Scanned from Four Essays on Philosophy. 1968 Foreign Languages Press Edition. Please report errors to mim@mim.org.
Before Marx, materialism examined the problem of knowledge apart from
the social nature of man and apart from his historical development, and
was therefore incapable of understanding the dependence of knowledge on
social practice, that is, the dependence of knowledge on production and
the class struggle.
Above all, Marxists regard man's activity in production as the most fundamental
practical activity, the determinant of all his other activities Man's knowledge
depends mainly on his activity in material production, through which he
comes gradually to understand the phenomena, the properties and the laws
of nature, and the relations between himself and nature; and through his
activity in production he also gradually comes to understand, in varying
degrees, certain relations that exist between man and man. None of this
knowledge can be acquired apart from activity in production. In a classless
society every person, as a member of society, joins in common effort with
the other members, enters into definite relations of production with them
and engages in production to meet man's material needs. In all class societies,
the members of the different social classes also enter, in different ways,
into definite relations of production and engage in production to meet their
material needs. This is the primary source from which human knowledge develops.
Man's social practice is not confined to activity in production, but takes
many other forms-class struggle, political life, scientific and artistic
pursuits; in short, as a social being, man participates in all spheres of
the practical life of society Thus man, in varying degrees, comes to know
the different relations between man and man, not only through his material
life but also through his political and cultural life (both of which are
intimately bound up with material life). Of these other types of social
practice, class struggle in particular, in all its various forms, exerts
a profound influence on the development of man's knowledge. In class society
everyone lives as a member of a particular class. and every kind of thinking,
without exception, is stamped with the brand of a class.
Marxists hold that in human society activity in production develops step
by step from a lower to a higher level and that consequently man's knowledge,
whether of nature or of society also develops step by step from a lower
to a higher level, that is, from the shallower to the deeper, from the one
sided to the many-sided. For a very long period in history, men were necessarily
confined to a one-sided understanding of the history of society because,
for one thing, the bias of the exploiting classes always distorted history
and, for another, the small scale of production limited man's outlook. It
was not until the modern proletariat emerged along with immense forces of
production (large-scale industry) that man was able to acquire a comprehensive,
historical understanding of the development of society and turn this knowledge
into a science, the science of Marxism.
Marxists hold that man's social practice alone is the criterion of the truth
of his knowledge of the external world. What actually happens is that man's
knowledge is verified only when he achieves the anticipated results in the
process of social practice (material production, class struggle or scientific
experiment). If a man wants to succeed in his work. that is, to achieve
the anticipated results, he must bring his ideas into correspondence with
the laws of the objective external world; if they do not correspond, he
will fail in his practice. After he fails, he draws his lessons, corrects
his ideas to make them correspond to the laws of the external world, and
can thus turn failure into success; this is what is meant by "failure
is the mother of success" and "a fall into the pit, a gain in
your wit". The dialectical-materialist theory of knowledge places practice
in the primary position, holding that human knowledge can in no way be separated
from practice and repudiating all the erroneous theories which deny the
importance of practice or separate knowledge from practice. Thus Lenin said,
"Practice is higher than (theoretical) knowledge, for it has
not only the dignity of universality, but also of immediate actuality."(1)
The Marxist philosophy of dialectical materialism has two outstanding characteristics.
One is its class nature: it openly avows that dialectical materialism is
in the service of the proletariat. The other is its practicality: it emphasizes
the dependence of theory on practice, emphasizes that theory is based on
practice and in turn serves practice. The truth of any knowledge or theory
is determined not by subjective feelings, but by objective results in social
practice. Only social practice can be the criterion of truth. The standpoint
of practice is the primary and basic standpoint in the dialectical-materialist
theory of knowledge.(2)
But how then does human knowledge arise from practice and in turn serve
practice? This will become clear if we look at the process of development
of knowledge.
