Marx's View on History as a Changing Process

 
History as Changing and Continuous
Process
 
Marx views history as a changing and yet continuous
process. The 
different phases in it are so clearly
related to each other that it reveals a clear pattern
which seems to have been evolving in accordance with
definite laws that are fully discoverable.
Marx is least interested in the history dominated by
individuals. He is 
interested in the history growing
around peoples, i.e. the history of society,
 more
specifically, the 
laws of the development of human
society.
To determine these laws with the aid of his materialism
Marx first 
identifies the essence of human activity as
resulting from human beings’ vital material needs
 of
having food, drink, clothing and shelter.
 
Conditions of Material Life
 
Whatever things human beings can do are all
conditional on their having secured the means of life;
the way they live is very much determined by the way
they make their living.
So the history of social development may alone be
known on the basis of the 
conditions of material life of
society.
For Marx it is the 
mode of production that reflects
these conditions.
 Every society, thus, thrives on a
particular mode of production and it is the latter that
determines all activities and institutions of that
society.
 
Changes Occur due to Changes in the
Mode of Production
 
Then Marx goes on to explain how 
changes in history
occur due to changes in the mode of production.
Production, by nature, is a social activity
 for it is
impossible for an individual to produce alone the
necessities of life.
Means of life are produced only by the collective
efforts of individuals. Hence the 
mode of production
must always be viewed in its social aspect.
Considering the social aspect of the mode of
production it is found to have 
two basic components-
i.
Forces of Production
; and
ii.
Relations of Production
 
Changes Occur…(contd.)
 
In order to produce, various 
means of production
 like
tools, machines, raw materials, land, buildings, etc. are
needed.
These means of production, however, do not by
themselves produce things. Production is made
possible only when the 
means of production are used
and utilized by people on the basis of their
knowledge, skill and experience.
The 
forces of production represent both these means
of production as well as the people who use these
means.
Since, by its very nature, production is social 
people
have to enter into mutual social relationship with
each other while engaging in production.
 
Social Relations are Property Relations
 
These relations develop in the context of the way in
which people engaged in production are 
related to the
means of production.
 The social relations people
develop among themselves while engaged in social
production are, in fact, the 
property relations.
These relations, however, are not the outcome of a
deliberate act on the part of the people. Such relations
are, in fact, 
conditioned by the pattern of
development of the forces of production.
In the 
primitive type of production
 where a whole
tribe was collectively engaged in hunting expedition
the 
forces of production were such that there was no
division of labour, and thus, no classes.
 It was
unnecessary to determine as to who was entitled to
dispose of what kinds of means of production.
 
Emergence of Classes with Private
Property
 
But later with the 
further development of the forces
of production there emerged division of labour.
Because the means of production came to be regarded
as the 
private property 
of particular persons.
Consequently, the simple and direct relations among
people began assuming the form of property relations.
Thus relations among people were now determined on
the basis of the 
ownership and lack of ownership of
the means of production.
It is the 
totality of these relations of production that
constitutes the economic structure of society 
and it is
this that represents the 
real foundation of a society on
which grow its legal and political superstructures.
 It is
also this 
which conditions definite forms of social
consciousness.
 
Change in the Mode of Production
Caused by Antagonism
 
It is now evident that social change results from a
change in the mode of production that is caused by
an antagonism between the forces of production and
the relations of production.
The 
forces of production of a society at a certain stage
of their development come in conflict with the
existing relations of production
, which is the property
relations and the 
consequence is a social revolution.
In 
all hitherto existing societies, except in primitive
society,
 according to Marx, the relations of production
have always appeared as a relation of domination and
subordination among classes as in all such societies the
mode of production has been marked by the presence
of exploiting and exploited classes.
 
Class Struggle
 
As explained earlier, class divisions are the natural
outcome of property relations following from the
division of labour.
Because of this division of labour 
different groups
occupy different places in social production.
 As a
result they 
stand in different relations to the means of
production and hence appropriate the social product
differently.
Social classes refer to these groups the relations among
which represent the 
class relations
 of a society. Such
class relations are 
characterized by a persistent
conflict which is of a fundamental nature
 and thus,
will only result in a revolutionary transformation of the
society.
 
