I’ve wanted to read something by JBF for a while. When someone in a Science for the People (SftP) reading group I’m in mentioned that there was another SftP reading group already half way through this book, I took it upon myself to also join. Though stuck around the Niagara area at the time, I dedicated a good portion of my spare time that week catching up.
Before starting this book, I was already anticipating JBF would be important theoretically for my dissertation research, and coming out the other side of this book, I am even more convinced that this will be the case. Someone in the reading group specifically mentioned to me that JBF did his PhD at York, which is something I have no idea how to respond to lol. I think I recall David Hess mentioning in my department's student-organized conference that he had a research project showing how dissenting or radical research was suppressed or censored in the sense that it almost universally occurred outside the domain of elite academic institutions, and in institutions that do not rank as high, which is possibly why so many radicals end up at York. Anyway, I really loved this book a lot.
The first half of this book is heavily focused on natural theology, which was somewhat surprising, but also something I really really appreciated. I suppose because this type of discourse belonged to another century, I don’t often see 21st century Marxists engaging in theology in this way. But Marx himself, in the years leading up to his dissertation research on Epicurean materialism, was reading a lot of natural theology. JBF remarks:
“At the time that Marx was studying Bacon he was also spending “a good deal of time” on the work of the German natural theologian (later deist) Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694–1768), especially the latter’s Considerations on the Art Instincts of Animals (1760).”
I was looking for something like this JBF book after reading Engels’s “Socialism: Utopian or Scientific” where Engels excerpts these Marx quotes from their book “The Holy Family” (a book which includes an extensive critique of Marx's doctoral advisor and liberal theologian Bruno Bauer):
"Materialism is the natural-born son of Great Britain. Already the British schoolman, Duns Scotus, asked, 'whether it was impossible for the matter to think?' "In order to effect this miracle, he took refuge in God's omnipotence — i.e., he made theology preach materialism. Moreover, he was a nominalist. Nominalism, the first form of materialism, is chiefly found among the English schoolmen. "The real progenitor of English materialism is Bacon. To him, natural philosophy is the only true philosophy, and physics based upon the experience of the senses is the chiefest part of natural philosophy.
"In Bacon, its first creator, materialism still occludes within itself the germs of a many-sided development. On the one hand, matter, surrounded by a sensuous, poetic glamor, seems to attract man's whole entity by winning smiles. On the other, the aphoristically formulated doctrine pullulates with inconsistencies imported from theology.
"In its further evolution, materialism becomes one-sided. Hobbes is the man who systematizes Baconian materialism. Knowledge based upon the senses loses its poetic blossom, it passes into the abstract experience of the mathematician; geometry is proclaimed as the queen of sciences. Materialism takes to misanthropy.”
Foster unpacks a lot of this stuff very extensively in this book. This emphasis on Marx’s theological engagements is not only important for helping to contextualize his theorizing on materialism but is also an important setup for Foster’s 4th chapter which critiques one of the more influential ‘scientific’ parsons of Marx’s time, Malthus:
““With the exception of the Venetian monk Ortes, an original and clever writer, most of the population theorists,” Marx wrote in Capital, “are Protestant clerics … Parson Wallace, Parson Townsend, Parson Malthus and his pupil, the arch-Parson Thomas Chalmers, to say nothing of the lesser reverend scribblers in this line…. With the entry of ‘the principle of population’ [into political economy] the hour of the Protestant parsons struck.””
Foster also discusses a lot of the scientists Marx was studying or studying under:
“I discovered that Marx’s systematic investigation into the work of the great German agricultural chemist Justus von Liebig, which grew out of his critique of Malthusianism, was what led him to his central concept of the “metabolic rift” in the human relation to nature—his mature analysis of the alienation of nature. To understand this fully, however, it became necessary to reconstruct the historical debate over the degradation of the soil that had emerged in the mid-nineteenth century in the context of the “second agricultural revolution,” and that extends down to our time.”