In the process of practice, man at first sees only the phenomenal side,
the separate aspects, the external relations of things. For instance, some
people from outside come to Yenan on a tour of observation. In the first
day or two, they see its topography, streets and houses; they meet many
people, attend banquets, evening parties and mass meetings, hear talk of
various kinds and read various documents, all these being the phenomena,
the separate aspects and the external relations of things. This is called
the perceptual stage of cognition, namely, the stage of sense perceptions
and impressions. That is, these particular things in Yenan act on the sense
organs of the members of the observation group, evoke sense perceptions
and give rise in their brains to many impressions together with a rough
sketch of the external relations among these impressions: this is the first
stage of cognition. At this stage, man cannot as yet form concepts, which
are deeper, or draw logical conclusions.
As social practice continues, things that give rise to man's sense perceptions
and impressions in the course of his practice are repeated many times; then
a sudden change (leap) takes place in the brain in the process of cognition,
and concepts are formed. Concepts are no longer the phenomena, the separate
aspects and the external relations of things; they grasp the essence, the
totality and the internal relations of things. Between concepts and sense
perceptions there is not only a quantitative but also a qualitative difference.
Proceeding further, by means of judgment and inference one is able to draw
logical conclusions. The expression in San Kuo Yen Yi,(3) "knit
the brows and a stratagem comes to mind", or in everyday language,
"let me think it over", refers to man's use of concepts in the
brain to form judgments and inferences. This is the second stage of cognition.
When the members of the observation group have collected various data and,
what is more, have "thought them over", they are able to arrive
at the judgment that "the Communist Party's policy of the National
United Front Against Japan is thorough, sincere and genuine". Having
made this judgment, they can, if they too are genuine about uniting to save
the nation, go a step further and draw the following conclusion, "The
National United Front Against Japan can succeed." This stage of conception,
judgment and inference is the more important stage in the entire process
of knowing a thing; it is the stage of rational knowledge. The real task
of knowing is, through perception. to arrive at thought, to arrive step
by step at the comprehension of the internal contradictions of objective
things, of their laws and of the internal relations between one process
and another, that is, to arrive at logical knowledge. To repeat, logical
knowledge differs from perceptual knowledge in that perceptual knowledge
pertains to the separate aspects, the phenomena and the external relations
of things, whereas logical knowledge takes a big stride forward to reach
the totality, the essence and the internal relations of things and discloses
the inner contradictions in the surrounding world. Therefore, logical knowledge
is capable of grasping the development of the surrounding world in its totality,
in the internal relations of all its aspects.
This dialectical-materialist theory of the process of development of knowledge,
basing itself on practice and proceeding from the shallower to the deeper,
was never worked out by anybody before the rise of Marxism. Marxist materialism
solved this problem correctly for the first time, pointing out both materialistically
and dialectically the deepening movement of cognition, the movement by which
man in society progresses from perceptual knowledge to logical knowledge
in his complex, constantly recurring practice of production and class struggle.
Lenin said, "The abstraction ofmatter, of alaw of nature,
the abstraction ofvalue, etc., in short,all scientific (correct,
serious, not absurd) abstractions reflect nature more deeply, truly andcompletely."(4)"Marxism-Leninism
holds that each of the two stages in the process of cognition has its own
characteristics, with knowledge manifesting itself as perceptual at the
lower stage and logical at the higher stage, but that both are stages in
an integrated process of cognition. The perceptual and the rational are
qualitatively different but are not divorced from each other; they are unified
on the basis of practice. Our practice proves that what is perceived cannot
at once be comprehended and that only what is comprehended can be more deeply
perceived. Perception only solves the problem of phenomena; theory alone
can solve the problem of essence. The solving of both these problems is
not separable in the slightest degree from practice. Whoever wants to know
a thing has no way of doing so except by coming into contact with it, that
is, by living (practising) in its environment. In feudal society it was
impossible to know the laws of capitalist society in advance because capitalism
had not yet emerged, the relevant practice was lacking. Marxism could be
