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The Marxist Ethic of Self-realization: Individuality and Community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2010

Extract

If, for Marx and Marxists, communism would be the most ideal of human societies, this is because it would make possible the maximum use of human and natural resources to the equal benefit of all. This means that, under communism, human beings would ‘realize themselves’. In direct and pointed contrast to capitalism wherein all individuals lead alienated, stunted, and fragmented lives, communism for Marx would provide the preconditions for a flowering, a full and final development of all human potentialities.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 1987

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References

1 He speaks of a ‘conflict’ between ‘creative self-realization’ and ‘the value of community’ in his (1985) p. 523 and, more bluntly in the shorter (1986) of ‘a head-on collision’ (p. 48). Similarly Steven Lukes in his (1985) speaks of ‘a contradiction, or at least tension, between the individualistic and communitarian impulses in Marx's thought’ (p. 96).

2 See for instance Nielsen (1973) and, of particular relevance to this paper, Plamenatz (1975) Ch. 12.

3 Aristotle, (1921) B2Google Scholar; see also Mulgan, (1977) 1317Google Scholar and Newman, (1887) 41–4.Google Scholar

4 Elster, (1985) 89.Google Scholar

5 Elster, (1985) 524.Google Scholar

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7 Cohen, (1973/1974).Google Scholar

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24 Marx, (1973) 162Google Scholar (my emphasis).

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31 I am extremely grateful to the following who commented on earlier drafts of this paper: H. Bunting, P. Carruthers, G. A. Cohen, S. Mills.