“Marx had considerable knowledge of the development of geological science. In the gymnasium in Trier he had studied under the then famous German geologist Johann Steininger (1794–1874), a follower of the great German geologist—often considered to be the “father of historical geology”—Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749–1817). Later at Berlin University Marx had attended lectures in anthropology given by Heinrich Steffens (1773–1845), a natural philosopher (in the tradition of Friedrich Schelling) and also an important geologist and mineralogist, who had attended lectures by Werner.”
Some of this discussion led to descriptions of later Marxist scientists (like Haldane, Oparin, and Lewontin) who emphasized the capacity of organisms to change their environments and conditions on earth in radical ways, starting from the production of an atmosphere which rendered another event of ‘spontaneous generation’ impossible:
“The answer lay partly in biochemistry, partly in the analysis already provided by the Russian ecologist V.I. Vernadsky in his theory in The Biosphere (1926) that the atmosphere, as we know it, was produced by life itself. By producing the atmosphere, life had altered the conditions from those that had made “spontaneous generation” possible”
This will be an important theoretical approach for my own research.
One of the central things JBF is trying to do in this book is rebut the prevalent accusation that Marx was fundamentally a modernist Promethean that had nothing valuable to contribute to ecological discourse. JBF writes:
“Thus postmodernist environmentalist Wade Sikorski writes that “Marx … was one of our age’s most devout worshippers of the machine. Capitalism was to be forgiven its sins because … it was in the process of perfecting the machine.”
Ironically, this criticism of Marx as Promethean—which has a very long history within Marx criticism, extending back to the early years of the Cold War—seems to have emerged in a very roundabout way from Marx’s own critique of Proudhon in this respect. Thus, Marx’s critique of the mythico-religious bases of Proudhon’s analysis of machinery and modernity has somehow been transposed… into a critique of Marx himself…”
I think Foster succeeds here. There are many proof texts like the ones below, but this book is so much more than prooftexting. However, this was an interesting comment Marx and Engels had on fish:
“The ‘essence,’ of the fish,” Marx and Engels were to write in The German Ideology,
‘is its “being,” water…. The “essence” of the freshwater fish is the water of a river. But the latter ceases to be the “essence” of the fish and is no longer a suitable medium of existence as soon as the river is made to serve industry, as soon as it is polluted by dyes and other waste products and navigated by steamboats, or as soon as its water is diverted into canals where simple drainage can deprive the fish of its medium of existence.’
All this pointed to the fact that the fish’s being was in a sense alienated as a result of human praxis. All such contradictions, between being and essence, thus demanded purely practical solution”
And another fascinating comment by Marx on deforestation:
“Marx himself referred to the “devastating” effects of “deforestation” and viewed this as a long-term, historical result of the exploitative relation to nature that had characterized all civilization, not just capitalism, up to that point: “the development of civilization and industry in general,” he wrote, “has always shown itself so active in the destruction of forests that everything that has been done for their conservation and production is completely insignificant in comparison.”70 Marx also decried the fact that the forests in England were not “true forests” since “the deer in the parks of the great are demure domestic cattle, as fat as London aldermen”; while in Scotland “the so-called “deer forests” that had been set up for the benefit of huntsmen (at the expense of rural laborers) encompassed deer but no trees”
Engels had a fascinating comment on coevolutionary phenomena in nature. JBF writes: “Animals too relate to the natural world in a way that is coevolutionary, changing their environments as well as being affected by it,” and then quotes Engels’ “Dialectics of Nature”:
‘We have seen how goats have prevented the regeneration of forests in Greece; on the island of St. Helena, goats and pigs brought by the first arrivals have succeeded in exterminating its old vegetation almost completely, and so have prepared the ground for the plants brought by later sailors and colonists. But animals exert a lasting effect on their environment unintentionally and, as far as the animals themselves are concerned, accidentally.’”
JBF mentions another comment by Kautsky on the way forestry promoted the replacement of deciduous trees by more profitable coniferous ones:
"whereby in forestry, for example, the destruction of forests is encouraged by “the elimination of slow growing deciduous trees by rapid-growing, and more rapidly exploitable, conifers.”
