Materialism and the Logic of Capitalism

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Yesterday, Victoria over at Short White Coat, Inc. wrote a penetrating post about the intersection of poverty and health problems in the US, reflecting on her work with AIDS patients who were exiting the criminal justice system, she lamented the reality: despite her training and intentions, these people faced such a host of social, legal, and medical problems that their futures seemed bleak, their challenges intractable:

My patients felt they had paid their debt to society, but society would not give them a chance. Most had limited education and job training, and during the recession, it was difficult enough to find a new job without a conviction. Prior to incarceration, many had suffered mental illness, including substance addiction and depression. All of them now faced complicated HIV medication regimens and doctors’ appointments despite frequently unstable housing, transportation, and employment status. After release, many met criteria for devastating post-traumatic stress disorder, some resulting from horrifying events occurring while under the “care” of the State. Almost all were from poor backgrounds and the majority were people of color. During the interviews, many expressed themes of detachment, a sense of alienation from society starting in childhood. Some intimated a sense that outcomes many Americans view as basic rights or inevitabilities were never options for them, like freedom from an abuser, a safe home and school environment, or deciding what to be when they grew up.

She went on to point out that this isn’t just some unfortunate set of accidents that occurred these people; rather, this nexus of misfortune, poor health, lack of education, and subjection to violence is central to how late capitalism functions. These aren’t bugs, in other words-they’re features.
She linked a post from the Social Medicine Portal that only underscores this reality. It’s a short post, well-worth reading, but perhaps the crux of its argument is here well expressed:

How can one claim to fight poverty if, at the same time, one is carrying out policies that create poverty? By privatizing public services and charging those who use them, by laying off workers and reducing unemployment compensation, by maintaining social assistance at levels below the poverty level, by privatizing pensions… one can only increase the number of poor people.

The very people who are so vocal about combating poverty and building a better future are the same people who are profiting off of labor exploitation and environmental degradation. If extremely rich philanthropists were serious about combating poverty, they’d start by changing the way their very companies work in the first place. Instead, they drive people into poverty with one hand while shaking their fist at poverty with the other. It’s a deeply hypocritical, cynical attitude-exactly what the expression and maintenance of power demands. Slavoj Zizek strikes at the heart of this reality in a talk he gave the RSA:

Unfortunately, the response from the Left has been both uninspired and ineffective, and I want to suggest here that the reasons for its failure are deeper than often perceived. It’s not just that the Left has failed to popularize its discourse or develop strong institutions. These are both valid points, but I think they are more symptoms than causes. Fundamentally, what those who resist capitalism really lack is a consistent narrative. We have not articulated a systematic ideology of resistance, because the primary ideologies of resistance are themselves predicated on the philosophy that undergirds capitalism itself. The Left still speaks of power as the primary issue on the table: we need more of it, we need to marshal it against our opponents.
But such a view takes the zero-sum antagonistic worldview of capitalism for granted. It challenges the current distribution of power and wealth, but not the naked exploitation of power and wealth themselves. Marxism is, at its heart, an attempt to transcend capitalism by being ever-yet more materialistic and ruthless than capitalism itself; Marx didn’t primarily argue that capitalism was wrong so much as he argued that it was not fully developed. Communism was to be mature capitalism, fully enlightened and playing out the logic of Marx’s understanding of the progressive development of history. Marxism is unabashedly materialistic and deterministic.
Anarchism tends towards a more romantic implementation and certainly focuses more on the individual as the center of value over Marxism’s more communitarian bent-though anarchism is so diverse that making any such generalization is difficult at best. Nonetheless, I think it’s fair to say that anarchism developed classical Liberalism to its logical end: the individual as the ultimate arbiter of all value and meaning. Others’ rights were to be respected as they too were individual persons, their own centers of value, but this was simply taken for granted. Modern anarchism doesn’t question materialism, it simply asserts the value of subjective beings without accounting for this valuation objectively. It is, in a sense, the ersatz political extension of 19th century Romanticism into the 20th and 21st centuries, a defiant semi-solpsism built around a core of unarticulated primal ethical claims encased in modern materialism, the two mixing as well as oil and water.
What is needed to resist capitalism is a philosophy that actually resists the logic of capitalism. Capitalism is a logical extension of the Enlightenment: the world is an object without inherent value that can-and should-be manipulated by human subjects as they see fit. Ethical and spiritual values are only valid within the sphere of a given individual person and have no ontological basis; the world is material alone and deterministic as well. Morality can be legislated-by groups with sufficient power-but there is no universally recognized set of values, aside from those that guarantee the capacity to accumulate resources as capital: property. The capacity for persons to absolute right over a certain set of resources, can have no limitations-but as a totally secular space, devoid of any sense of sacredness, the world can support no other rights.
Marxism and Anarchism attempt to defy the neoliberal order, but on its terms: power is to be met with power. What makes these efforts so pathetic is not only that, at the outset, such an attitude already concedes the central debate, but that self-styled revolutionary groups have orders of magnitude less power than their adversaries; they have absolutely no chance at success. When they do develop enough power to defeat their opponents, the power itself-quite predictably-reshapes them. Those 20th century revolutions that were successful were successful precisely to the extent that they adopted capitalist and imperialist tactics. Perhaps no state witnesses to this as well as the People’s Republic of China; in its most revolutionary phase it murdered or starved millions of people to death in a few short years. And as Maoist Marxism showed its faults, the Party rapidly refashioned itself along mercantilist lines, becoming one of the most aggressively capitalist institutions in the world.
No, what is needed is a philosophy that explains the world in radically different terms. This is not to say that the realities of oppression should or could be ignored. Indeed, those who claim to speak about social justice cannot ignore the “mundane” everyday needs of the world’s oppressed. But it is precisely here, again, that contemporary radicals so often get their priorities reversed. If the concern is for food stamps (now known as TANF), Social Security, the minimum wage and the rights of unions, then what is needed is a reformist attitude, because these are all assets that have to be negotiated within the current order. What is a revolutionary attitude towards Social Security? This is a question with no answer, because Social Security was a concession given away by the capitalist system in the first place; under revolutionary conditions, would such a system be necessary or even sustainable? So long as we are talking about the everyday needs of the oppressed under the current system, let’s abandon all self-serving talk of revolution.
And if we are going to talk of revolution, then we must talk about a full and real revolution: not just the transfer of power from one group to another, promising to organize capital in a fairer way-though such a move would be quite welcome, it is ultimately a reformist move at its very best. No, real revolutionary activity has to be predicated on a radically different system, one that resists the very logic of capitalism. And this means critiquing-though not rejecting-materialist science, balancing it with what can only be called a relationary realism that affirms the ontological validity of subjects as real entities in the world who are only possible through societies. Individualism must be balanced with community, matter must be contextualized with relationship, analysis must be seen as as depending on its opposite vector: synthesis.
Resistance to capitalism must articulate a vision, not just call for the creation of opposition institutions. A world that has no sacred aspect, a world of mere heaps of matter, is a world devoid of ethics a priori. In such a world, the word oppression is meaningless, and justice is a legal term only. If we are going to challenge oppression and injustice, we have to believe that these are real categories of action, and this demands what is today a radical assertion: people are not just collections of cells, they are real relational entities, and ethics is the ontologically valid study of how such entities can exist and thrive in harmony. Hence, the materialist determinism of Marxism, though not flat-out denied, must be balanced-Hegel wasn’t standing on his head after all. And the desperate post-Romanticism of anarchism must be reconciled with itself-the dualism inherent in it must be transcended and a unity achieved.
The idealist project, essentially dead in the anglophonic world for centuries, was warped and turned in on itself in the early 20th century with existentialist nihilism, which essentially surrendered any ontological considerations to materialism anyway. But the spiritual-ethical impulse has not died, rather it has carried forward as a powerful undercurrent in modern societies. What is needed is to bring it to the surface-and this will require an ontology that can join it with all the valid positions of materialism. Such a project can not only join idealistic realism and empirical materialism, the two positions that have been battling one another for 2500 years in western thought, but can crucially also reveal the folly of late capitalism and the desperate need to move beyond it.