the product only of capitalist society. Marx, in the era of laissez-faire
capitalism, could not concretely know certain laws peculiar to the era of
imperialism be forehand, because imperialism, the last stage of capitalism,
had not yet emerged and the relevant practice was lacking; only Lenin and
Stalin could undertake this task. Leaving aside their genius, the reason
why Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin could work out their theories was mainly
that they personally took part in the practice of the class struggle and
the scientific experimentation of their time; lacking this condition, no
genius could have succeeded. The saying, "without stepping outside
his gate the scholar knows all the wide world's affairs", was mere
empty talk in past times when technology was undeveloped. even though this
saying can be valid in the present age of developed technology, the people
with real personal knowledge are those engaged in practice the wide world
over. And it is only when these people have come to "know" through
their practice and when their knowledge has reached him through writing
and technical media that the "scholar" can indirectly "know
all the wide world's affairs". If you want to know a certain thing
or a certain class of things directly, you must personally participate in
the practical struggle to change reality, to change that thing or class
of things, for only thus can you come into contact with them as phenomena;
only through personal participation in the practical struggle to change
reality can you uncover the essence of that thing or class of things and
comprehend them. This is the path to knowledge which every man actually
travels, though some people, deliberately distorting matters, argue to the
contrary. The most ridiculous person in the world is the "know-all"
who picks up a smattering of hearsay knowledge and proclaims himself "the
world's Number One authority"; this merely shows that he has not taken
a proper measure of himself. Knowledge is a matter of science, and no dishonesty
or conceit whatsoever is permissible. What is required is definitely the
reverse-honesty and modesty. If you want knowledge, you must take part in
the practice of changing reality. If you want to know the taste of a pear,
you must change the pear by eating it yourself. If you want to know the
structure and properties of the atom, you must make physical and chemical
experiments to change the state of the atom. If you want to know the theory
and methods of revolution, you must take part in revolution. All genuine
knowledge originates in direct experience. But one cannot have direct experience
of everything; as a matter of fact, most of our knowledge comes from indirect
experience for example, all knowledge from past times and foreign lands.
To our ancestors and to foreigners, such knowledge was-or is-a matter of
direct experience, and this knowledge is reliable if in the course of their
direct experience the requirement of "scientific abstraction",
spoken of by Lenin, was-or is- fulfilled and objective reality scientifically
reflected; otherwise it is not reliable. Hence a man's knowledge consists
only of two parts. that which comes from direct experience and that which
comes from indirect experience. Moreover, what is indirect experience for
me is direct experience for other people. Consequently, considered as a
whole, knowledge of any kind is inseparable from direct experience. All
knowledge originates in perception of the objective external world through
man's physical sense organs. Anyone who denies such perception, denies direct
experience, or denies personal participation in the practice that changes
reality, is not a materialist. That is why the "know-all" is ridiculous.
There is an old Chinese saying, "How can you catch tiger cubs without
entering the tiger's lair?" This saying holds true for man's practice
and it also holds true for the theory of knowledge. There can be no knowledge
apart from practice.
To make clear the dialectical-materialist movement of cognition arising
on the basis of the practice which changes reality-to make clear the gradually
deepening movement of cognition-a few additional concrete examples are given
below.
In its knowledge of capitalist society, the proletariat was only in the
perceptual stage of cognition in the first period of its practice, the period
of machine-smashing and spontaneous struggle; it knew only some of the aspects
and the external relations of the phenomena of capitalism. The proletariat
was then still a "class-in-itself". But when it reached the second
period of its practice, the period of conscious and organized economic and
political struggles, the proletariat was able to comprehend the essence
of capitalist society, the relations of exploitation between social classes
and its own historical task; and it was able to do so because of its own
practice and because of its experience of prolonged struggle, which Marx
and Engels scientifically summed up in all its variety to create the theory
of Marxism for the education of the proletariat. It was then that the proletariat
became a "class-for-itself".
