this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2026
200 points (95.9% liked)
Socialism
6873 readers
221 users here now
Rules TBD.
founded 7 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Can we discuss this? I don't believe that Marx's definition of communism is a form of society that comes after socialism. I think communism exists now within the working class. Its the real struggle against capitalist class owned private property and capitalist directed production and distribution of the historic means of production.
I actually really don't like the definition of communism as something strictly "out there". Communism exists just as sure as capitalism exists. Socialism can become communist, but communism goes away when capitalism goes away. Communism is the negation of "bourgeois" private property. The left is already too idealist and prefigurative, and Marx was really against that.
If you ask me, the idea of socialism as the achievement of minimum demands, that leads to communism as the realization of maximum demands, is not a Marxist communist theory of change, it is a social democratic one.
I think you're getting at the concept of communism as a movement vs. communism as a mode of production. As a communist, I am committed to bringing about communism the mode of production, so in a way this process itself is "communism" from a certain view. However, this becomes very confusing for those not familiar, and so I try to keep things compartmentalized when discussing with those not as informed.
Socialism is chiefly a mode of production best seen as a transition between capitalism and communism. It's the process of building the communist society where money, class, and the state have been abolished, where private property is no longer a thing. Drawing a distinction between the process of building something, and the object being built, is important. It's the difference between the movement and the goal.
Yes but I think points of emphasis matter. Socialism may exist in some formal ways and some informal ways, but assuming it does, for example I know that you consider China to be at least partially/mostly socialist, the task is not for a socialist nation to become a communist nation, but for a socialist nation to become a socialist international, topple imperial international capitalist totality, and continually develop mass proletarian international productive forces, etc.,
So yes it is important to delineate "communist society" vs communist movement, in that the communist/proletarian movement actually exists, as it is the embodiment of the revolutionary potential of the working class; where "communist society" does not exist, and will not exist for a very long time.
So why define communism as something that it is not? Like its fine to imagine a better world, but it isn't practical and it isn't part of communism as it is inherently prefigurative. Communists concern ourseves with what exists, and what will exist (I'm not a huge fan of predictive Marxism, but knowing where we are headed is necessary for a successful political project) not what should exist.
Communism is post-socialist because it is what is compelled by the resolution of socialist contradictions. It's useful to have a demarcation between wholly socialist countries like China, which necessarily have large numbers of contradictions that compel movement forward, with a future communist society that will be free of such contradictions like private property. Socialism isn't something you can "partially be," really, it's a descriptor for the principal aspect of a society, what is rising within it. In that sense, it's similar to what you're getting at in socialism as a movement.
Also that's not my donvote I don't do that shit, just to be clear
Someone appears to be serially downvoting my recent comments, which is more obvious by the fact that replies to grad comments are safe. Probably someone from .world.
Correct as usual.
Figures, lol.
Then what is a communist? Is it just a utopian identity or is it a practical activity? I don't get why there is total rejection to this idea, from communists especially.
A communist, in my opinion, is someone that both agrees with the theory and tries to move closer to that status in practice. That could mean something like fighting neocolonialism all the way to being a teacher in a socialist country, trying to inform the next generation of communists.
Well thanks for the replies. I still can't square "ideas only exist objectively in practice," which is (IMO, but apparently nobody else's) a critical insight from Marx; and "the theory" being something that is inherently unknowable except in the most abstract lines of comprehension. Communists literally never spend time theorizing what the future society will be like. I don't understand how we are defined by something we can not understand concretely, as well as an activity that not only do we not engage with, but comrades will literally discourage, preferring to engage with actual struggle.
When I work with a lot of new people who want to get involved in practical work, the way to get them and keep them active, is not to describe the theoretical future, but connect them, their ideas especially, with the present. But when left to their own discussions, they often wax on about how things "should be". So is it practical to connect with them on that level? Absolutely. Is it what makes me and my comrades "communist?" No, what makes us a communist is the work we do, not the dreams I dream. That "work" can be self-development, and it can be development of objective conditions, and at some point self development and development of objective conditions become one in the same.