0 thoughts on “Materialism and the Logic of Capitalism

  1. Scott,
    Thanks for the great writing. I think there is/was a solid anti-capitalistic vision. F. David Peat writes of it in “Blackfoot Physics”
    The Great Disease
    “Indigenous America was pervaded by a field of active meaning, a relationship that had been created in a world beyond the immediate senses, and which involved the whole of nature in a web of exchange, relationship, obligation and renewal. What happened next was a perturbation of balance, a virus in a field of meaning, the epidemic spread of an alien set of values”.
    I think our contemporary understanding of biology, thermodynamics, morphic fields and the pathologies of centralized power, (the most dangerous of which is religion) provide us with a clear vision that sends capitalism to its well-deserved grave. The “alien set of values” of which Peat writes, are as alien to our spirits, as those of indigenous people.
    I don’t idealize indigenous cultures but they do provide a variety of templates for the creation of something better than this capitalistic ugliness, this death machine that ultimately destroys itself. So I don’t think we lack a vision, we just lack the understanding character to go do it.

  2. Dave,
    Yeah, you raise excellent points here: and I would agree that a valuation of reality and of subjects is not new at all. Of course, as a Christian, I’m more likely to approach this from a stance of re-capturing what was lost in the rise of modernism in Western culture–but I absolutely agree that Native culture and religion deserves space to voice itself on this as well. But I would also have to say that I, personally, am quite ignorant about such culture and religion and cannot really provide any good input on that issue. But this might be a good theme to develop on Tikkun Daily among those who are more informed about such issues!

  3. Very interesting essay, Scott. I applaud you for trying to think outside the box of the intellectual options relating to social justice prevailing today. I don’t think you’ve exhausted the important possibilities, however. You seem to want to defend a sort of dualism against materialism, but dualism is part of the set of philosophical options spawned primarily by market- and money-oriented societies. The earliest forms of mind-body dualism of which we have record emerged in Axial Age Greece, which was precisely the period in which money in the form of currency was emerging as a dominant economic factor and human beings were more and more being treated as slaves, which could be owned and, of course, bought and sold as possessions. Slavery almost completely died out in the Global middle ages, but then reemerged with a vengeance in what is often called (early) modernity, with the simultaneous rise of capitalism and chattel slavery. This was also the period of Descartes’ famous dualism and the modern forms of idealism and materialism were almost immediate dialectical responses to the way Descartes framed the problem.
    I agree that the relational conception of the human being shows a great deal of promise and social justice workers would be well advised to treat it seriously. Rather than directly rejecting materialism, however, I think a useful approach to conceptualizing mind can be found in George Lakoff’s embodied realism (See his Philosophy in the Flesh), which is compatible with cutting edge research into the correlation of sensorimotor experience with the acquisition of language and especially the development of conceptual metaphor, without which the so-called higher functions of religion, philosophy, and science would not be possible.
    I’d also recommend that you read David Graeber’s Debt: The First 5000 Years, which integrates history, cultural-analysis, economics, and philosophy with a social-justice perspective that, in my mind, provides a refreshing perspective from which familiar versions of Marxism and the ideological accommodation to capital can be challenged.

  4. Jan,
    I’ll definitely look into those books–I’m really interested (as you noticed) in relational thought. Thanks for the suggestions! I do want to re-clarify, though: I’m not dismissing materialism (which I expressed in the post above, though perhaps I could and should have been clearer). I am *critiquing* it, but not dismissing it. I accept materialism, so far as it goes–I think it’s necessary but insufficient. I am also most unequivocally *not* espousing dualism–only trying to rescue what I think were some of the motivating impulses of dualist idealism, most notably a valuation of subjects as such. However, I would fully agree with you that dualism is not a live option as an ontology.
    For me, the crucial issue is how to assign full ontic reality to subjects as actual entities in the material order. I don’t think current materialist realism allows for this, because its logic of assigning reality is only analytical and reductive, but I’m fully, existentially committed to such reality as the only basis both for ethics and for taking one’s own self-consciousness seriously. I think materialism needs to be radically confronted and developed–but not rejected.
    Thanks again for your comment and reading suggestions! My list of summer reading has just been expanded.

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