Similarly with the Chinese people's knowledge of imperialism. The first
stage was one of superficial, perceptual knowledge, as shown in the indiscriminate
anti- foreign struggles of the Movement of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom,(5)
the Yi Ho Tuan Movement,(6) and so on. It was only in the second stage that
the Chinese people reached the stage of rational knowledge, saw the internal
and external contradictions of imperialism and saw the essential truth that
imperialism had allied itself with China's comprador and feudal classes
to oppress and exploit the great masses of the Chinese people This knowledge
began about the time of the May 4th Movement of 1919.(7)
Next, let us consider war. If those who lead a war lack experience of war,
then at the initial stage they will not understand the profound laws pertaining
to the directing of a specific war (such as our Agrarian Revolutionary War
of the past decade). At the initial stage they will merely experience a
good deal of fighting and, what is more, suffer many defeats. But this experience
(the experience of battles won and especially of battles lost) enables them
to comprehend the inner thread of the whole war, namely, the laws of that
specific war, to understand its strategy and tactics, and consequently to
direct the war with confidence. If, at such a moment, the command is turned
over to an inexperienced person, then he too will have to suffer a number
of defeats (gain experience) before he can comprehend the true laws of the
war.
"I am not sure I can handle it." We often hear this remark when
a comrade hesitates to accept an assignment. Why is he unsure of himself?
Because he has no systematic understanding of the content and circumstances
of the assignment, or because he has had little or no contact with such
work, and so the laws governing it are beyond him. After a detailed analysis
of the nature and circumstances of the assignment, he will feel more sure
of himself and do it willingly. If he spends some time at the job and gains
experience and if he is a person who is willing to look into matters with
an open mind and not one who approaches problems subjectively, one-sidedly
and superficially, then he can draw conclusions for himself as to how to
go about the job and do it with much more courage. Only those who are subjective,
one-sided and superficial in their approach to problems will smugly issue
orders or directives the moment they arrive on the scene, without considering
the circumstances, without viewing things in their totality (their history
and their present state as a whole) and without getting to the essence of
things (their nature and the internal relations between one thing and another).
Such people are bound to trip and fall.
Thus it can be seen that the first step in the process of cognition is contact
with the objects of the external world; this belongs to the stage of perception.
The second step is to synthesize the data of perception by arranging and
reconstructing them; this belongs to the stage of conception, judgment and
inference. It is only when the data of perception are very rich (not fragmentary)
and correspond to reality (are not illusory) that they can be the basis
for forming correct concepts and theories.
Here two important points must be emphasized. The first, which has been
stated before but should be repeated here, is the dependence of rational
knowledge upon perceptual knowledge. Anyone who thinks that rational knowledge
need not be derived from perceptual knowledge is an idealist. In the history
of philosophy there is the "rationalist" school that admits the
reality only of reason and not of experience, believing that reason alone
is reliable while perceptual experience is not; this school errs by turning
things upside down. The rational is reliable precisely because it has its
source in sense perceptions, otherwise it would be like water without a
source, a tree without roots, subjective, self-engendered and unreliable.
As to the sequence in the process of cognition, perceptual experience comes
first; we stress the significance of social practice in the process of cognition
precisely because social practice alone can give rise to human knowledge
and it alone can start man on the acquisition of perceptual experience from
the objective world. For a person who shuts his eyes, stops his ears and
totally cuts himself off from the objective world there can be no such thing
as knowledge. Knowledge begins with experience-this is the materialism of
the theory of knowledge.
The second point is that knowledge needs to be deepened, that the perceptual
stage of knowledge needs to be developed to the rational stage-this is the
dialectics of the theory of knowledge.(8) To think that knowledge can stop
at the lower, perceptual stage and that perceptual knowledge alone is reliable
while rational knowledge is not, would be to repeat the historical error
of "empiricism". This theory errs in failing to understand that,
although the data of perception reflect certain realities in the objective
world (I am not speaking here of idealist empiricism which confines experience
to so-called introspection), they are merely one-sided and superficial,
reflecting things incompletely and not reflecting their essence. Fully to
reflect a thing in its totality, to reflect its essence, to reflect its
inherent laws, it is necessary through the exercise of thought to reconstruct
the rich data of sense perception, discarding the dross and selecting the
essential, eliminating the false and retaining the true, proceeding from
the one to the other and from the outside to the inside, in order to form
a system of concepts and theories-it is necessary to make a leap from perceptual
to rational knowledge. Such reconstructed knowledge is not more empty or
more unreliable; on the contrary, whatever has been scientifically reconstructed
in the process of cognition, on the basis of practice, reflects objective
reality, as Lenin said, more deeply, more truly, more fully. As against
this, vulgar "practical men" respect experience but despise theory,
and therefore cannot have a comprehensive view of an entire objective process,
lack clear direction and long- range perspective, and are complacent over
occasional successes and glimpses of the truth. If such persons direct a
revolution, they will lead it up a blind alley.
