Tuesday, 9 June 2026

OLIGARCHY AND THE CRISIS OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY

Part I: The Historical Premises of the Present Crisis

I. Introduction: Trump as the Expression of a System in Terminal Decline

The rise of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency should not be seen as a personal anomaly, a bizarre accident, or merely due to the quirks of the American electoral process. Instead, it reflects the core political expression of a social order that has exhausted its legitimate authority. The book highlights this clearly, describing Trump as a “real estate huckster and casino con-artist” who was elevated to the highest position by an oligarchy intent on preserving its global dominance through force. “Donald Trump and his henchmen, backed by the oligarchy that placed him in power, aim to overcome the decline of American capitalism through force…”

This formulation is conclusive. It dismisses the liberal view that Trump is a departure from American norms. Instead, it places him within the natural course of American capitalism following the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991. Once freed from Cold War geopolitical limits, the ruling class launched 30 years of unchecked militarism. The tactics developed abroad—such as coups, assassinations, economic blockades, and blatant disrespect for international law—have now been integrated into domestic politics. Therefore, the crisis in American democracy is not due to Trump’s personality but is an inevitable result of imperialist decline.

II. 1991 and the Illusion of Unipolar Omnipotence

David North’s book *Oligarchy: Trump and the Breakdown of American Democracy* points to 1991 as a pivotal moment. Following the USSR's collapse, the American ruling class believed history had confirmed its global dominance. The quote—“Force works”—serves not just as a comment on foreign policy but also as a reflection of the ideological fervour that seized the bourgeoisie.

The Gulf War, Yugoslavia's bombing, Afghanistan and Iraq invasions, drone conflicts in the Middle East and Africa, Latin American coups, and the encirclement of Russia and China aren't isolated events. They collectively aim for a single strategic objective: achieving enduring global dominance via military power. However, imperialism isn't just a policy choice; it's an inevitable outcome of capitalism's monopoly phase. As the US faces diminishing economic competitiveness, it increasingly relies on military force to sustain its dominance. The tension between economic decline and military strength fostered a political culture where legality, diplomacy, and democratic norms are seen as mere obstacles. The ruling class that has formed since this era is not only aggressive but also criminal.

III. The Internalisation of Imperialist Methods

Imperialist tactics once used abroad are now evident domestically: “In a society ruled by billionaires, corporate predators, military-intelligence operatives, and political swindlers… the criminal and anti-democratic methods of imperialism are used both at home and abroad.” This reflects a core Marxist idea: the violence of the capitalist state is not separate. The same ruling class that destroys schools in Iran, supports burying Palestinian children under rubble, or captures Venezuelan officials and oilfields, will not hesitate to use similar methods against its own people.

The police's militarisation, increased surveillance, criminalisation of protests, and bipartisan backing for mass deportations and border militarisation all reflect the same imperialist logic. The American government has become a tool for oligarchic control, operating outside constitutional and democratic boundaries.

IV. Bipartisan Complicity and the Collapse of Liberalism

A key point in the document is its emphasis that the crisis cannot be solely blamed on the Republican Party or Trump. It highlights that the Democratic Party, just like the Republicans, has played a role in enabling the oligarchy's growth. The text states: “No official opposition from either ruling party is mounted…”

This is not just rhetorical exaggeration. The Democrats supported wars, funded intelligence agencies, expanded the drone program, and oversaw the largest transfer of wealth to the rich in American history. Their opposition to Trump was based on tactical differences over foreign policy and internal power, not a defence of democratic rights. Liberalism as an ideology has fallen apart under its own contradictions. It cannot truly defend democracy because it is inherently linked to the capitalist system that is eroding it.

