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Institute Resource Paper #11
New Epoch Calls for New Doctrine -- The
Doctrine of the Leap
“While the people were very much alive, I saw a dead
philosophy – Cold War anti-communism and neo-imperialism
– walking the corridors of the Pentagon.”
(US Air Force Lt. Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski (retired) speaking
about the prevailing mood and decision-making process at the
Pentagon.)
This little section of an interview published by salon.com
illustrates how new conditions call for new principles to
guide important activity. Today few can doubt that any political
scientist or political functionary who tries to handle the
political and social realities of the turn of this millennium
by using principles that fit the Cold War is going to get
into a big mess. Likewise any scientific communist who tries
to superimpose the principles that guided the political activities
of Marxists 100 or 150 years ago is in for quite a bit of
frustration. But any revolutionary who tries to focus activity
without making use of science is in for at least as much frustration
and mistakes.
This is why we make a distinction between the enduring value
of the science of Marxism and its doctrine at any given historical
moment. In this class, we’ll start with a few definitions
and then explore some of the critical ramifications of doctrine.
Science and doctrine
Let’s review the general relation between science and
doctrine. Science discloses the nature of the motion in society.
But revolutionaries still need to figure out what to do.
Doctrine guides revolutionaries, but it is not simply a set
of things to do. Doctrine is the indispensable level of thinking
between describing the laws that govern the objective process
and identifying what needs to be done to advance the revolutionary
process.
“For revolutionaries, doctrine is
a general policy or set of principles that guides political
activity to accomplish a definite political goal. Doctrine
is based on the conclusions of the science of society: a definition
of the specific set of inherent, objective laws that govern
the objective process you are dealing with.”
Marx’s epoch and doctrine different from ours
To appreciate the importance of developing doctrine for our
epoch, we have to take look at the origins of capitalism and
the epoch in which Marx and Engels developed their scientific
methodology and developed doctrine.
In The Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels wrote
that the epoch they were describing was the epoch of the bourgeoisie.
They noted that the economic interests of those who accumulated
wealth in the business that went on in the towns (as opposed
to those who held their wealth in land) were compatible with
the beginning of industrial production. They highlighted the
immense transformation of relationships in society. Historians
have documented the events that confirm Marx’s concept
that capital is a social relation, not a certain amount of
money. It wasn’t as if wealth based on the privileges
of land ownership got larger and larger and then somehow became
“capital.” Capitalism didn’t originate simply
by something else getting bigger. Nor did it simply grow out
of industrialization. It certainly thrived within industrialization
and modernization, but the beginning of capital as a social
relation was a political as well as economic process. The
seizure of certain lands and the passage of certain laws in
a certain part of England separated laborers from their land
(and tools) and forced their connection to and dependence
on the capitalists. Under the conditions of modernization
and industrialization, once the first step in this qualitatively
new relationship was taken, there was no stopping it. All
the stages of capitalism’s growth were stages of this
process of the growth of capital as a social relation.
In his epoch, every political step that Marx advocated was
conditioned by and flowed from the class struggle associated
with the growth and development of capitalism in the context
of the rise of industry and the growth of the social relationships.
Today everything communists do must be conditioned by and
flow from the leap from industry to electronics and the resulting
destruction of society.
Other reports and papers have described the social revolution
sweeping away old relationships, disrupting societies, and
destroying lives around the world. As critical as it is, describing
the economic revolution at the foundation of this social revolution
ever more deeply and specifically does not, in and of itself,
advance the revolutionary process. Yet we cannot figure out
what to do unless we understand these things and figure out
what they mean for our activity. Doctrine navigates the relation:
“The force that shapes an epoch
determines the doctrine that guides all political activity.
Everything we see around us today is conditioned by and flows
from the beginning of the leap and transition in society —
the leap from an industrially-based society to one based on
electronics – and the resulting disruption and destruction
of society. Today doctrine is the set of principles that guide
revolutionaries’ political activity within the context
of this leap.”
This is not at all to say that our epoch does away with class
struggle. The class struggle is the political struggle, the
struggle for political power. The point is that today the
keystone in the arch of principles is the leap in society.
This is the context for all the complex and interconnected
processes going on today, including the class struggle.
In Marx’s epoch there took place an immense transformation
of social relationships. That is, the connections between
the capitalists and the workers in production were growing
and strengthening. Under those conditions, in order to guarantee
the ultimate general (political) results of the proletarian
movement, the communists had to keep uppermost in their minds
the class struggle between the workers and the capitalists.
In Marx’s epoch, taking the class struggle as the reference
point was especially critical in the context of the capitalists’
political struggles against the aristocracy, a struggle that
necessarily drew in the working class as well.