Rational knowledge depends upon perceptual knowledge and perceptual knowledge
remains to be developed into rational knowledge-this is the dialectical-materialist
theory of knowledge. In philosophy, neither "rationalism" nor
"empiricism" understands the historical or the dialectical nature
of knowledge, and although each of these schools contains one aspect of
the truth (here I am referring to materialist, not to idealist, rationalism
and empiricism), both are wrong on the theory of knowledge as a whole. The
dialectical-materialist movement of knowledge from the perceptual to the
rational holds true for a minor process of cognition (for instance, knowing
a single thing or task) as well as for a major process of cognition (for
instance, knowing a whole society or a revolution).
But the movement of knowledge does not end here. If the dialectical-materialist
movement of knowledge were to stop at rational knowledge, only half the
problem would be dealt with. And as far as Marxist philosophy is concerned,
only the less important half at that. Marxist philosophy holds that the
most important problem does not lie in understanding the laws of the objective
world and thus being able to explain it, but in applying the knowledge of
these laws actively to change the world. From the Marxist viewpoint, theory
is important, and its importance is fully expressed in Lenin's statement,
"Without revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary movement."(9)
But Marxism emphasizes the importance of theory precisely and only because
it can guide action. If we have a correct theory but merely prate about
it, pigeonhole it and do not put it into practice, then that theory, however
good, is of no significance. Knowledge begins with practice, and theoretical
knowledge is acquired through practice and must then return to practice.
The active function of knowledge manifests itself not only in the active
leap from perceptual to rational knowledge, but-and this is more important-it
must manifest itself in the leap from rational knowledge to revolutionary
practice. The knowledge which grasps the laws of the world, must be redirected
to the practice of changing the world, must be applied anew in the practice
of production, in the practice of revolutionary class struggle and revolutionary
national struggle and in the practice of scientific experiment. This is
the process of testing and developing theory, the continuation of the whole
process of cognition. The problem of whether theory corresponds to objective
reality is not, and cannot be, completely solved in the movement of knowledge
from the perceptual to the rational, mentioned above. The only way to solve
this problem completely is to redirect rational knowledge to social practice,
apply theory to practice and see whether it can achieve the objectives one
has in mind. Many theories of natural science are held to be true not only
because they were so considered when natural scientists originated them,
but because they have been verified in subsequent scientific practice. Similarly,
Marxism-Leninism is held to be true not only because it was so considered
when it was scientifically formulated by Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin
but because it has been verified in the subsequent practice of revolutionary
class struggle and revolutionary national struggle. Dialectical materialism
is universally true because it is impossible for, anyone to escape from
its domain in his practice. The history of human knowledge tells us that
the truth of many theories is incomplete and that this incompleteness is
remedied through the test of practice. Many theories are erroneous and it
is through the test of practice that their errors are corrected. That is
why practice is the criterion of truth and why "the standpoint of life,
of practice, should be first and fundamental in the theory of knowledge".(10)
Stalin has well said, "Theory becomes purposeless if it is not connected
with revolutionary practice, just as practice gropes in the dark if its
path is not illumined by revolutionary theory."(11)
When we get to this point, is the movement of knowledge completed? Our answer
is: it is and yet it is not. When men in society throw themselves into the
practice of changing a certain objective process (whether natural or social)
at a certain stage of its development, they can, as a result of the reflection
of the objective process in their brains and the exercise of their conscious
dynamic role, advance their knowledge from the perceptual to the rational,
and create ideas, theories, plans or programmes which correspond in general
to the laws of that objective process. They then apply these ideas, theories,
plans or programmes in practice in the same objective process. And if they
can realize the aims they have in mind, that is, if in that same process
of practice they can translate, or on the whole translate, those previously
formulated ideas, theories, plans or programmes into fact, then the movement
of knowledge may be considered completed with regard to this particular
process. In the process of changing nature, take for example the fulfillment
of an engineering plan, the verification of a scientific hypothesis, the
manufacture of an implement or the reaping of a crop; or in the process
of changing society, take for example the victory of a strike, victory in
a war or the fulfillment of an educational plan. All these may be considered
the realization of aims one has in mind. But generally speaking, whether
in the practice of changing nature or of changing society men's original
ideas, theories, plans or programmes are seldom realized without any alteration.