V. The Deep Roots of Democratic Consciousness in the American Working Class

Amidst this context of oligarchic criminality, the book highlights a counter-trend: the enduring presence of democratic and revolutionary traditions within the American working class. “Their democratic impulses… remain deeply rooted in tradition among workers and young people." This is not mere sentimentality, but a historical reality. The American Revolution and the Civil War were pivotal events where ordinary people fought against tyranny, slavery, and aristocratic privilege. These values—egalitarianism, suspicion of concentrated power, and opposition to injustice—are still ingrained in the consciousness of millions.

The clash between this democratic legacy and the state's oligarchic decline is reaching a breaking point. The resurgence of strikes, increasing class struggle, and youth radicalisation reflect this ongoing historical pattern.

VI. The Necessity of Socialism

The final point of the book is straightforward: “The struggle for socialism by the global working class is... the core expression of what is humane, decent, and emancipatory...” This is more than just poetic language; it is a logical conclusion based on an objective analysis of capitalism’s crises. The continuation of democracy, the prevention of world wars, the protection of human rights, and the preservation of civilisation all depend on the overthrow of the oligarchy and the building of workers’ power worldwide.

Part II: The Class Anatomy of the American Oligarchy and the Bonapartist Turn

VII. The Class Structure of the Contemporary American Oligarchy

The shift of the United States into an oligarchic regime is a literal sociological reality, not just a metaphor. Over the last forty years, wealth has become increasingly concentrated among a very small elite, reaching unprecedented levels in modern history. The wealthiest 0.1% now hold more assets than the bottom 90% combined. This trend surpasses mere inequality; it signifies a return to a capitalist aristocracy. North’s book highlights this vividly: “In a society governed by billionaires, corporate predators, military-intelligence operatives and political swindlers…”

This constellation of forces represents the true sovereign power in the United States. The official democratic institutions—such as Congress, the courts, and the presidency—have been diminished and subordinated to the interests of financial capital, the military-intelligence complex, and the corporate elite. The oligarchy is not merely a passive recipient of wealth; it actively influences politics by funding candidates, shaping legislation, controlling media, and directing foreign policy. Its interests fundamentally conflict with democratic principles, which require social equality and public accountability, both of which the oligarchs oppose. The emergence of Trump can be seen as the political embodiment of this class power.

VIII. The Military‑Intelligence Apparatus as the Backbone of Oligarchic Rule

The American state is currently controlled by a large military-intelligence complex that functions with little oversight. The Pentagon, CIA, NSA, FBI, and numerous private contractors create a lasting system of coercion and surveillance. This structure has expanded steadily since 2001, but its origins trace back to the post-1991 rise of unipolar dominance.

North highlights that methods traditionally used for imperial control abroad are now being applied domestically. This is not just rhetoric. The militarisation of local police, employing counter-insurgency tactics against protesters, expanding domestic surveillance, and criminalising dissent all reflect the same underlying logic. The military-intelligence complex forms the backbone of oligarchic rule, providing the coercive force needed to sustain a social order marked by stark inequality and widespread unrest. It also served as the source of many of Trump's close advisers and supporters. The American ruling class increasingly rules not through popular consent but through intimidation.

IX. The Transformation of the Presidency Under Conditions of Capitalist Decay

The presidency, originally designed as a constitutional office limited by checks and balances, has evolved into a quasi-monarchical entity. This change is not solely due to Trump but rather the result of decades of the expansion of executive power. From the Iran-Contra scandal to the drone assassination program, and from warrantless surveillance to the unilateral initiation of wars, the presidency has increasingly become the main tool for the ruling class to bypass democratic limits.

Trump’s presidency did not initiate this trend; it took advantage of it. His disregard for constitutional norms, his use of the state for personal gain, and his mobilisation of fascistic groups were only possible because the institutional foundations of democracy had already been weakened. In the context of capitalist decline, the presidency tends to lean towards Bonapartism—a form of rule in which executive power supersedes formal democratic institutions while relying on support from the military, police, and parts of the petty bourgeoisie.