Class Struggle (contd.)
 
By virtue of their ownership of the means of
production 
one class lives without labour on the
fruits of labour of the other class
 which does not
own the means of production.
Thus, the 
class owning the means of production
appropriate most of the social wealth and
thereby exploit the other class
 which is without
ownership over the means of production.
The 
exploited class owns nothing except their
labour power which it is forced to sell for its
bare sustenance. 
Thus the relations between
these classes cannot be anything but antagonistic
and 
the conflicts are irreconcilable in nature.
 
History is History of Class Struggles
 
For Marx, 
all hitherto existing societies have been
marked by class conflicts
 and, therefore, their history
must always be taken to be a history of class struggles.
It is with the aid of these general laws of history that
Marx points out how in course of historical
development different types of societies have evolved
on the basis of different types of production relations.
In the earliest phase of known human history Marx
identifies the 
primitive communist society 
where the
means of production are held in common,
 generating
no property relations and which, therefore, is
conspicuous by the 
absence of classes and
exploitation.
 
History is…(contd.)
 
But, with the 
development of metal tools and
consequent changes in productive activities
, that is,
with changes in the forces of production there came
about 
division of labour
 and consequently property
relations, leading to the emergence of 
slave society
where the master class owns the means of production.
The 
labouring slaves divorced from the means of
production are exploited by the non-labouring slave-
owners 
who appropriate most of the social product.
With changes in productive forces 
calling for initiative
and interest on the part of those who produce, the
slave society breaks down and in its place rises the
feudal society.
 
History is…(contd.)
 
Here the 
feudal lords represent the exploiting class
who own the principal means of production, but who,
however, are 
no longer masters of slaves and have no
legal right over the persons of the toilers.
The 
serfs 
(the labouring class), on the other hand, 
have
some of the means of production in their possession.
This is allowed to only to 
enable them to show
initiative and have interest in the cultivation of land
which is the chief productive activity in the feudal
society.
Yet the serfs are 
very much exploited as they have to
hand over a substantial portion of the produce 
from
the land to the feudal lords and are also bound to give
them services.
 
History is…(contd.)
 
Due to changes further in the forces of production the
feudal society disintegrates and there grows on its
ruins the capitalist society.
In the capitalist society it is the 
capitalist who owns
the means of production, but not the workers who
actually produce.
 Thus in a sense, 
those who labour to
produce are personally free.
 But in practice there is 
no
less exploitation here.
Since the 
working class is entirely divorced from the
means of production and they have nothing except
their labour power
 they are forced to sell it for wages
just to collect their means of subsistence.
 
Socialist Society: An Inevitability
 
Like the previous social systems the capitalist society is
also not permanent. It is liable to change and 
the
inevitability of this change is more and more manifest
when the capitalist productive forces are fully
developed.
 It is at this point that 
an irreconcilable contradiction
of capitalism will come to the fore.
 The more and
more capitalism is developed the more and more its
productive forces tend to become social.
Development of capitalism is achieved through
expanding production and employing millions of
workers in large mills and factories. 
Thus development
capitalism is brought about through 
extending the
area of collective effort and labour,
 that is, by way of
an increasing socialization of the forces of production.
 
Socialist Society:…(contd.)
 
This 
naturally calls for a social ownership of the
means of production
 which alone will ensure a
harmony between the forces of production and the
relations of production.
But 
under the capitalist system the means of
production always remain private capitalist property.
Thus, at a certain stage of its development, capitalism
faces a contradiction that 
foreshadows the imminence
of change- a change that would be in the direction of
a change in the ownership of the means of
production
.
In other words, 
capitalism is forced by the laws of
history to be replaced by the socialist society where
means of production are fully socialized 
which will
result in the end of exploitation of man by man.
 
Socialist Society:…(contd.)
 
