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MARXISM AND THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE by Robert M. Young The main thing to be said about Marxism and the history of science is
        that more, much more, has been written that is explicitly or implicitly anti-Marxist than
        has been written which is avowedly an attempt to see the history of science in Marxist
        terms. Another class of writings can be seen as watered-down Marxism, while still another
        is silent about Marxism but does not make much sense unless one knows that Marxism is the
        silent partner in a one-voice dialogue or polemic in which the other position is not
        named. The analogy which springs to mind is that of a planet which is not seen but is
        inferred because of the perturbations of the other planets due to the gravitational effect
        of the unseen one. The defining feature of Marxist approaches to the history of science is
        that the history of scientific ideas, of research priorities, of concepts of nature and of
        the parameters of discoveries are all rooted in historical forces which are, in the last
        instance, socio-economic. There are variations in how literally this is taken and various
        Marxist-inspired and Marxist-related positions define the interrelations among science and
        other historical forces more or less loosely. There is a continuum of positions. The most
        orthodox provides one-to-one correlations between the socio-economic base and the
        intellectual superstructure. This is referred to as economism or vulgar Marxism. The
        classical source is a set of comments in the preface to A Contribution to the Critique
          of Political Economy (1859):  
        My enquiry led me to the conclusion that neither legal relations nor
          political forms could be comprehended whether by themselves or on the basis of a so called
          general development of the human mind, but that on the contrary they originate in the
          material conditions of life, the totality of which Hegel, following the example of English
          and French thinkers of the eighteenth century, embraces within the term "civil
          society"; that the anatomy of this civil society, however, has to be sought in
          political economy.... The general conclusion at which I arrived and which, once reached,
          became the guiding principle of my studies can be summarised as follows. In the social
          production of their existence, men inevitably enter into definite relations, which are
          independent of their will, namely relations of production appropriate to a given stage in
          the development of their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of
          production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation, on which
          arise a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond definite forms of
          social consciousness. The mode of production of material life conditions the general
          process of social, political and intellectual life. It is not the consciousness of men
          that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their
          consciousness... The changes in the economic foundation lead sooner or later to the
          transformation of the whole immense superstructure. In studying such transformations it is
          always necessary to distinguish between the material transformation and the economic
          conditions of production, which can be determined with the precision of natural science,
          and the legal, political, religious, artistic or philosophic  in short, ideological
          forms in which men become conscious of this conflict and fight it out. Just as one does
          not judge an individual by what he thinks about himself, so one cannot judge such a period
          of transformation by its consciousness, but, on the contrary, this consciousness must be
          explained from the contradictions of material life, from the conflict existing between the
          social forces of production and the relations of production. No social order is ever
          destroyed before all the productive forces for which it is sufficient have been developed,
          and new superior relations of production never replace older ones before the material
          conditions for their existence have matured within the framework of the old society.
          Mankind thus inevitably sets itself only such tasks as it is able to solve, since closer
          examination will always show that the problem itself arises only when the material
          conditions for its solution are already present or at least in the course of formation.[1]  The attentive reader will notice that science is here distinguished
        from ideology, but all versions of Marxist history of science generalise the position take
        here about intellectual life and treat science as lying within the historical force
        described by Marx in this passage, which is of fundamental importance to Marxist
        historiography.Next to economism is the theory of mediation, according to which there
        are various degrees of relative autonomy, elasticity, lag and room for contradictions.