X. Trumpism as an American Form of Bonapartism

Trumpism is a uniquely American form of Bonapartism. Similar to Louis Bonaparte in 1851, Trump aimed to portray himself as the personification of the “nation" fighting against a corrupt political system. He appealed to confused segments of the petty bourgeoisie, rallied fascistic groups, and tried to use state power to solidify his personal authority. However, Bonapartism is not defined solely by the leader's personality. It signals a deeper social crisis: the ruling class's failure to govern through traditional parliamentary methods, along with the lack of an organised revolutionary leadership capable of mobilising the working class.

Trump’s attempt to seize power, efforts to overturn election results, support for paramilitary groups, and his use of the presidency as a personal domain were not anomalies. Instead, they reflect the natural outcomes of a ruling class that can no longer sustain its dominance through democratic means. The description in the book of Trump as a tool of an oligarchy aiming to retain its authority “through force" accurately characterises this Bonapartist path.

XI. The International Dimensions of the Crisis

The crisis facing American democracy is part of a broader global trend. This includes the collapse of the post-Cold War order, increasing tensions among imperial powers, and a worldwide surge in class struggle. Faced with China's rise, Russia's resurgence, and the waning of its economic dominance, the United States has adopted a more aggressive military stance. Its efforts to sustain global hegemony have led to a persistent state of conflict, further destabilising its internal political landscape.

The oligarchic decline of the American state is closely linked to the global capitalist crisis. The same contradictions that gave rise to Trump have also led to far-right movements in Europe, authoritarian governments in Asia, and political unrest in Latin America. Therefore, the fight against oligarchy must be a global effort.

Part III: The Revolutionary Legacy, the Re‑Emergence of the Working Class, and the Historical Necessity of Socialism

XII. The Revolutionary Legacy of the American People

A key argument of the book emphasises that the American working class holds a strong democratic and revolutionary legacy. This is not mere nostalgia but a materialist view of ongoing historical tradition. The U.S. originated from a bourgeois revolution that, despite its flaws, promoted universal ideals of equality, popular sovereignty, and opposition to tyranny. These ideals were further developed and radicalised during the Civil War—often termed the “Second American Revolution”—which ended slavery and reshaped the nation around the principle of free labour.

The book highlights: “The 250-year-old legacy of the American Revolution and the Civil War… remains a deeply rooted tradition among workers and young people.” This insight is vital. The American working class is not politically passive. Beneath the current political confusion lies a reservoir of democratic feelings, hostility to injustice, and a strong dislike for official lies and brutality. These impulses are not just cultural; they form the ideological layers of past revolutionary struggles. The tension between this democratic heritage and the oligarchic decline of the state is a key factor driving the current crisis.

XIII. The Re‑Emergence of the Working Class as a Revolutionary Force

The past decade has witnessed the re‑emergence of the working class as a decisive political actor. Strikes have surged across industries; teachers, auto workers, logistics workers, nurses, rail workers, and countless others have engaged in militant struggles. These movements are not isolated economic disputes but expressions of a deeper social antagonism.

The working class faces numerous challenges, including stagnant wages, insecure jobs, rising living costs, and the dismantling of public services. Society is becoming more militarised, and both major political parties show indifference to these issues. In response, the ruling class has resorted to repression, union-busting, and fostering far-right groups. Meanwhile, the pressures of the capitalist crisis are driving millions of workers toward political radicalisation. The book describes this situation: “The conflict between the criminal oligarchy and the moral consciousness of the masses is assuming an increasingly explosive character…” This is no exaggeration. The United States is heading into a period of significant social upheaval as the working class begins to recognise its collective power and the ruling class struggles to maintain control through traditional means. The historical preconditions for revolutionary struggle are emerging.