I also wanted to include this quote by August Bebel, someone who I learned about during a visit to Wetzlar, Germany, because I had the chance to visit his home while in that historic German town where Goethe acquired material for his novel Werther. Bebel laments how deforestation of the highlands was destroying the river flow of the Rhine and Vistula:
“At the same time [August Bebel] wrote an extensive critique of Malthusian overpopulation theory. Hence, his work contained important ecological elements. “The mad sacrifice of forest, for the sake of ‘profit,’” he wrote,
is said to be the cause of the appreciable deterioration of climate and decline in the fertility of the soil in the provinces of Prussia and Pomerania, in Styria, Italy, France, and Spain. Frequent inundations are the consequence of stripping high ground of trees. The inundations of the Rhine and Vistula are chiefly attributed to the devastation of forest land in Switzerland and Poland.”
Finally, a very fascinating comment by Rosa Luxemburg on how deforestation was causing the disappearance of warblers:
“In prison in May 1917 Rosa Luxemburg also demonstrated her concern in this area. She wrote to her friend Sonja Liebknecht that she was studying “natural science”:
‘geography of plants and animals. Only yesterday I read why the warblers are disappearing from Germany. Increasingly systematic forestry, gardening and agriculture are, step by step, destroying all natural nesting and breeding places: hollow trees, fallow land, thickets of shrubs, withered leaves on the garden grounds. It pained me so when I read that. Not because of the song they sing for people, but rather it was the picture of the silent, irresistible extinction of these defenseless little creatures which hurt me to the point where I had to cry. It reminded me of a Russian book which I read while still in Zurich, a book by Professor Sieber about the ravage of the redskins in North America. In exactly the same way, step by step, they have been pursued from their land by civilized men and abandoned to perish silently and cruelly.’”
One interesting and comment by JBF was that Marx and Engels were both working to move beyond anthropocentrism:
“Under the influence of the ancient materialists and Darwin, Marx and Engels repudiated the age-old conception that had placed human beings at the center of the natural universe. Thus Engels professed “a withering contempt for the idealistic exaltation of man over the other animals.” There is no trace in Marx and Engels of the Cartesian reduction of animals to mere machines.”
The last thing I want to conclude on here was that Marx and Engels were involved in a project that was rejecting the teleological assertions of natural theology, which is why they appreciated Darwin so much, despite how he was still fundamentally so bourgeois. Engels specifically mentioned what he saw as one of Darwin’s central mistakes which was his reliance on Malthus:
“However great the blunder made by Darwin in accepting the Malthusian theory so naively and uncritically, nevertheless anyone can see at the first glance that no Malthusian spectacles are required to perceive the struggle for existence in Nature.”
Yet one of the contradictions I have not worked out yet is Marx’s critique of teleology in light of how teleological his conception of history was. His faith that capitalism by some sort of law of nature was digging its own grave and communism was an inevitable future that was on the verge of arriving. Was this a rhetorical assertion of faith, or did Marx genuinely see this social development teleologically.
Marx commented on Darwin in Capital, using the curious phrase of ‘natural technology’:
“Darwin has directed attention to the history of natural technology, i.e. the formation of the organs of plants and animals, which serve as the instruments of production for sustaining their life. Does not the history of the productive organs of man in society, of organs that are the material basis of every particular organization of society, deserve equal attention?”
“In drawing this comparison between “natural technology” and human technology, Marx was of course aware that the Greek word “organ” (organon) also meant tool, and that organs were initially viewed as “grownon” tools of animals—tools, as the artificial organs of human beings.47 As Engels stated, “animals in the narrower sense also have tools, but only as limbs of their body.”48 Human technology was thus distinguished from natural technology in that it did not consist of such adnated organs, but rather occurred through the social production of tools: the “productive organs of man in society.” ”
Marx eventually sent Darwin a copy of his first volume of Capital to which Darwin responded (perhaps somewhat condescendingly as some in my reading group believe):
“Dear Sir:
I thank you for the honor which you have done me by sending me your great work on Capital; & I heartily wish that I was more worthy to receive it, by understanding more of the deep & important subject of political economy. Though our studies have been so different, I believe that we both earnesdy desire the extension of Knowledge, & [“that” added] this in the long run is sure to add to the happiness of Mankind.
I remain Dear Sir/Yours faithfully/Charles Darwin.”