But either I don't understand something or other people don't understand me, and I wouldn't begin to know how to tell the difference. The other commenter was just debating me, so I'm not really any further along. But thanks again.
That's why I bridged the fact that those opposing neocolonialism from a communist viewpoint are still communists, even though they are far removed from such a society. Building communism is what makes a communist, but that act of building is not the same as communism once built. Theory and practice must be united for someone to be a communist, simply theorizing is not communist, nor is vulgar practice without theory communist.
Does that make sense?
Okay so based on this, the part of my initial statement that was inaccurate would be "communism already exists" in that there are communists, and people building communism, but "communism" doesn't exist because the conditions don't exist for it yet. That is, as long as we are drawing lines between "communism" and something like communalism, which might refer to certain communal living experiments taking place in different parts of the world. Like Marx didn't consider the Obshchina to be communist, but theorized that it could contain some pre-socialist potential (which bore out, at least partially, in the formation of the soviets.)
I wanted to consider communism as the practical work of communists. But I can see how that, at the very least, confuses the issue. And like the other responder pointed out, Marx was at least blended in his definition of communism, since he did spend time and energy describing "communist society." So in order to be correct, I would have to prove a worthwhile theoretical break between "communism" and "communist society" which, at the very least, confuses people's understanding more than it like addresses a practical shortcoming in our movements, and also seems to piss off other comrades.
If that tracks, I think I get where you're coming from.
Yep, that's pretty much it! There's the process of building communism, we can call "communizing" if you prefer (though I kind of hate this as a verb), and then there's "communism," the eventual abolition of class society. The process exists even if the mode of production does not yet.
I mean I still don't like the emphasis on the abstract future rather than the present concrete. But at this point I guess its not worth arguing about.
Thanks for good faith engaging! See ya around
See ya!
You’re clearly alluding to the words in The German Ideology about communism being the real movement which abolishes the present state of things. And yet in the same work, and in several others, Marx and Engels also do talk about “communist society” and give some rough descriptions of how it would operate. The notion that communism is pure negativity and that it “goes away when capitalism goes away” (or that "the idea of socialism as the achievement of minimum demands, that leads to communism as the realization of maximum demands, is not a Marxist communist theory of change, it is a social democratic one") is something you would have to take up with a lot of works, again, but this is most clearly put down in Critique of the Gotha Programme.
And I don’t think Marx would go so far as to say “communism exists now within the working class,” because there is no world-historic struggle by the collective proletariat to the present state of things; struggle on the individual level is not communism, as is also made clear in TGI, nor would communism exist within the working class semantically regardless, as it is the [which seizes upon the immanent negativity in capitalism and reorganizes production, thereby upheaving capitalist relations of production], it is not some rebellious spirit people come to possess.
Its true that Marx discusses communist society in Critique of the Gotha Programme, that is a good call out. However CotGP is not a description of communism, but a criticism of Lassalle. Marx is also very specific in the way he defines "society" and is explicit that it is a tendency of the "old materialism", which is still the dominant form of materialism as it is bourgeois materialism, to define society in a way that is static, abstract, and impractical. Marxists can't define any society in an idealist, bourgeois way, and also adhere to a revolutionary program.
Theses on Feuerbach is such an important document. Unfortunately, many Marxists do not understand it, and default to idealist conceptions of individuals and society; or at least inconsistent in how they apply a Marxist method to analysis.
From Thesis I:
It matters how we define the individual. Not just abstractly, but as a sensing, experiencing subject. Since we can't possibly imagine what those experiences will be in "communist society" we can't imagine a communist individual existing in that society.