XIV. The Moral and Political Bankruptcy of the Ruling Class

The American ruling class has exhausted all ideological justifications for its dominance. It can no longer justify itself through democracy, as it consistently undermines democratic institutions. It cannot rely on prosperity, given the unprecedented levels of inequality under its rule. Nor can it claim to promote peace, as it engages in ongoing war. The book sharply criticises this by stating: “In a society governed by billionaires, corporate predators, military-intelligence operatives, and political swindlers…”

This is not a rhetorical flourish. It is a sociological description of a ruling class that has become parasitic, predatory, and openly criminal. Its foreign policy consists of bombings, sanctions, and coups. Its domestic policy consists of deregulation, privatisation, and repression. The ruling class has no progressive role to play in history. It is an obstacle to human development.

XV. The Objective Necessity of Socialist Revolution

North concludes with a statement of immense historical weight: “The struggle for socialism by the international working class is… the indispensable expression of all that is humane, decent, and emancipatory… The survival of humanity depends upon its victory.”

This is not a moral appeal but a scientific conclusion. The contradictions of capitalism—such as imperialist war, ecological disaster, economic inequality, and authoritarianism—cannot be fixed within the current social system. Humanity faces a clear choice: socialism or barbarism; democratic workers’ control or oligarchic dictatorship; international solidarity or imperialist conflict.

The working class is the only social force capable of transforming society according to principles of equality, rational planning, and democratic control of production. Because capitalism is inherently international, the socialist movement's international scope is essential, not just desirable. The crisis facing American democracy is fundamentally linked to the global capitalist crisis. Therefore, the solution is not reform but the overthrow of the current system.

XVI. Conclusion: The Historical Moment and the Tasks of the Present

The United States is at a critical crossroads. The decline of the oligarchic state, the rise of authoritarian regimes, increasing class conflict, and growing global tensions are not fleeting issues. They signal a social system in its final crisis. This book offers a sharp, direct analysis: Trump is not the root cause of the crisis but a symptom. The ruling class cannot restore democracy because they are the ones undermining it. Only the working class, drawing on its revolutionary history, can defend democratic rights and ensure humanity's future. Today’s challenge is to build a conscious, organised, international socialist movement to lead the working class in the fight for power. History is calling—will the working class answer?

 

 

 

Gordon S. Wood (1933–2026): The passing of a major historian of the American Revolution

I. A historian of the American Revolution whose work shaped half a century 

Gordon S. Wood, who passed away Sunday at age 92 after being hit by a car, was a highly influential historian of the American Revolution and early American history. As noted in the WSWS, he was “a leading historian of the American Revolution,’ with a career at Brown University and key publications—The Creation of the American Republic, The Radicalism of the American Revolution, and Empire of Liberty—that became essential references for many scholars.

Wood was part of the final cohort of prominent postwar American historians educated in Bernard Bailyn's liberal-republican tradition. His work reflected a serious purpose, meticulous archival research, and the view that the American Revolution was a true turning point in global history. As noted, his scholarship focused on “the far-reaching social and political transformations unleashed by the break with monarchy,” a perspective that, although not Marxist, still captured the Revolution’s inherent dynamism. Wood’s death marks the passing of a figure whose work helped define the terrain on which debates over the Revolution have been fought for more than five decades.

II. The contradictions of a liberal historian in an age of reaction

Wood was not a Marxist. His approach focused on ideology, republicanism, and political culture instead of the material conditions and class struggles behind the Revolution. He viewed ideas as independent forces and often overlooked the economic and social conflicts that influenced the revolutionary process.

Wood’s strengths were inherently linked to his limitations. He was part of a generation of liberal historians who, despite their theoretical flaws, genuinely engaged with the Enlightenment, the democratic ideals of the eighteenth century, and the universalist principles of the Revolution. He opposed the cynical, postmodern, and racialist reinterpretations that have emerged over the past twenty years.

Tom Mackaman’s obituary will highlight that Wood recognised a crucial point: the American Revolution was genuinely revolutionary—a significant global shift. This perspective unexpectedly and firmly set him against the prevailing ideological trends that now shape elite academic and media circles.