        There is ample warrant for this in the writings of Marx and Engels. For example, Engels
        wrote to Bloch in 1890:  
        According to the materialist conception of history, the ultimate determining
          element in history is the production and reproduction of real life. More than this neither
          Marx nor I have ever asserted. Hence if somebody twists this into saying that the economic
          element is the only determining one, he transforms that proposition into a
          meaningless, abstract, senseless phrase. The economic situation is the basis, but the
          various elements of the superstructure  political forms of the class struggle and
          its results, to wit: constitutions established by the victorious class after a successful
          battle, etc., juridical forms, and even the reflexes of all these actual struggles in the
          brains of the participants, political, juristic, philosophical theories, religious views
          and their further development into systems of dogmas  also exercise their influence
          upon the course of the historical struggles and in many cases preponderate in determining
          their form. There is an interaction of all these elements in which, amid all the endless
          host of accidents (that is, of things and events whose inner interconnection is so remote
          or so impossible of proof that we can regard it as non-existent, as negligible) the
          economic movement finally asserts itself as necessary. Otherwise the application of the
          theory to any period of history would be easier than the solution of a simple equation of
          the first degree.[2]  All of this falls within the general framework which asserts that:  
        The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas:
          i.e., the class which is the ruling material force of society, is at the same time
          its ruling intellectual force. The class which has the means of material production
          at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that
          thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production
          are subject to it. The ruling ideas are nothing more than the ideal expressions of the
          dominant material relationships, the dominant material relationships grasped as ideas;
          hence of the relationships which make the one class the ruling one, therefore the ideas of
          its dominance.[3]  Marx stresses the historicity of all concepts throughout his writings,
        for example, in the Grundrisse:   
            This example of labour shows strikingly how even the most abstract
              categories, despite their validity  precisely because of their abstractness 
              for all epochs, are nevertheless in the specific character of this abstraction, themselves
              likewise a product of historic relations, and possess their full validity only for and
              within these relations.... In the succession of the economic categories, as in any other
              historical, social science, it must not be forgotten that their subject  here,
              modern bourgeois society  is always what is given, in the head as well as in
              reality, and that these categories therefore express the forms of being, the
              characteristics of existence, and often only individual sides of this specific society,
              this subject, and that therefore this society by no means begins only at the point where
              one can speak of it as such; this holds for science as well.[4] To summarise the less rigid form of Marxist approaches to the history
        of science which fall within the domain of mediation theory, one should begin with the
        concept of labour and the labour process as the key to human history. History or
        historicity is, in turn, the key to everything: 'We know only a single Science, the
        science of history'.[5] The net effect of this approach is to broaden and deepen one's
        perspective: to root explanations in labour and the labour process, to treat concepts
        historically, to investigate connections and articulations as fully as possible and
        constantly to bear in mind that the arrow of causality moves from being to consciousness.
        This means that a number of distinctions on which the false self-consciousness of science
        depends are seen as permeable and interactive, for example, the distinctions between fact
        and value, substance and context, science and society, the context of origination and the
        context of justification. If one connects these perspectives to recent developments in the
        philosophy of science, a useful simplification would be to say that all facts are
        theory-laden, all theories are value-laden, and all values are derived from world-views or
        ideologies which permeate and constitute what count as facts, theories, priorities and
        acceptable scientific discoveries. A further consequence is that the sharp distinction
        between science and technology vanishes. All is mediation  mediation of social and
        economic forces involved in the production and reproduction of real life. Science is
        inside society, inside history. At the extreme of the position I have described as the theory of
        mediation lies structuralist Marxism with its concept of immanent or structural causality
        in which the formal features of an intellectual sphere correspond to formal features of
        the base, but in the most arcane writings of the structuralist Marxists, the lonely moment
        of the last instance never comes. My own experience of the trajectories of structuralist
        Marxist writers is that they eventually find themselves moving into the New Right and are
        therefore not a reliable guide to this point of view. At the outermost extreme of Marxist historiography lies the point of
        view of totality. The entire effort of Marxist writings in this tradition is to transcend
        the attempt to treat science in isolation from society. Science was seen as 'incapable of