The working class, 
the property-less proletariat would
be the vanguard of a process of revolutionary change
in the socialist direction.
At a developed stage of capitalism the 
social
productive forces have simply outgrown the control
of the bourgeoisie.
 So it is now the turn of the working
class to assume leadership.
For this the 
working class needs to be fully aware of
its suffering in the capitalist system.
 Thus, it is
necessary to open their minds by 
exposing the nature
and working of the capitalist mode of production.
This is exactly what Marx does by 
focusing on his
economic theory of capitalism- the theory of surplus
value.
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Marx views history as a continuous process evolving according to discoverable laws, rooted in human material needs. He emphasizes the role of the mode of production in shaping social development, with changes in history driven by changes in the mode of production, leading to shifts in social relations and property relations. Through his materialist perspective, Marx highlights the interconnectedness of individuals within society and their collective efforts in production.

  • Marx
  • History
  • Mode of Production
  • Social Development
  • Materialism

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  1. History as Changing and Continuous Process Marx views history as a changing and yet continuous process. The different phases in it are so clearly related to each other that it reveals a clear pattern which seems to have been evolving in accordance with definite laws that are fully discoverable. Marx is least interested in the history dominated by individuals. He is interested in the history growing around peoples, i.e. the history of society, more specifically, the laws of the development of human society. To determine these laws with the aid of his materialism Marx first identifies the essence of human activity as resulting from human beings vital material needs of having food, drink, clothing and shelter.

  2. Conditions of Material Life Whatever things human beings can do are all conditional on their having secured the means of life; the way they live is very much determined by the way they make their living. So the history of social development may alone be known on the basis of the conditions of material life of society. For Marx it is the mode of production that reflects these conditions. Every society, thus, thrives on a particular mode of production and it is the latter that determines all activities and institutions of that society.

  3. Changes Occur due to Changes in the Mode of Production Then Marx goes on to explain how changes in history occur due to changes in the mode of production. Production, by nature, is a social activity for it is impossible for an individual to produce alone the necessities of life. Means of life are produced only by the collective efforts of individuals. Hence the mode of production must always be viewed in its social aspect. Considering the social aspect of the mode of production it is found to have two basic components- i. Forces of Production; and ii. Relations of Production

  4. Changes Occur(contd.) In order to produce, various means of production like tools, machines, raw materials, land, buildings, etc. are needed. These means of production, however, do not by themselves produce things. Production is made possible only when the means of production are used and utilized by people on the basis of their knowledge, skill and experience. The forces of production represent both these means of production as well as the people who use these means. Since, by its very nature, production is social people have to enter into mutual social relationship with each other while engaging in production.

  5. Social Relations are Property Relations These relations develop in the context of the way in which people engaged in production are related to the means of production. The social relations people develop among themselves while engaged in social production are, in fact, the property relations. These relations, however, are not the outcome of a deliberate act on the part of the people. Such relations are, in fact, conditioned by the pattern of development of the forces of production. In the primitive type of production where a whole tribe was collectively engaged in hunting expedition the forces of production were such that there was no division of labour, and thus, no classes. It was unnecessary to determine as to who was entitled to dispose of what kinds of means of production.

  6. Emergence of Classes with Private Property But later with the further development of the forces of production there emerged division of labour. Because the means of production came to be regarded as the private property of particular persons. Consequently, the simple and direct relations among people began assuming the form of property relations. Thus relations among people were now determined on the basis of the ownership and lack of ownership of the means of production. It is the totality of these relations of production that constitutes the economic structure of society and it is this that represents the real foundation of a society on which grow its legal and political superstructures. It is also this which conditions definite forms of social consciousness.

  7. Change in the Mode of Production Caused by Antagonism It is now evident that social change results from a change in the mode of production that is caused by an antagonism between the forces of production and the relations of production. The forces of production of a society at a certain stage of their development come in conflict with the existing relations of production, which is the property relations and the consequence is a social revolution. In all hitherto existing societies, except in primitive society, according to Marx, the relations of production have always appeared as a relation of domination and subordination among classes as in all such societies the mode of production has been marked by the presence of exploiting and exploited classes.

