs are actually rejecting the classic traditions of their own disciplines.

Marx, using historical materials with superb mastery, takes as his unit of study entire epochs. The values of the social scientists generally lead them to accept their society pretty much as it is; the values of Marx lead him to condemn his society — root, stock and branch. The social scientists see society’s problems as matters only of “disorganization”; Marx sees problems as inherent contradictions in the existing structure. The social scientists see their society as continuing in an evolutionary way without qualitative breaks in its structure; Marx sees in the future of this society a qualitative break: a new form of society — in fact a new epoch — is going to come about by means of revolution.

No one who does not come to grips with the ideas of marxism can be an adequate social scientist.

C. Wright Mills