Today society is undergoing a different immense transformation
of social relationships. The economic revolution of our epoch
is tearing apart the connections between the capitalists and
the workers that were built up in the past epoch. The doctrine
of the leap serves as a guide to everything Marxists need
to figure out and do in this epoch of social revolution.
Revolutionary process, line of march, and critical
questions of the revolution
“Theoretically, [the communists]
…have …the advantage of clearly understanding
the line of march, the conditions, and the ultimate general
results of the proletarian revolution.”
Whether in Marx’s epoch or ours, once the revolutionary
process begins, it goes through definite stages. Not only
are the epoch and character of the revolution we are dealing
with different from what the Marxists of the past epoch faced,
but we are also at a different stage of the revolutionary
process. For us, the disruption of society that kicks off
the revolutionary process is only in its initial stages. But
that revolutionary process has begun.
Recognizing the difference between the Marxist doctrine of
the past epoch and doctrine for this epoch makes it possible
for us to proceed from the line of march of the revolution
rather than from a set of beliefs or truths. Here we will
explore the overall difference by looking at a critical question:
relying on the objective economic and social changes in order
to prepare the political aspects of the revolution.
The preparation for the political revolution has been a stumbling
block for revolutionaries of many countries and time periods.
Many “Marxists” seem to have reduced the doctrine
of the class struggle to the economic struggle between the
capitalists and the workers, as if the back-and-forth struggle
between the workers and capitalists determines or leads automatically
to a transfer of political power. It is as if bigger and bigger
social struggle somehow leads to or becomes “political
struggle.” A wrong philosophical conception about how
change takes place leads to wrong political and organizational
conclusions, with the result that many well-meaning revolutionaries
organize their political lives around intensifying the economic
struggle. If the economic struggle – not just the unions,
but all non-political wrangling over the distribution of the
wealth – were the route to the reconstruction of society,
then there would be no need to develop political consciousness
or to form an organization of revolutionaries; all the hard
work of valiant fighters would certainly have given us socialism
by now.
Let’s break this apart a bit and look at it through
the “glasses” of the doctrine of the leap.
Social struggle is not the same as political struggle. The
social struggle is the struggle over the distribution of the
social product; the political struggle is the struggle to
impose the demands of a class, the struggle for the political
power to reconstruct society. To find our way, we have to
approach things dialectically. The resolution of the social
struggles is political, that is, a matter of the struggle
for political power; but the social struggle won’t “jump
track” and suddenly become political. The social struggle
will not spontaneously lead to political power; but communist
have to work within it in order to prepare for the political
tasks ahead. Communists aim their political activity toward
creating the conditions for the class to achieve political
power.
Since we have to operate within the social struggle, we need
to understand its foundation and character today and how that
differs from the practical struggles of Marx’s epoch.
Although the social struggle doesn’t spontaneously become
a political struggle, communists today have to take stock
of the objectively communist character of that social struggle.
Marx dealt with a struggle of workers whose relationship with
the capitalists in production was growing; we are dealing
with a struggle of workers whose labor power is more and more
useless to the capitalist class and whose struggle is bound
to clash more and more with the capitalists’ means of
political control.
In order to find our way through these stages – to
master the line of march of the revolution, including the
steps communists have to take to ensure the completion of
each stage and the ultimate reconstruction of society –
we need to understand the conditions under which we are operating.
Marx, Engels, Lenin, and other revolutionaries of the past
epoch had to work out their conceptions of the path to political
power under conditions entirely different from ours.
In Marx and Lenin’s epoch, the historical struggle
was the struggle against the aristocracy. The working class
could march side-by-side with the capitalist class (or a section
of it) against the aristocracy, and the Marxists always fought
for the workers to understand and fight for their independent
interests. In addition to protecting and promoting those interests
at every step in the process, the Marxists also understood
and prepared for the political tasks.
“The Marxist writings which could
be termed doctrine, in the sense we are using it, summed up
the principles guiding the preparation for moments of crisis
and instability when the industrial working class could carry
the revolution against the aristocracy past the seizure of
political power by the capitalist class and on to political
power in the hands of the workers (or workers and peasants).
Their writings also addressed the tactical and organizational
implications of those principles.”
Even in times of economic crisis, the Marxists of the previous
epoch faced a process far different from what we face today.
Economic crisis may have presented a situation of extreme
poverty and suffering of the working class (and, in some cases,
the peasantry) or even with political instability. But there
did not exist the objective antagonism to capitalism that
we find today, and the connection between the capitalists
and the workers were growing. Today we face not just economic
crisis but social revolution based on economic revolution.