This is because people engaged in changing reality are usually subject to
numerous limitations; they are limited not only by existing scientific and
technological conditions but also by the development of the objective process
itself and the degree to which this process has become manifest (the aspects
and the essence of the objective process have not yet been fully revealed).
In such a situation, ideas, theories, plans or programmes are usually altered
partially and sometimes even wholly, because of the discovery of unforeseen
circumstances in the course of practice. That is to say, it does happen
that the original ideas, theories, plans or programmes fail to correspond
with reality either in whole or in part and are wholly or partially incorrect.
In many instances, failures have to be repeated many times before errors
in knowledge can be corrected and correspondence with the laws of the objective
process achieved, and consequently before the subjective can be transformed
into the objective, or in other words, before the anticipated results can
be achieved in practice. Nevertheless, when that point is reached, the movement
of human knowledge regarding a certain objective process at a certain stage
of its development may be considered completed.
However, so far as the progression of the process is concerned, the movement
of human knowledge is not completed. Every process, whether in the realm
of nature or of society, progresses and develops by reason of its internal
contradiction and struggle, and the movement of human knowledge should also
progress and develop along with it. As far as social movements are concerned,
true revolutionary leaders must not only be good at correcting their ideas,
theories, plans or programmes when errors are discovered, as has been indicated
above; but when a certain objective process has already progressed and changed
from one stage of development to another, they must also be good at making
themselves and all their fellow-revolutionaries progress and change in their
subjective knowledge along with it, that is to say, they must ensure that
the proposed new revolutionary tasks and new working programmes correspond
to the new changes in the situation. In a revolutionary period the situation
changes very rapidly; if the knowledge of revolutionaries does not change
rapidly in accordance with the changed situation, they will be unable to
lead the revolution
It often happens, however, that thinking lags behind reality; this is because
man's cognition is limited by numerous social conditions. We are opposed
to die-hards in the revolutionary ranks whose thinking fails to advance
with changing objective circumstances and has manifested itself historically
as Right opportunism. These people fail to see that the struggle of opposites
has already pushed the objective process forward while their knowledge has
stopped at the old stage. This is characteristic of the thinking of all
die-hards. Their thinking is divorced from social practice and they cannot
march ahead to guide the chariot of society, they simply trail behind, grumbling
that it goes too fast and trying to drag it back or turn it in the opposite
direction.
We are also opposed to "Left" phrase-mongering. The thinking of
"Leftists" outstrips a given stage of development of the objective
process; some regard their fantasies as truth, while others strain to realize
in the present an ideal which can only be realized in the future. They alienate
themselves from the current practice of the majority of the people and from
the realities of the day, and show themselves adventurist in their actions.
Idealism and mechanical materialism, opportunism and adventurism, are all
characterized by the breach between the subjective and the objective, by
the separation of knowledge from practice. The Marxist-Leninist theory of
knowledge, characterized as it is by scientific social practice, cannot
but resolutely oppose these wrong ideologies. Marxists recognize that in
the absolute and general process of development of the universe, the development
of each particular process is relative, and that hence, in the endless flow
of absolute truth, man's knowledge of a particular process at any given
stage of development is only relative truth. The sum total of innumerable
relative truths constitutes absolute truth.(12) The development of an objective
process is full of contradictions and struggles, and so is the development
of the movement of human knowledge. All the dialectical movements of the
objective world can sooner or later be reflected in human knowledge. In
social practice, the process of coming into being, developing and passing
away is infinite, and so is the process of coming into being, developing
and passing away in human knowledge. As man's practice which changes objective
reality in accordance with given ideas, theories, plans or programmes, advances
further and further, his knowledge of objective reality likewise becomes
deeper and deeper. The movement of change in the world of objective reality
is never-ending and so is man's cognition of truth through practice. Marxism-Leninism
has in no way exhausted truth but ceaselessly opens up roads to the knowledge
of truth in the course of practice. Our conclusion is the concrete, historical
unity of the subjective and the objective, of theory and practice, of knowing
and doing, and we are opposed to all erroneous ideologies, whether ' Left
or Right, which depart from concrete history.
