Marx the Moralist?

16 September 2024

“The Communists do not preach morality at all.” Those are Marx's own words, and they sure seem pretty clear: Marx hated morality. He called it a bourgeois prejudice, a way to trick workers into being docile drones instead of rebelling against the system. And yet at other times Marx sounds very much the moralist. He's constantly railing against capitalist business owners, saying they exploit their workers, deprive people of dignity, and suck the life out of society. Marx thought we could do better than bourgeois morality: there’s a real morality out there, he implied, ready to replace the fake one.

So what should we make of Marx when he writes that “Communism abolishes eternal truths, it abolishes all religion and morality, instead of constituting them on a new basis”? Is he not saying that rather than seeking a new ethical system, we should smash them all? Well yes, but not now—he’s saying we should smash them in the future, once we have a communist utopia. In that utopia, everyone’s needs will be met, so we won’t have to worry about conflicting needs.

Even if that's true, there's surely still a problem. Some moral codes are about more than conflicting needs: they are about being good people. Suppose, for example, you promise someone that you'll keep their secret; in the amoral utopia, what's to keep you from blabbing it around?

According to Marx, you'll want to keep the secret. Once the utopia is here, you won’t have to be forced to do things by some external moral system, like some kind of angel on your shoulder whispering orders into your ear. Morality is a way of getting people to do things they don’t already want to do. In utopia, we won't need that: everyone will automatically want to do what’s best for everyone else. Even now, in this imperfect world of ours, we often do things for our loved ones simply because we love them. And we also do things for people we've never met: everywhere you look, people are building schools, inventing cures for diseases, painting murals that brighten everyone's day. Human nature is at least partly altruistic, and many people have a genuine desire to contribute something new to society.

OK, but who's going to collect the garbage in utopia? (In Grafton, New Hampshire, a libertarian community reportedly collapsed when the local bears started attacking.) Warm fuzzy feelings may be enough for a happy week at Burning Man. But for a sustainable long-term project, you're going to need everyone to take a turn doing the ongoing, unpleasant tasks. There's an altruistic side to humanity, but we’re also a selfish species of individuals who look out for our own interests. Why should we think that’s going to change just because the workers have seized the means of production?

Marx might say this: look at how different we are now from how people were even a hundred years ago, let alone a thousand or ten thousand. In ancient Rome, pretty much everyone thought slavery was totally normal; nowadays, pretty much everyone would be appalled if they found out their neighbor had a slave. "We’ve come a long way, baby." But an opponent might ask just how long a way we've actually come, given the existence of factory farming, ecological degradation, or people going bankrupt from doctor’s bills just to make the medical industry rich. Human greed has not gone away, and it isn’t about to. The selfish side is not going to change, even in a marxist utopia.

Maybe our guest will convince us that such change is possible: it’s Vanessa Wills, whose new book is Marx’s Ethical Vision.

 

Comments (4)


Daniel's picture

Daniel

Tuesday, October 15, 2024 -- 4:30 PM

From a purely materialistic

From a purely materialistic perspective, i.e. from the perspective of a pure nominalism of concept-contents generated by some or other thought-independent combination or extraction of materials, morals are generic norms the invariance of which is constituted by the conditions which make possible their production and maintenance. The imperative not to steal, for example, can be a moral one only insofar as private ownership is understood as a universal right. But because not everybody owns property, this right has relevance to only a few. It's therefore not a bundle of normative claims that constitutes a moral system, but the partiality of its relevance, making variations in moral codes correspond to those in social privileges. Does this suggest that abolition of social privilege would entail the abolition of morality altogether? My answer would be that it doesn't seem so, because the possibility of universal application of normative claims is not eliminated along with it, but remains a possible object of knowledge which, however, under current material conditions of existence, remains unknown. Does this sound about right?

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darrellsullivan701's picture

darrellsullivan701

Saturday, February 15, 2025 -- 12:20 AM

An interesting interpretation

An interesting interpretation of Marx's words! Indeed, his assertion that communists do not preach morality raises important questions about the role of morality in politics and economics. Many critics argue that this reflects his disdain for traditional moral values. However, it is worth considering that Marx may have meant the necessity of rethinking morality in the context of class struggle and social justice. Ultimately, his ideas can be seen as a call for the creation of a new type of morality based on equality and community. It is fascinating how these thoughts resonate with contemporary discussions about morality and ethics in various areas of life, including business and social relations.

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Sofia_Carvalho

Monday, February 17, 2025 -- 7:39 AM

Marx's approach to morality

Marx's approach to morality is fascinating because it challenges traditional ethical frameworks. Rather than focusing on abstract moral principles, he emphasizes material conditions and class struggle as the foundation of ethics. This raises an interesting question: Can morality truly exist independently of economic and social structures, or is it always a product of them?

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3PattiSe

Thursday, April 17, 2025 -- 6:48 AM

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