III. Wood and the WSWS: A principled stand against the 1619 Project

A key political moment in Wood’s later career was his open opposition to the New York Times’ 1619 Project. When the Times promoted the inaccurate idea that the American Revolution was fought to maintain slavery, Wood was among the earliest and most notable historians to dispute this. His 2019 interview with the WSWS, conducted by historian Tom Mackaman, remains a significant reference in the fight against racialist distortions of American history.

Wood described the Project as a “displacement by ideology” and considered the Times’ refusal to correct factual errors as “an assault on historical integrity.” These were deliberate statements, reflecting a principled stance by a historian who recognised that rewriting the Revolution with racialist perspectives served current political interests.

Wood’s intervention was important not just because of his reputation but also because of the core principles he upheld. His life’s work showed how the Revolution “shattered the hierarchical, deferential social order” and introduced “a new world of egalitarian aspiration.” The 1619 Project aimed to erase this legacy by framing the Revolution as a reactionary plot by slaveholders. Wood refused to allow this falsification to pass unchallenged.

IV. The broader political context: Identity politics and the assault on historical truth

Wood’s conflict with the 1619 Project should be viewed in the wider political landscape of the past ten years. During this period, identity politics has grown among America's ruling elite, accompanied by deliberate attempts to undermine the Enlightenment and Revolution's universalist and egalitarian ideals. The goal is to substitute class analysis with racial essentialism and to hide the revolutionary legacy that challenges capitalist dominance.

Wood, although a liberal, understood the peril involved. His involvement in the WSWS’s online panel on July 4, 2020—during a period of severe political upheaval—showed his readiness to stand by historical facts, even when it meant opposing influential institutions. Mackaman’s obituary will surely note that Wood’s position “deserves acknowledgement and respect,” reflecting his intellectual integrity at a time when many scholars yielded to ideological influence.

V. Assessing Wood’s legacy from a Marxist standpoint

From a historical materialist perspective, Wood’s work has notable strengths and some limitations. He emphasised the revolutionary nature of 1776, describing the fall of monarchical hierarchy and the emergence of democratic equality. He also opposed racialist reinterpretations that dismiss the Revolution’s progressive aspects and upheld the historian’s duty to pursue truth.

Wood acknowledged his limitations, especially in his tendency to see ideology as the primary factor in historical change. He overlooked the role of class forces in driving the Revolution and did not fully grasp the period's international and socioeconomic dimensions. Despite these gaps, his research remains highly valuable. Wood’s analysis remains essential to understanding the ideological and political transformations of the late eighteenth century. His claim that the Revolution was progressive is largely consistent with the Marxist interpretation of bourgeois revolutions as key stages in the development of modern society.

VI. Conclusion: A historian who stood for truth in an age of falsification

Gordon S. Wood’s passing represents a significant loss for the field of history. He was part of a generation of historians who held that the past is knowable, that truth holds importance, and that the American Revolution was a pivotal moment in the fight for human liberation.

In the last years of his life, Wood was compelled into a political conflict he had neither pursued nor escaped. Confronted with the racialist distortion of the Revolution, he decided to uphold historical truth. As a result, he aligned—impartially—with the World Socialist Web Site in a struggle that goes beyond scholarly debate and addresses core issues of historical awareness.

Tom Mackaman will publish a more extensive assessment of Wood’s life and work. For now, it is enough to say that he was a serious historian, a principled opponent of ideological distortion, and a defender of the revolutionary legacy of 1776. His contributions will endure.

Gordon S. Wood and the 1619 Project: A historian’s stand against racialist falsification

I. Introduction: A confrontation forced by history

Gordon S. Wood generally avoided political controversy. Throughout his career, he focused on the liberal-republican tradition of American historiography, creating detailed analyses of the ideological and institutional changes during the Revolutionary era. However, in the last ten years of his life, Wood became involved in a political conflict that extended well beyond academic circles.