From Thesis III:
This is just a really important passage, as it defines Marxist praxis. The individual in society experiences their world, thinks about it, takes action that changes it; then, by experiencing the changes, changes the self. This changed self contemplates, and takes action, so on. This process of change, the process that fuses of subject and object in the individual , is necessary to understand in order to change anything in society.
How does this relate to defining far off post socialist "communist society?" Well, communist society will be brought about through mass, continual change of this sort, the society will be defined by this revolutionary process. However, this process does not come about by achieving communist society, this process is present now and generally referred to by communists as "theory + practice." So communism isn't actually defined by a future condition but by a present condition that will continually develop into the central characteristic of individuals in communist society.
VIII:
Ideas only exist in practice. Since "communist society" can not be practiced, it does not exist. It cant define communists, it is an ideal. So what defines communism is what is practiced.
IX:
The "comprehension" of "communist society" does not even reach the level of contemplating single individuals! Only an abstract civil society. So it does not even reach the level of bourgeois materialism, it's not scientific, its pre-modern conception. It is post apocalypse, it's heaven and hell. Its fine to think this way, it is fine to daydream, but it can not be what defines us.
In the Manifesto, Marx defines communists by what we do:
Marx is then explicit:
This is a total dismissal of the definition of communism as some future idyllic society. Right here at the beginning of part two of the manifesto. Defining communism as an idyllic future society is not the historic role of communists. Understanding existing conditions and plotting a way forward is our role.
I see too many socialists and communists more consumed by what could be than what is. And that's probably not you! I'm sure you have the correct discipline that allows you to both imagine a better world and fight for one. If imagining a better world is the impetus for actually engaging in the here and now, then that's a subjective factor that is part of the process. But emphasis matters, Lenin was known to "bend the stick". Communism is concretely not "what comes after socialism." Communism is the struggle today, not the dreams of tomorrow, and I'm tired of this other definition being what defines us.
It’s a criticism of Lassalle that also contains a description of communism. These things aren’t mutually exclusive.
Marx violates this in TGI.
The issue you seem to be having throughout everything is the comprehension of revolutionary subjects as unconscious pseudo-subjects, where revolution comes about as a mechanical inevitability springing from capitalism, and ““communist society”” (unpredictably) from this (“communist society will be brought about”), hence the ability to preserve the movement towards communist society via ~“revolutionary praxis” but do away with this as the ultimate goal.
For Marx, communism is defined by a present condition (“the premises now in existence” ~ TGI) which carries the possibility for the creation of a communist society (“Looked at historically this inversion appears as the point of entry necessary in order to enforce, at the expense of the majority, the creation of wealth as such, i.e. the ruthless productive powers of social labour, which alone can form the material basis for a free human society.” – Draft Ch. 6 of Capital). This possibility is immanent to these conditions and therefore Marx and Engels can sketch certain features of this possible society through studying present society and its historical premises, which is the actual basis for their call for the proletariat to become organized and unite.
I don’t care if you disagree with Marx but that is what you’re doing.
This isn’t what Marx is saying, nor is it true.
I already addressed a very similar passage from TGI.
No, it's absolutely not just motivation. Communist society being a real possibility/historical necessity (in what is effectively though not explicitly a moral “should”), is what Marxism rests on–this is where “historical materialism” is supposed to transcend the “social materialism” of classical political economy. You can’t justify the call for global proletarian revolution without this. If it turns out that Marx doesn’t manage to prove this, that it can’t be proven because of when the owl of Minerva spreads its wings, then the only thing to do is to drop Marxism.
He says this twice in TonF. The first time he says it is in the second Thesis:
He also says it in the last, most famous line. You can nit pick this semantically or whatever, but semantics aren't Marxist.
It is what he is saying. Like I get your point that because capitalism creates two opposed classes, one which creates value through labor, and another that exploits that labor for their own benefit, that capitalism creates not just the possibility for the oppressed class to not just overthrow the power of the ruling class, but, because the working class is the vast, vast majority, we create a more just and democratic society. Where, for for the first time in history, the ruling class would be the vast mass of people, where cooperation and solidarity is our objective interest, which carries within it the possibility of abolition of class antagonism.