        grasping reality as a totality'.[6] At the extreme, the theory of totality argues that all
        aspects of reality are interconnected with and reflect all others. This is a point of view
        rather akin to Leibniz's monadology and it runs the risk of losing the directionality of
        causality from base to superstructure which is the bedrock or axiom of Marxist
        explanation. On the other hand, the point of view of totality insists on embedding ideas
        in society. As Lukács wrote,  
        For the Marxist as an historical dialectician both nature and
          all the forms in which it is mastered in theory and practice are social categories; and
          to believe that one can detect anything supra-historical or supra-social in this context
          is to disqualify oneself as a Marxist.[7] The appearance of Marxist history of science in the Anglo-American
        literature can be linked to a single catalytic event: the surprise appearance of a Soviet
        delegation at The Second International Congress of the History of Science and Technology
        in London in 1931. The delegation was headed by Nikolai Bukharin, Lenin's favourite, who
        was still years away from his own dramatic purge trial. Another contributor to the volume
        of their essays, Science at the Cross Roads, was N. I. Vavilov, an eminent plant
        breeder who died of persecution a decade later, while among the others, E. Colman survived
        and slipped into Finland decades later. Far and away the single most important document in
        the Marxist historiography of science is the essay from that volume, 'The Social and
        Economic Roots of Newton's "Principia"' by Boris Hessen. This is the locus
          classicus of the base-superstructure approach to the history of science, using the
        greatest work of modern science's most revered hero as its case study. Hessen argued that
        each of Newton's main theoretical preoccupations could be rooted directly and
        unambiguously in technical issues in his historical setting. He began by reviewing Marx's
        views from the Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (quoted
        above). The following sentence appears in bold: 'The method of production of material
          existence conditions the social, political and intellectual process of the life of
          society'.[8] Moving on to Lenin, he claims that Marxism eliminates two main defects in
        previous historical writing:  
        Previous historical theories considered only the intellectual motives
          of the historical activity of people as such. Consequently they could not reveal the true
          roots of those motives, and consequently history was justified by the individual
          intellectual impulse of human beings. Thus the road was closed to any recognition of the
          objective laws of the historical process. "Opinion governed the world." The
          course of history depended on the talents and the personal impulses of man. Personality
          was the creator of history... The second defect which Marx's theory eliminates is that the
          subject of history is not the mass of the population, but the personalities of genius. The
          most obvious representative of this view is Carlyle  for whom history was the story
          of great men... The ideas of the ruling class in every historical period are the ruling
          ideas, and the ruling class distinguishes its ideas from all previous ideas by putting
          them forward as eternal truths. It wishes to reign eternally and bases the inviolability
          of its rule on the eternal quality of its ideas.[9]  He then traces the economics, physics and technology of the period of
        the English Civil War and the Commonwealth and dwells on communications, water transport,
        industry (especially mining) and war (including division of labour, army and armaments,
        and ballistics). He then concludes:  
        If we compare this basic series of themes with the physical problems
          which we found when analysing the technical demands of transport, means of communication,
          industry and war, it becomes quite clear that these problems of physics were fundamentally
          determined by these demands... We have compared the main technical and physical problems
          of the period with the scheme of investigations governing physics during the period we are
          investigating, and we come to the conclusion that the scheme of physics was mainly
          determined by the economic and technical tasks which the rising bourgeoisie raised to the
          forefront.[10}  Moving on, he says,  
        We cite all these facts in opposition to the tradition which has been
          built up in literature, which represents Newton as an Olympian standing high above all the
          earthly technical and economic interests of his time, and soaring only in the
          empyrean of abstract thought.[11]  Then, casting his net wider, he allows for a less vulgar view than is
        often attributed to him:  
        It would, however, be too greatly simplifying and even vulgarizing our
          object if we began to quote every problem which has been studied by one physicist
          or another, and every economic and technical problem which he solved.[12]  He goes on to repeat that the economic factor is not the sole
        determining factor  only the 'creation and recreation of actual life'. He then
        argues that it is important to 'analyse more fully Newton's epoch, the class struggles
        during the English Revolution, and the political, philosophic and religious theories
        [that] are reflected in the minds of the contemporaries of these struggles'.[l3] Hence, he
        discusses wider issues, including the history of concepts of energy, and the history of
        Luddism leading up to his own time.I have considered this classical paper at some length, mostly because
        it is richer than is often supposed. Among the other writings in Science at the Cross