In the present epoch of the development of society, the responsibility of
correctly knowing and changing the world has been placed by history upon
the shoulders of the proletariat and its party. This process, the practice
of changing the world, which is determined in accordance with scientific
knowledge, has already reached a historic moment in the world and in China,
a great moment unprecedented in human history, that is, the moment for completely
banishing darkness from the world and from China and for changing the world
into a world of light such as never previously existed. The struggle of
the proletariat and the revolutionary people to change the world comprises
the fulfillment of the following tasks: to change the objective world and,
at the same time, their own subjective world-to change their cognitive ability
and change the relations between the subjective and the objective world.
Such a change has already come about in one part of the globe, in the Soviet
Union. There the people are pushing forward this process of change. The
people of China and the rest of the world either are going through, or will
go through, such a process. And the objective world which is to be changed
also includes all the opponents of change, who, in order to be changed,
must go through a stage of compulsion before they can enter the stage of
voluntary, conscious change. The epoch of world communism will be reached
when all mankind voluntarily and consciously changes itself and the world.
Discover the truth through practice, and again through practice verify and
develop the truth. Start from perceptual knowledge and actively develop
it into rational knowledge; then start from rational knowledge and actively
guide revolutionary practice to change both the subjective and the objective
world. Practice, knowledge, again practice, and again knowledge. This form
repeats itself in endless cycles, and with each cycle the content of practice
and knowledge rises to a higher level. Such is the whole of the dialectical
materialist theory of knowledge, and such is the dialectical theory of the
unity of knowing and doing.
NOTES
(l) From Lenin's notes on "The Idea" in Hegel'sThe Science
of Logic Book III, Section 3. See V. 1. Lenin, "Conspectus of Hegel'sThe
Science of Logic" (September-December 1914),Collected Works,
Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 205.
(2) See Karl Marx, "Theses on Feuerbach" (spring of 1845), Karl
Marx and Frederick Engels,Selected Works, in two volumes, Eng. ed.,
FLPH, Moscow, 1958, Vol. II, p. 403, and V. I. Lenin,Materialism and
Empire-Criticism (second half of 1908), Eng. ed., FLPH, Moscow, 1952.
pp. 136-42.
(3)San Kuo Yen Yi (Tales of the Three Kingdoms) is a famous Chinese
historical novel by Lo Kuan-chung (late 14th and early 15th century).
(4) From Lenin's notes on "Subjective Logic or the Doctrine of the
Notion" in Hegel'sThe Science of Logic, Book III. See V. I.
Lenin, Conspectus of Hegel'sThe Science of Logic,Collected Works,
Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 161.
(5) The Movement of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom was the mid-19th century
revolutionary peasant war against the feudal rule and national oppression
of the Ching Dynasty. In January 1851 Hung Hsiu-chuan, Yang Hsiu-ching and
other leaders launched an uprising in Chinden Village in Kueiping Country,
Kwangsi Province, and proclaimed the founding of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.
Proceeding northward from Kwangsi, their peasant army attacked and occupied
Hunan and Hupeh in 1852. In 1853 it marched through Kiangsi and Anhwei and
captured Nanking. A section of the forces then continued the drive north
and pushed on to the vicinity of Tientsin. However, the Taiping army failed
to build stable base areas in the places it occupied; moreover, after establishing
its capital in Nanking, its leading group committed many political and military
errors. Therefore it was unable to withstand the combined onslaughts of
the counter- revolutionary forces of the Ching government and the British,
U.S. and French aggressors, and was finally defeated in 1864.
