Raymond Aron was born and educated in the 1920s in France, and after studying in Germany and witnessing the rise of fascism, the threat from which was not being taken seriously by the naive liberal intellectuals in France, spent WWII in the UK then returned to France, declined an academic chair to become a journalist and, with memories of the naivety to the threat of fascism, became one of the sharpest critics of the Soviet Union which countryman Satre and other "fellow travellers" saw through very rose-coloured glasses. Written in 1955 and his most famous book, "The Opium of the Intellectuals" was a historic and contemporary analysis of French political development focussing on the contradictions within the Left and its denial of the worst crimes of the Communists. Clive James described the book as the best debunking of Marxist theology amongst leftist intellectuals in France, noting that Aron wasn’t on the right but was a staunch defender of liberalism.
The book begins noting that the Left, traditionally anti-monarchy and anti-tradition, once in government had to change its position and became largely anti-capitalist, yet had to reconcile it’s goal equality with the necessity of maximising production.
"The Left was born and took shape in opposition – the child of an idea. It denounced a social order which, like all things human, was indeed imperfect. But as soon as the Left was victoriously and became in its turn responsible for the existing society, the Right, which was now identified with the opposition or counter-revolution, had little difficulty in demonstrating that the Left represented, not liberty against authority or the people against the privileged few, but one power against another, one privileged class against another."
The book challenged many of the claims made by Marxism both as written by Karl Marx and as pronounced by communists in France at the time. It disputed the Communist Party’s contention that its version of history was inevitable, it summarised and critiqued Satre’s analysis of Marx’s "end of history" anticipation of a "new world" which Marxists believed was about to occur, it challenged the contention that the proletarian workers in 1955 had the same objectives as workers of 100 years prior and disputed the contention that such workers would really benefit from a revolution, asking what oppressions would a revolution overturn. It also argued that if the Soviet Union failed to embody the revolution as written by Marx, then not only has Bolshevism failed, but history has failed.
The book noted that Marx had claimed that a proletarian revolution would humanise society, but this has not been realised by actual revolutions and that Marx’s imagined self-destruction of capitalism has not occurred by nationalisation although it could be argued that it has in effect occurred through increased state intervention. It noted that while rule by the monarchy and church was traditionally opposed by the left, many elements within the Left would, if given the opportunity, impose rule by an anonymous bureaucracy. [This anonymous bureaucracy was parodied by a more recent TV comedy on the other side of the channel with the phrase "computer says no"] It also posed the question, if industrial workers are alienated by working in a privately-owned factory, do they cease to be alienated if the factory is taken over by the government?
"The origin of doctrinarism is the implicit or explicit assumption that economic alienation is the primary cause of all alienations and that individual ownership of the means of production the primary cause of economic alienation."
The book recorded that the emergence of market economics in the late 19th and 20th centuries did not follow the evolution that was predicted by Marx.
"So-called proletarian regimes, that is regimes governed by communist parties, owe practically nothing to authentic working-class culture, to the parties or unions whose leaders themselves belong to the working class."
The book also observed that communist revolutions of the 20th century have been led by intellectuals, not proletarians, and that communism has only been installed by military force and maintained by coercion.
"The expansion of communist power does not prove the truth of its doctrine any more than the conquests of Mohammed proved the truth of Islam."
Intertwined with Aron’s critique of communism was his critique of intellectuals as a group, many of which were communists or fellow travellers. He observed that to the Left, a revolution is a revolution only if it is liberal, humane and egalitarian and if it results in a change of ownership but the nationalisation of industry hasn’t changed the status of workers, something the Left would not acknowledge. He also called out double standards. The book recorded his observation that many commentators applied very different standards to the behaviour of the Soviet Union than to that of governments in the West, condemned colonisation by Westerners of Africa but ignored colonisation and repression in Eastern Europe by the Soviet Union and railed against injustices of the established order in Western countries, yet tolerated comparable and worse injustices committed by revolutionary movements. And on the subject of revolutions, it also posed the question: how long does the revolution go on? The book countered the tenet of Marxist thought that capitalist prosperity was due to exploitation of colonies with several examples of continuing prosperity in countries which had lost colonies and observed that in Eastern Europe, living standards had fallen, unions were controlled by the government and workers knew the difference between the real emancipation in the West and the "ideal" emancipation under which they were living.
The book provided an insightful analysis of the different societal roles of intellectuals in Britain, France and the USA, noting that in the UK, at the time of the book’s writing, there were no Communist or Fascist parties in the House of Commons and that the Liberal party had become insignificant, most of its goals having been achieved. This was contrasted with the situation in France where the Communist party’s success, although it had members of parliament, was limited by peasant proprietors and petite bourgeoisie to never getting more than a third of the vote.
"Marxism, in the Leninist version, offers to the intellectual of all continents the means of reinterpreting their own history and that of their foreign masters without humiliation."
The book’s focus on intellectuals, while at times being critical, was more analytical. After introducing his three intellectual criticisms: technical, "if I was in the leader’s shoes"; moral, "things are not as they ought to be" and ideological or historical, "the society to come will be better", it provided an analysis of the different societal roles of intellectuals in Japan compared to France, India compared the UK as well as in France and in the USA.
"The art of the British intellectuals is the reduce to technical terms conflicts which are often ideological; the art of the American intellectuals is to transpose into moral conflicts controversies which are far more concerned with means than with ends; the art of the French intellectuals is to ignore and very often to aggravate the real problems of the nation out of an arrogant desire to think for the whole of humanity."
Turning to the relationship between intellectuals and the Church, Aron cited Jean-Jacques Rousseau who had discussed the idea of a secular religion in the 18th century and Auguste Comte who had articulated the incompatibility of theology and metaphysics with positive knowledge in the 19th century. He acknowledged the inherent problem of dual authority: master and priest, noting that the Church accepted the role of intellectuals in non-religious matters and that intellectuals, independent of both church and states, were largely hostile to the Church. Aron observed that the struggle between the Church and revolution is still present.
"Communism is thus not so much a religion as a political attempt to find a substitute for religion in an ideology erected into a state orthodoxy – an orthodoxy which goes on cherishing claims and pretensions abandoned by the Catholic Church."
The book then described how communism behaves as a secular religion one result of which is the crystallisation of orthodoxy and another being indifference. This was followed by a wide-ranging discussion and analysis of historical and then current relationships between proletariat, bourgeoisie, aristocrats and church but noted rivalry between bourgeois and proletariat differed from that between aristocrats and the bourgeois which falsified the notion of a "class struggle". Towards the end of the book, Aron observed that both the USA and the USSR had systems which stifle ideological debate and that more ideological debate took place in the second-tier powers.
I found the book’s observations and analysis of the position of Marxism within the political debate of its time insightful and well argued. It wasn’t an easy read – perhaps it would have been an easier read in its original French – and while it’s less relevant than when first published, many of the book’s observations have continued relevance to current political debate.