          Roads, Bukharin's essay seems to me the most interesting. In discussing 'Theory and
        Practice from the Standpoint of Dialectical Materialism', he puts forward a theory of
        science which roots it in practice. He argues that  
        ...the idea of the self-sufficient character of science "science
          for science's sake" is naïve: it confuses the subjective passions of the
          professional scientist, working in a system of profound division of labour, in conditions
          of a disjointed society, in which individual social functions are crystallised in a
          diversity of types, psychologies, passions (as Schiller says: "Science is a goddess,
          not a milch cow"), with the objective social role of this kind of activity, as
          an activity of vast practical importance. The fetishizing of science, as of other
          phenomena of social life, and the deification of the corresponding categories is a
          perverted ideological reflex of a society in which the division of labour has destroyed
          the visible connection between social function, separating them out in the consciousness
          of their agents as absolute and sovereign values.[l4]  He goes on to include scientific theories within the superstructure,
        and says that the 'mode of production' determines also the 'mode of conception'.[15]
        Therefore, the 'highest forms of theoretical cognition[16] are included in
        historical analysis; 'scientific cognition is the practice of material labour
        continued in particular forms (natural science)'.[l7] In my view, this approach lays the
        foundations for a labour process perspective in the history of science in which the
        relations between theory and practice  the connections or articulations of science
   are always to the fore as constitutive rather than contextual, while science itself
        is seen in terms of raw materials, means of production, purposive human activity and the
        goals or use values which emerge from the labour process.The effect of the appearance of the Soviet delegation has been
        described as electrifying  though not on the day, when hardly anyone responded. The
        papers were printed and made available in five days and appeared in book form ten days
        after they were delivered. The historians of science whose work was most directly influenced in
        Britain were J. G. Crowther, a journalist and free-lance writer; Hyman Levy, a physicist;
        Joseph Needham, a chemical embryologist who became the historian of a massive work on Science
          and Civilization in Ancient China; and a polymath crystallographer, J. D. Bernal, who
        essayed broadly on the history of science, especially in his multi-volume Science in
          History. There were others, but I would say that the direct effect on historical
        writing (pace Needham) was not very great. It certainly did not influence the
        teaching of the history of science in the major British universities in the ensuing
        decades. Benjamin Farrington wrote interestingly on Francis Bacon, but the only noteworthy
        young historian of science in Great Britain, S. F. Mason, author of Main Currents of
          Scientific Thought, had to return to chemistry because he could not find work as a
        historian of science. Instead, the history of science developed two deeply un-Marxist
        strands: the history of discovery and the history of ideas. Both were cut off from the
        study of the sorts of determinations which characterise the writings of Marx, Engels,
        Soviet writers and their English followers. There were a few English-speaking writers of
        note, especially Edgar Zilsel and Dirk Struik, but there was certainly no school or
        tradition. Indeed, an avowedly anti-Marxist historian of ideas, Rupert Hall, bragged in
        1963 about how little Marxist writing there was [l8] and reiterated his position a decade
        later when he was badly out of touch.[l9] Did it all drain into the sands? I would say no. Rather than look for
        directly Marxist historiography, it is worth noticing watered-down versions of it 
        linking ideas to their times but filtering out the nasty subversive and revolutionary
        potential of a fully Marxist analysis. I refer to the writings of Max Weber, Karl Mannheim
        and Robert K. Merton in sociology, the sociology of knowledge and the sociology of
        science. I will dwell on the last two, while noting in passing that Max Weber has been
        seen as the bourgeois Marx, placing ideas in history but rooting them in an irrational
        human nature rather than in the socio-economic base. Karl Mannheim, the father of the
        sociology of knowledge, has been called 'the bourgeois Lukács', since his work was deeply
        influenced by the Hungarian Marxist dialectician, Georg Lukács, whose writings on
        reification and the concept of totality were of fundamental importance in challenging
        economism or vulgar Marxism and providing a rich conception of the interrelations between
        forms of thought, ideas of nature and conceptions in science. Mannheim rooted ideas,
        including some ideas in the foothills of science, in human interest. He began with the
        concept of the value-ladenness of ideas which represented the interests of particular
        groups and then moved on to the sociology of knowledge. He wanted to determine the
        parameters of situationally conditioned knowledge versus detached knowledge. Mannheim
        acknowledged his debts to Marx and Lukács[20], but his own work was distinct from theirs
        in that his goals were avowedly epistemological rather than political. His aim was to
        avoid taking sides and to find a standpoint from which to view knowledge as a social
        product, while the Marxist position is to assert that knowledge always takes sides and to
        support the relatively progressive tendency in any particular circumstance. Mannheim
        attempted to rise above the dangers of relativism into the observer's viewpoint of