But you are going to have to provide something more substantive on your theory of individuals as pseudo-subjects. I'm not confused about this. I think you're being overly mechanical, and dismissing my point without evidence. It seems like you're just chucking subjectivity out the window, and giving into determinism. There is a deterministic element to Marxism, the world dictates the limits and possibilities, but people change it. I really don't buy what your selling here, and you're not supporting your argument, on this very load-bearing point.
I'm not getting rid of goals. To me the goal is to determine what is happening here and now, and make predictions and plans based in concretion. Marx's theories about "communist society" are concrete enough to believe, but they are still very abstract and impossible to relate to directly. They change nothing on their own.
I'm not trying to disprove them. But I don't see how something in the far flung future defines us, and you aren't convincing me. To me its a very idealist attitude that isn't based in people's direct experience since it isn't an absolute given that we experience the central contradictions of capitalism directly. The vast majority of people are unconvinced of it, and you can't even convince me, a Marxist. If all you are gonna do is tell me I'm wrong without acknowledging a single point that I've made, and I don't mean just quoting and debunking, but actually addressing, then thanks for your time.
I see a lot of people fixated on a future that doesn't exist, and not really communists, who often are quite practical, even if it isn't as practical as I would like. But lots of socialists and new people joining our movements, I don't think the over emphasis on what comes way in the future is helpful. These people have to get out of their idealisms and into actual work. Communists balance this in practice, but emphasize the idealized in definition. New communists tend to learn axioms before learning about their own communities, which is exactly backwards, and not what Marxism teaches us.
In neither of these quotes does he say this. I can’t even imagine how you got this from what you quoted. And if he did, all the worse for it, because this does not hold up at all.
I don’t care if semantics are or aren’t “Marxist”; you need to get into semantics if you want to analyze the meaning of a sentence. There’s no nit pick, Marx isn’t saying anything close to this.
You can’t just smuggle in the concept of justice. Wrt democracy, Engels said that the communist aim of overcoming the state also implies the overcoming of democracy. Wrt Marxism, democracy is not some virtue to be maximized nor does communism have anything to do with the concept of justice.
Oy vey. How could you misread my words so completely?
Here is where semantics would come in handy.
It’s just been established that you didn’t actually read what I said with any attention so this isn’t a very big issue for me.
Anyways, this is Marxism 101. This grand calculus is what justifies everything (you see this in the draft ch.6 of Capital quote). Without this view, what justifies the call for global proletarian revolt? Within Marxism there is no universal (real) justice or morality, so it cannot derive legitimacy from this; it can’t be immediate self-interest, because Marx wasn’t a proletarian (why not side with the bourgeoisie?). Who’s to say this world we know nothing about will be “better”? Who’s to say the global terror won’t backfire tremendously and lead to a world far worse than the one against which people revolted? Capitalism contains contradictions? Why don’t we work to alleviate them as much as possible? If you think about this for two seconds you realize there is no other option than that Marxism relies on the image of the future communist society/the historical necessity it traces from capitalism to it for the legitimacy of communism as a movement. If that’s idealist, then Marxism is idealist. This is the backbone of the movement, this is what defines it.
I don’t think so. You didn’t seem to either: “The ‘comprehension’ of ‘communist society’ does not even reach the level of contemplating single individuals! Only an abstract civil society. So it does not even reach the level of bourgeois materialism, it’s not scientific, its pre-modern conception.”
“Since we can’t possibly imagine what those experiences will be in ‘communist society’ we can’t imagine a communist individual existing in that society.”
“while in communist society, where nobody has one exclusive sphere of activity but each can become accomplished in any branch he wishes, society regulates the general production and thus makes it possible for me to do one thing today and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticise after dinner, just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, herdsman or critic” (The German Ideology).
Thanks for the discussion.