The Debate Between Communism
and Capitalism A
Critique of Marxist Communism based on Terry Eagleton's book 'Why
Marx Was Right” Aufheben
The word 'aufheben' is used
primarily in the works of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel as a way to
explain the result of the thesis and antithesis interacting, via the
term 'sublation'.
Terry Eagleton's book Why
Marx Was Right seems to prove
the old adage that 'defenders of a faith often do more damage than
detractors.' The adage here is taken to mean it's a sign that an old
paradigm is falling away when defenders cling to it. 1.Terry
Eagleton: Why Marx Was Right (Yale University Press) hereafter
referred to as W.M.R.
Eagleton
claims to be a Marxist, but he is no street radical. He would seem
to fit better with the genteel seventeenth century Utopians like
Tobias Hess and Johann Valentin Andrea, who were waiting for a group
of physician-magi to arise and heal society. Eagleton makes the
points that capitalism is a necessary step for communism, because
there can be no communism without capitalism to reject (WMR pgs.
57-63), that Karl Marx even had some positive feelings for
Colonialism because it would bring about the needed conditions for
communism (WMR pgs. 218-221), and that communism must ride on the
back of capitalism (WMR pg. 235). This sounds like a nice way of
saying that communism is a parasite on capitalism. Eagleton even says
communism needs capitalist resources (WMR pg. 57), and that it was
Stalin and not Marx that thought communism could generate wealth (WMR
pg. 236). There seems to be a big problem with communism if it cannot
even be the hero in it's own drama. Communism is a protest against
the abuses of capitalism. Communists share much the same relationship
that devil worshipers have with Christianity-without Christianity
there can be no devil worshipers. Capitalism must be prior not only
historically but ontologically to Communism.
The
reason for this is wealth creation. If your purpose is to spread the
wealth, there must first be wealth, and this is what communism cannot
do. It cannot create wealth. Eagleton even goes as far as to say that
capitalism is like the 'Sorcerer's Apprentice'-able to create wealth
out of thin air. Capitalism is not without its problems, or communism
would never have grown into a world wide movement. The abuses and
excesses of capitalism are the blood that communism feeds on.
*all posts co-authored by I.Green
*all posts co-authored by I.Green