        'relationalism', while Marxists always see their work as fundamentally polemical and
        partisan. Many adherents to the perspective of the sociology of knowledge have
        joined Mannheim in attempting to stand above the battle and have drawn on other social
        sciences, including anthropology, to enrich their views on scientific knowledge. The
        approach of the sociology of knowledge has grown dramatically in recent years as a way of
        rooting science in society without endangering the career or detached academic perspective
        of the investigator, drawing a firm line between theory and practice. A similar path was taken by Robert K. Merton, the doyen of bourgeois
        sociology of science, whose original work in the 1930s was littered with footnotes and
        homages to Hessen. Merton focused on the origins, the class perspectives, the choice of
        topic, and other parameters of scientific knowledge while avoiding any commitment to
        seeing the resultant discoveries in ideological terms. The sociology of knowledge
        thereby became an elaborate study of the context of origination while carefully keeping
        away from the context of justification, the holy of holies which is so dear to non-Marxist
        philosophers of science. Within this framework of sociology of science as sociology of
        knowledge, quite subtle work has been done about scientific communities, patronage,
        honours, the culture of laboratories, scientific accountability (or the lack of it) to the
        rest of society, and other topics which take the existing mode of production as given. There are traditions of Marxist history of science in Eastern Europe,
        but there has been very little communication between writers in the Soviet bloc and those
        in the West. There are also Marxist and communist writers in, for example, France, Italy
        and Germany, but Anglo-Saxon scholars have not been particularly powerfully influenced by
        them. The single exception to this judgement is the work of Michel Foucault, who wrote
        within the structuralist tradition and always claimed to do so in the light of Marxism.
        However, his voluminous and brilliant writings have always struck me as lacking historical
        specificity. He paints boldly and audaciously on large canvases, dipping into historical
        particularity at moments, but his concept of power is relatively ahistorical in that a
        particular claim about it could often be moved fifty years in either direction without
        affecting his argument. My own experience of most writing in the wake of Foucault's ideas
        is that the practitioners lack his brilliance, do not do their homework, and tend to drift
        into relatively apolitical stances, bedazzled by belles lettres. The best defence of Foucault's writings is that, like a Marxist, he
        treats theoretical and practical knowledges as forms of power. His most illuminating work
        has been about human knowledges  psychiatry, clinical medicine, penology and
        sexology. Yet he is un-Marxist in cutting these off from most of their articulations and
        in treating them formalistically. In this sense he is also anti-Marxist, or, at least,
        anti-reflectionist. Yet he leaves open the question of the appropriate conceptualisation
        of the relationship between knowledge and society: it remains to be investigated. For a
        Marxist, in the elusive last instance the question is not an open one. The arrow of
        causality must point, however circuitous its path, from the production and reproduction of
        real life to knowledge, whether theoretical or applied. Would that I could cite a significant volume of avowedly Marxist
        writings in the English language to counterpose against the watered-down and disappointing
        versions discussed above. It could, of course, be argued that the flowering of Marxist
        writings in the later 1960s and early 1970s only glanced at problems which the history of
        the mode of production is not yet ready to solve. As Albert Camus, a fellow traveller of
        French Marxism, once wrote, 'One must imagine Sisyphus happy'.[2l] In my own view, when future historians find themselves able to provide
        a richer Marxist history of science, the Marxist writer whose views they are likely to
        find most fruitful  along with those of Marx, Lukács and Marcuse  is Antonio
        Gramsci. I shall cite two passages to give a flavour of his insight  the first on
        objectivity and the second on science and nature:  
        ...the idea of "objective" in metaphysical materialism would
          appear to mean an objectivity that exists even apart from man; but when one affirms that a
          reality would exist even if man did not, one is either speaking metaphorically or one is
          falling into a form of mysticism. We know reality only in relation to man, and since man
          is historical becoming, knowledge and reality are also a becoming and so is objectivity,
          etc.{22]  Matter as such therefore is not our subject but how it is socially and
          historically organised for production, and natural science should be seen correspondingly
          as essentially an historical category, a human relation... Might it not be said in a
          sense, and up to a certain point, that what nature provides the opportunity for are not
          discoveries and inventions of pre-existing forces  of pre-existing qualities of
          matter  but 'creations', which are closely linked to the interests of society and to
          the development and further necessities of development of the forces of production?[23]  Here, I propose, lie the germs of a richer Marxist history of science.  NOTES 1. K Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (1859)
        (London, 1971), pp. 20-l.2. _______ Grundrisse: Foundations of the Critique of Political
          Economy (rough draft) (1857-58) (London, 1973 pp. 105-6.3. ______ and F. Engels, Selected Correspondence (1955) 2nd ed.