(6) The Yi Ho Tuan Movement was the and-imperialist armed struggle which
took place in northern China in 1900. The broad masses of peasants, handicraftsmen
and other people took part in this movement. Getting in touch with one another
through religious and other channels, they organized themselves on the basis
of secret societies and waged a heroic struggle against the joint forces
of aggression of the eight imperialist powers-the United States, Britain,
Japan, Germany, Russia, France, Italy and Austria. The movement was put
down with indescribable savagery after the joint forces of aggression occupied
Tientsin and Peking.
(7) The May 4th Movement was an anti-imperialist and and- feudal revolutionary
movement which began on May 4, 19l9. In the first half of that year, the
victors of World War I,i.e., Britain, France, the United States,
Japan, Italy and other imperialist countries, met in Paris to divide the
spoils and decided that Japan should take over ail the privileges previously
enjoyed by Germany in Shantung Province, China. The students of Peking were
the first to show determined opposition to this scheme, holding rallies
and demonstrations on May 4. The Northern warlord government arrested more
than thirty students in an effort to suppress this opposition. In protest,
the students of Peking went on strike and large numbers of students in other
parts of the country responded. On June 3 the Northern warlord government
started arresting students in Peking en masse, and within two days about
a thousand were taken into custody. This aroused still greater indignation
throughout the country. From June 5 onwards, the workers of Shanghai and
many other cities went on strike and the merchants in these places shut
their shops. Thus, what was at first a patriotic movement consisting mainly
of intellectuals rapidly developed into a national patriotic movement embracing
the proletariat, the urban petty bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie. And along
with the growth of this patriotic movement, the new cultural movement which
had begun before May 4 as a movement against feudalism and for the promotion
of science and democracy, grew into a vigorous and powerful revolutionary
cultural movement whose main current was the propagation of Marxism- Leninism
(8) See Lenin's notes on "The Idea' in Hegel'sThe Science of Logic
Book III, Section 3, in which he said: "In order to understand, it
is necessary empirically to begin understanding, study, to rise from empiricism
to the universe." (V. I. Lenin, "Conspectus of Hegel'sThe Science
of Logic,Collected Works, Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol.
(9) V. I. Lenin, "What Is to Be Done?" (autumn 1901-February 1902)Collected
Works, Eng. ed., FLPH, Moscow, 1961, Vol. V, p. 369.
(10) V. I. Lenin,Materialism and Empirio-Criticism, Eng. ed., FLPH,
Moscow, 1952, p. 141.
(11) J. V. Stalin, "The Foundations of Leninism" (April-May 1924).Problems
of Leninism, Eng. ed., FLPH, Moscow, 1954, p. 31.
(12) See V. I. Lenin,Materialism and Empirio-Criticism, Eng. ed.,
FLPH Moscow, 1952, pp. 129-36.
There used to be a number of comrades in our Party who were dogmatists and
who for a long period rejected the experience of the Chinese revolution,
denying the truth that "Marxism is not a dogma but a guide to action"
and overawing people with words and phrases from Marxist works, torn out
of context. There were also a number of comrades who were empiricists and
who for a long period restricted themselves to their own fragmentary experience
and did not understand the importance of theory for revolutionary practice
or see the revolution as a whole but worked blindly though industriously.
The erroneous ideas of these two types of comrades, and particularly of
the dogmatists caused enormous losses to de Chinese revolution during 1931-34,
and yet the dogmatists, cloaking themselves as Marxists, confused a great
many comrades. "On Practice" was written in order to expose the
subjectivist errors of dogmatism and empiricism in the Party, and especially
the error of dogmatism, from the standpoint of the Marxist theory of knowledge.
It was entitled "On Practice" because its stress was on exposing
the dogmatist kind of subjectivism, which belittles practice. The ideas
contained in this essay were presented by Comrade Mao Tse-Tung in a lecture
at the Anti-Japanese Military and Political College in Yenan.