§ 6. Aspects of the materialistic philosophy of history. Marx's general philosophy of economic materialism had three minor propositions or doctrines. (a) The doctrine of increas ing misery; capital in private hands results in the "exploita tion" of the workers as explained by the economic theory of surplus value (labor theory of value) ; this causes and7ust cause the steadily increasing degradation of the masses. (b) The, doctrine of the class conflict; all history is a record of the class struggle between those who have property, the ruling classes within the nations, and those who have not, the op pressed working class, (a conception of history blind to most of the great international conflicts). The class conflict was declared to be growing more sharply marked and bitter than ever before; "the entire human society more and more divides itself into two great hostile camps, into two great conflicting classes, bourgeoisie and proletariate." (c) The catastrophic theory: the final and inevitable result of this misery and class conflict must be a revolution, when the downtrodden workers 4 See Vol. I, pp. 210, 228, 502 on the labor-theory of value.
will throw off their chains and "expropriate the expropria tors," and institute the communistic order in place of cap italism.
The old time "scientific" socialist had a lofty scorn for any less dogmatic philosophy than his own or for any less sweep ing social change than that he expected. Moderate social re form to him was but temporizing; indeed, it was evil, inasmuch as it helped to postpone the inevitable, but in the end, benefi cent catastrophe of the social revolution. A step-by-step movement toward socialism, state even of a pretty sweeping character, was, to the old-time Marxians, not really socialism at all. Some explanation of this attitude is found in the extremely limited manhood suffrage and in the aristocratic class government of most European countries, especially of Germany; so that, as the party socialists saw it, multiplying state enterprises but increased the power of the ruling, and 5 See above, I 3.
eventually of the militarist, class. The social-democratic leaders felt that until they themselves were in power, the growth of "state socialism" would be a calamity for the na tion. The events of 1914 may make our judgment tolerant toward their feeling.
§ 8. Its unreal and negative character. The so-called "scientific" socialism had, therefore, a peculiarly unscientific spirit; for, in a modern sense, science implies a patient search for truth, not a sudden revelation ; a constant testing of opin ions by observation and experiment, not a dogmatic conviction that refuses the test of reality. "Scientific" socialists talked
much, and still talk much, of the "evolution" of social insti tutions; but they refused to admit the essential condition for institutional evolution, the competitive trial on a small scale, of a new form of economic organization to prove its fitness to survive. Indeed, communism had been tried on a small scale many times in the communistic societies, and had always failed in a brief time.
Lincoln said that a man's legs ought to be long enough to reach to the ground; but "scientific" socialism was not built on that plan. To be sure it contained many elements of truth, but these were so distorted that the result was a caricature of history, of philosophy, of economics, and of prophecy. The most important influence of radical socialism has been exerted through negative criticism. It has performed the function of a party in opposition, relentlessly hunting out and pointing out the defects of existing institutions, arousing the smugly con tented, and, by its very recklessness and bitterness, inspiring at times a wholesome fear of more revolutionary evils. This has been a real service to the cause of moderate and con structive reform in the more democratic countries of west ern Europe and in America.