In 1980 Alvin Gouldner identified two traditions of Marxist
thought--Marxism as science and Marxism as critique. This book is
concerned with the first and by far the most politically
influential of those traditions--Marxism as science. It analyzes
the claim, first made by Marx and Engels themselves, that Marxism
is some kind of "hard" natural science of society able to identify
laws of social development and to provide a scientific guide to
revolutionary activity.
Marxism and Science breaks new ground by using Wittgensteinian
analysis of Marxist discourse to construct a totally different
conception of Marxism appropriate to the postmodern world. In this
conception, Marxism is a point of view that can be advanced,
rationally defended, and made convincing and persuasive to others,
but that is as partial in some respects as any other political
point of view. Reconceiving Marxism thus requires not only
understanding language in a different nonobjectivist way but also
adopting a new political practice and program, which the book
proceeds to outline.
Marxism and Science concludes that, intellectually, Marxism as
hard science is fairly obviously and profoundly untenable. But it
goes on to argue that the purely intellectual grounds for this
claim are much less interesting than the political and
psychological purposes that such a claim has always served for
Marxists in particular and scientific socialists in general. The
most important of these purposes has been to provide a sort of
psychological and emotional certitude to set against the
overwhelming existential domination of capitalism in the world.
Claiming this certitude to be as spurious as the arguments used to
sustain it, the author calls upon Marxists and socialists to admit
this and accept the doubt and uncertainty that come with a frank
avowal of an open and unforeclosed future.
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