        (Moscow, I965), p. 417.4 ______ and F. Engels, The German Ideology (1845-46) (London,
        1965), p. 61.5. Ibid. p. 28.6 M. Jay, Marxism and totality: the Adventures of a Concept from
          Lukács to Habermas (Cambridge, I984), p 117.7. Quoted in ibid., p. 116.8. N. l. Bukharin et al., Science at the Crossroads (1931), 2nd
        ed. (London, I971), p. 152.9. Ibid., pp. 153-4.10. Ibid., pp. 166-7.11. Ibid., p. 174.12. Ibid., p. 177.13. Ibid.14. Ibid., p. 20.15. Ibid., p. 22.16. Ibid., p. 23.17. Ibid., p. 2418. A. R. Hall; 'Merton Revisited, or Science and Society in the
        Seventeenth Century', History of Science, 2 (1963), 1-16.19. ______, 'Microscopic Analysis and the General Picture', Times
          LIterary Supplement 26 Apr. 1974, pp. 437-38.20. K. Mannheim, Ideology and Utopia: an Introduction to the
            Sociology of Knowledge (1936) (London, 1960, p. 279.21. A Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays (1942) (New
        York, 1959), p. 91.22. A. Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks of Antonio
          Gramsci (1929-35) (London, 1971), p. 446.23. Ibid., pp. 465-6. BIBLIOGRAPHY AND FURTHER READING J. D. Bernal, Science in History (1954), 2nd ed. (London, 1957).T. M. Brown, 'Putting Paradigms into History', Marxist Perspectives, 9 (1980), 34-63.J. G. Crowther, The Social Relations of Science (1941), 2nd ed.
        (London, 1967).M. Foucault, The Order of Things: an Archaeology of the Human
          Sciences (London, 1970).L. R. Graham, Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union (London,
        1973).D. Joravsky, The Lysenko Affair (Cambridge, Mass., 1970).L. Levidow (ed.), Radical Science Essays (London, l986).S. F. Mason, Main Currents of Scientific Thought (1956);
        reprinted as A History of the Sciences (New York, 1962).R. K. Merton, Science, Technology, and Society in Seventeenth
          Century England (1938) (New York, 1970).J. Needham et al., Science and Civilization in China (Cambridge,
        1954-84).Radical Science Collective, 'Science, Technology, Medicine and the
        Socialist Movement', Radical Science Journal, 1 l (1981), 3-70.D. J. Struik, Yankee Science in the Making (1948), 2nd ed. (New
        York, 1962).Gary Werskey, The Visible College: a Collective Biography of British
          Scientists and Socialists in the 1930s (London, 1978).R. M. Young, 'The Historiographic and Ideological Contexts of the
        Nineteenth-Century Debate on Man's Place in Nature', in Darwin's Metaphor (Cambridge,
        1985), pp. 164-247E. Zilsel, 'The Genesis of the Concept of Scientific Progress', in P.
        P. Wiener and A. Noland (eds.), Roots of Scientific Thought (New York, 1957), pp.
        251-75. Reprinted from R. C. Olby et al., eds, Companion to the
          History of Modern Science. Routledge, 1990, pp. 77-86. Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk   |    |