The class struggle is the political struggle. The struggle
of the classes for their interests cannot be resolved except
in a political struggle for power. Marxists who limit themselves
to the doctrine that fit the epoch of the rise of the connection
between the capitalists and the workers find it difficult
to recognize or envision a political struggle under the conditions
of the beginning of the destruction of those conditions.
Revolutionaries who don’t proceed from the recognition
of the leap in society and the beginning of the social revolution,
will not even recognize the beginning the revolutionary process.
They won’t be ready to identify what needs to be done
at each stage of the revolutionary process in which they operate.
Today we face the social consequences of a system in the
process of destruction — not the growing pains of an
expanding and developing system. Our challenge is to prepare
for the political struggle within the social struggle that
develops on that objective foundation. We need to get more
specific about how to do that under the specific historical
and cultural conditions in which we work. Under these conditions,
the concept of a “mass uprising” takes on a different
significance than it did in a previous epoch. Marxists of
our epoch are going to have to grapple with the prospects
and ramifications of all this for relying on the objective
– economic and social – aspects of the revolutionary
process in order to prepare for the conscious – political
– aspects and resolution of the process.
Objective economic and social changes set the basis for the
transformation of society, but the direction of change depends
on political consciousness, political action, and political
power. Political revolution is impossible without the development
of political crisis, political struggle, and political consciousness.
We may be a long way from that stage, or it may be closer
than it appears. But revolution will have to go through a
stage of political struggle.
Organizational ramifications
Following from all this, the “doctrine of the leap”
also has organizational ramifications.
Under the conditions in which there is a class that is objectively
communist, Marxists can conclude that the nature of the organization
of revolutionaries will be different from that of the epoch
of Marx, Engels and Lenin. At this relatively emergent stage
of the revolutionary process, Marxists see the importance
of an organization of revolutionaries based not on a set of
beliefs or the theory of Marxism but rather on the program
of the “bottom” of society, those with no stake
in the capitalist system.
Such is the nature of doctrine and effective political work:
Assess and evaluate changing conditions. Identify the quality
of the process or a task. Determine what will move the revolutionary
process ahead. Sum up, draw conclusions, spell out guiding
principles.
Once we understand doctrine in that sense, we can see that
there is – or should be – a set of general principles
that guides any specific field of revolutionary activity.
For example, the conclusions of the doctrine of the leap point
Marxists toward building a certain type of organization of
revolutionaries. But it doesn’t stop there. Such an
organization will have a general guiding doctrine on organizational
development (such as the development of revolutionaries into
communists, or the unity of authority and responsibility)
or a general doctrine on agitation and propaganda. The point
is that doctrine is not simply a list of tasks; nor is it
static. Doctrine is not a set of rules for revolutionaries
to follow. It is a set of principles that encourage and equip
revolutionaries to think through a changing situation and
its implications.
---------
We don’t talk much about “the left,” because
we don’t seem to even operate on the same plane. But
it might put things in perspective to emphasize something
that so clearly distinguishes us from “the left”
that we don’t necessarily recognize it. The “doctrine
of the leap” means that, if society is entering into
the process of a leap, then the revolutionary process on that
basis has begun. Even in the face of such overwhelming changes
as are destabilizing the whole world, much of the “left”
is still busy clarifying, arguing, and bargaining its shibboleth-like
positions. These “positions” are often nothing
more than favorite fragments of Marxist doctrine of a bygone
epoch pasted onto one or another issue in today’s social
struggle. Without recognizing that social revolution is bringing
the world through a traumatic leap, they are very simply stuck
at the very moment when the revolutionary process is just
beginning. Marxists who proceed from the “doctrine of
the leap” and the objectivity of the revolutionary process
can begin to anticipate and flesh out a conception of the
stages of the revolutionary process and more accurately identify
their tasks at any given step along the way. Everything we
do must be examined from the standpoint of this doctrine of
the leap,
The Institute for the Study of the Science of Society concentrates
on teaching science in such a way that unleashes rather than
channels thinking. Only with this type of education can revolutionaries
find their way through changing objective conditions, develop
doctrine, and draw the correct conclusions about political
activity.
Readings:
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Selection from V.I. Lenin, “Three
Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism.” Section
3. (Pages 8-10 in Proletarian Publishers edition.)
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Selection from V.I. Lenin, Karl Marx. Section
titled, “The class struggle.” (Pages 16-18 in
Foreign Languages Press edition.)
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Thomas Friedman chapter
Discussion questions
1. What is the relation between science and doctrine? Why
is doctrine important?
2. Discuss the difference between Marx’s epoch and ours.
Why does this make a difference for doctrine?
3. What is the political significance of a class with no place
in the capitalist system? What type of political crisis might
we expect in this epoch and in this country? And how might
we prepare?
May 2004
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