  8. Class Struggle As explained earlier, class divisions are the natural outcome of property relations following from the division of labour. Because of this division of labour different groups occupy different places in social production. As a result they stand in different relations to the means of production and hence appropriate the social product differently. Social classes refer to these groups the relations among which represent the class relations of a society. Such class relations are characterized by a persistent conflict which is of a fundamental nature and thus, will only result in a revolutionary transformation of the society.

  9. Class Struggle (contd.) By virtue of their ownership of the means of production one class lives without labour on the fruits of labour of the other class which does not own the means of production. Thus, the class owning the means of production appropriate most of the social wealth and thereby exploit the other class which is without ownership over the means of production. The exploited class owns nothing except their labour power which it is forced to sell for its bare sustenance. Thus the relations between these classes cannot be anything but antagonistic and the conflicts are irreconcilable in nature.

  10. History is History of Class Struggles For Marx, all hitherto existing societies have been marked by class conflicts and, therefore, their history must always be taken to be a history of class struggles. It is with the aid of these general laws of history that Marx points out how in course of historical development different types of societies have evolved on the basis of different types of production relations. In the earliest phase of known human history Marx identifies the primitive communist society where the means of production are held in common, generating no property relations and which, therefore, is conspicuous by the absence of classes and exploitation.

  11. History is(contd.) But, with the development of metal tools and consequent changes in productive activities, that is, with changes in the forces of production there came about division of labour and consequently property relations, leading to the emergence of slave society where the master class owns the means of production. The labouring slaves divorced from the means of production are exploited by the non-labouring slave- owners who appropriate most of the social product. With changes in productive forces calling for initiative and interest on the part of those who produce, the slave society breaks down and in its place rises the feudal society.

  12. History is(contd.) Here the feudal lords represent the exploiting class who own the principal means of production, but who, however, are no longer masters of slaves and have no legal right over the persons of the toilers. The serfs (the labouring class), on the other hand, have some of the means of production in their possession. This is allowed to only to enable them to show initiative and have interest in the cultivation of land which is the chief productive activity in the feudal society. Yet the serfs are very much exploited as they have to hand over a substantial portion of the produce from the land to the feudal lords and are also bound to give them services.

  13. History is(contd.) Due to changes further in the forces of production the feudal society disintegrates and there grows on its ruins the capitalist society. In the capitalist society it is the capitalist who owns the means of production, but not the workers who actually produce. Thus in a sense, those who labour to produce are personally free. But in practice there is no less exploitation here. Since the working class is entirely divorced from the means of production and they have nothing except their labour power they are forced to sell it for wages just to collect their means of subsistence.

  14. Socialist Society: An Inevitability Like the previous social systems the capitalist society is also not permanent. It is liable to change and the inevitability of this change is more and more manifest when the capitalist productive forces are fully developed. It is at this point that an irreconcilable contradiction of capitalism will come to the fore. The more and more capitalism is developed the more and more its productive forces tend to become social. Development of capitalism is achieved through expanding production and employing millions of workers in large mills and factories. Thus development capitalism is brought about through extending the area of collective effort and labour, that is, by way of an increasing socialization of the forces of production.

  15. Socialist Society:(contd.) This naturally calls for a social ownership of the means of production which alone will ensure a harmony between the forces of production and the relations of production. But under the capitalist system the means of production always remain private capitalist property. Thus, at a certain stage of its development, capitalism faces a contradiction that foreshadows the imminence of change- a change that would be in the direction of a change in the ownership of the means of production. In other words, capitalism is forced by the laws of history to be replaced by the socialist society where means of production are fully socialized which will result in the end of exploitation of man by man.

  16. Socialist Society:(contd.) The working class, the property-less proletariat would be the vanguard of a process of revolutionary change in the socialist direction. At a developed stage of capitalism the social productive forces have simply outgrown the control of the bourgeoisie. So it is now the turn of the working class to assume leadership. For this the working class needs to be fully aware of its suffering in the capitalist system. Thus, it is necessary to open their minds by exposing the nature and working of the capitalist mode of production. This is exactly what Marx does by focusing on his economic theory of capitalism- the theory of surplus value.

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