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Title: âIdealismâ and âMaterialismâ Author: Errico Malatesta Date: 1924 Language: en Topics: idealism, materialism Source: The Method of Freedom: An Errico Malatesta Reader, edited by Davide Turcato, translated by Paul Sharkey. Notes: Translated from ââIdealismoâ e âmaterialismo,ââ Pensiero e VolontĂ (Rome) 1, no. 2 (15 January 1924).
It has been noted thousands of times that men, before arriving at the
truth, or at least as much relative truth as is attainable at various
junctures in their intellectual and social development, are wont to fall
into the most widely varying errors in looking at things, now from one
side and now from the other, thereby lurching from one exaggeration to
its opposite.
I wish to examine here a phenomenon of this sort, which is of great
interest to the whole of contemporary social life.
A few years ago everybody was a âmaterialist.â Invoking a âscienceâ that
was the harnessing of the general principles derived from a positive
knowledge that was all too incomplete, it was expected to explain the
whole of human psychology and the entire eventful history of humanity in
terms of basic material needs alone. The âeconomic factorâ explained
all: past, present, and future. Every manifestation of thought and
sentiment, every vagary in life, love as well as hate, passions good and
bad, the condition of women, ambition, jealousy, racial pride, any sort
of relations between individuals and peoples, war and peace, mass
submissiveness or rebelliousness, sundry forms of family and society,
political regimes, religion, morality, literature, art, science⊠all of
these were merely the outworkings of the prevalent mode of production
and distribution of wealth and of the instruments of labor in each
epoch. And those with a broader, less simplistic notion of human nature
and history were looked upon within the conservative and subversive
ranks alike as throwbacks bereft of âscience.â
Naturally, this outlook influenced the practical behavior of parties and
tended to lead to the sacrificing of every nobler ideal to material
interests, economic issues, no matter how petty and insignificant these
latter might be.
Today, the fashion has changed. These days everybody is an âidealistâ:
everybody affects to sneer at the âbelly,â and treats man as if he were
pure spirit, eating, dressing, and meeting physiological needs being
matters of no significance to him, matters not to be heeded, lest a
moral decline set in.
I have no intention of concerning myself here with the sinister quirks
that turn âidealismâ into sheer hypocrisy and a weapon of deception; the
capitalist who commends a sense of duty and spirit of sacrifice to his
workers so that he may blithely slash their wages and boost his own
profits; the âpatriotâ who, enthused by love of country and the national
spirit, devours his own homeland and, given the chance, the homelands of
others; or the soldier who, for the greater glory and honor of the flag,
exploits the vanquished and oppresses them and rides roughshod over
them.
I talk about honest folk: especially those of our comrades who, having
seen that the fight for economic betterment ended up consuming the
entire energy of the workersâ organizations until all revolutionary
potential there was spent, and now witnessing so much of the proletariat
allowing itself to be stripped of any vestige of freedom and, albeit
reluctantly, kissing the rod that smites them in the vain hope that they
might be guaranteed employment and decent pay, are showing a tendency to
jettison in disgust all economic concerns and struggles and to confine,
or, if your prefer, raise our entire activity to the realms of education
and revolutionary struggle proper.
The main problem, the basic need is the need for freedom, they argue;
and freedom can only be won and retained through wearisome struggles and
cruel sacrifices. It therefore falls to revolutionaries to pay no mind
to petty matters relating to economic improvements, to oppose the
selfishness that prevails among the masses, to spread the spirit of
sacrifice and, instead of promising pie-in-the-sky, to imbue the crowd
with a sacred pride in suffering on behalf of a noble cause.
Entirely agreeâbut let us not get carried away.
Freedom, full and complete freedom, is certainly the essential prize,
because it represents the enshrinement of human dignity and is the only
means whereby social problems can and ought to be resolved to the
benefit of all. But freedom is a hollow word unless it is wedded to
ability, which is to say, to the means whereby one can freely carry on
his own activity.
The maxim âwhoever is poor is a slaveâ is still true, though equally
true is that other maxim that âwhoever is a slave is or is made poor,
and thus loses all of the best characteristics of the human being.â
Material needs, the satisfaction of physiological needs, are indeed
lesser and even contemptible matters, but they are the basic
pre-requisite for any higher moral and intellectual existence. Man is
prompted by myriad factors of the most varied sorts and these shape the
course of history, but⊠He has to eat. âFirst live, and then
philosophize.â
To our aesthetic sensibilities, a bit of canvas, some oil, and a little
colored earth are mean things when set alongside a Raphael painting; but
without those relatively worthless materials, Raphael would never have
been able to set down his dream of beauty.
I suspect that the âidealistsâ are all folk who eat on a daily basis and
who can still be reasonably sure of eating the following day; and this
is only natural, because in order to be able to think, to be able to
aspire to loftier matters, a basic minimum, no matter how low, of
material comfort is required. There have been and are men equal to the
greatest heights of sacrifice and suffering, men who can blithely look
hunger and torture in the face and carry on fighting heroically for
their cause amid the most horrific suffering; but these are men who have
grown up in relatively favorable circumstances and who have managed to
store up a quantum of latent energy, which then comes into play as the
need arises. That is the general rule, at any rate.
For many a long year I have dallied with workersâ organizations,
revolutionary groups, and educational associations and I have always
noticed that the greatest activists, the greatest enthusiasts were those
who were in the least straitened circumstances and who were attracted,
not so much by their own needs, but by a desire to contribute to the
doing of good and to feel ennobled by an ideal. The true, the greatest
wretches, the ones who might appear to have the most personal and
immediate interest in a change in things were either absent or played a
passive role. I remember how tough and fruitless our propaganda work
turned out to be in certain locations around Italy thirty or forty years
ago when the farm-workers and much of the urban worker population were
living in genuinely brutish conditions, which I should like to think are
now a thing of the past, albeit the fears of their making a come-back
may not be without foundation. Just as I have seen hunger-inspired
popular unrest stilled at a stroke by the opening a few âcookhousesâ and
the distribution of a little cash.
From all of which, my deduction is that pride of place goes to the idea,
which must activate the will, but certain conditions are required for
the idea to be able to emerge and make an impact.
Thus our old program, that announced that moral, political, and economic
emancipation could not be disentangled one from another, and that the
masses need to be placed in such material conditions as may allow for
the outworking of ideal needs, stands confirmed.
Fight for wholesale emancipation and, while waiting and preparing for
the day on which that will be feasible, wrest from government and
capitalists all political and economic improvements that might improve
the conditions of our struggle and boost the numbers of conscious
fighters. So, wrest them by means that imply no acknowledgment of the
existing arrangements and which pave the way to the future.
Spread the sense of duty and the spirit of sacrifice; but bear in mind
that example is the best form of propaganda and that one can not ask of
others that which we ourselves do not do.