That struggle involved confronting the New York Times’ 1619 Project. Wood saw it as a “displacement by ideology” and believed the Times’ refusal to correct factual errors was “an assault on historical integrity.” These words reveal a historian who recognised something fundamental was at stake: the ability to write truthful history amid ideological manipulation.

II. The 1619 Project and the rewriting of the American Revolution

The 1619 Project argued that the main purpose of the American Revolution was to preserve slavery. This claim was not only false but also historically unfounded. It reversed the correct timeline of the eighteenth century, overlooked the significant social changes brought by the Revolution, and turned a major historical event into a racial conspiracy.

Wood quickly saw the danger. His career had shown that the Revolution “shattered the hierarchical, deferential social order” and began “a new world of egalitarian aspiration.” Suggesting that this upheaval was driven by a desire to defend slavery dismisses the Revolution’s democratic essence and reduces history to racial essentialism.

Wood’s critique was based on evidence, not ideology. He was familiar with the archives and the political debates of the 1760s and 1770s. He understood that the Revolution’s leaders—despite their contradictions—weren’t rallying the population to defend slavery but to overthrow monarchy and hereditary privilege.

III. Why Wood’s intervention mattered

Wood’s opposition to the 1619 Project goes beyond academic disagreement. It must be understood within the wider political landscape of the past decade. During this time, the ruling class has increasingly used identity politics to divide the working class and hide the core class conflicts in American society. The 1619 Project served as a key ideological tool in this effort. By framing American history primarily as a racial story, it aimed to undermine the universal and egalitarian ideals championed during the Enlightenment and the Revolution.

Wood’s intervention was notably politically explosive. According to the uploaded document, “What made Wood’s participation in this debate significant was not merely his prestige, but the substance of what he was defending.” He supported the view that the Revolution was a progressive event with global significance. Additionally, he defended the Enlightenment and emphasised the historian’s duty to pursue truth. And he did so publicly, on the record, in an interview with the World Socialist Web Site.

IV. The WSWS interviews: A turning point in the controversy

The 2019 interview between WSWS and Wood, led by historian Tom Mackaman, marked a crucial turning point. It represented the first major public critique of the 1619 Project by a well-known historian. The interview highlighted the Project’s inaccuracies, methodological flaws, and political biases. Wood’s relationship with WSWS was more than casual; he had been interviewed earlier in 2015 and later participated in their online panel on the American Revolution on July 4, 2020. This ongoing involvement indicated a deep intellectual connection based on a shared commitment to uncovering historical truth. The Times responded to Wood and other historians with arrogance and evasiveness, but the damage was already done. The Project was compelled to quietly revise key claims, implicitly admitting that its main thesis was indefensible.

V. Wood’s stand and the crisis of the historical profession

Wood’s involvement in the controversy highlighted a profound crisis within the American historical community. Many scholars, either intimidated by the current political environment or supporting the racialist ideas of the Project, chose to stay silent. Others defended the Project even while aware that its claims were inaccurate. Wood stood firm, refusing to compromise. He emphasised that historians have a duty to pursue the truth, not to popular ideological trends. As the document notes, “Wood took the obligation of the historian seriously to truth.”

This position inherently put him at odds with the prevailing ideological trends of the American ruling class. Simultaneously, it aligned him with the Marxist support for the Enlightenment and the revolutionary tradition.

VI. Conclusion: A historian who refused to falsify the past

Gordon S. Wood’s clash with the 1619 Project is a key moment in his later career. It highlighted the enduring significance of his scholarship, his intellectual integrity, and the political importance of defending the revolutionary legacy of 1776. In a time when racist ideology and postmodern relativism threaten historical truth, Wood’s stance—like that of the WSWS—was brave. It confirmed that the American Revolution was genuinely a revolution, a progressive, globally significant event whose meaning cannot be erased by current political trends.

His role in this struggle will remain an essential part of his legacy.

  

Monday, 8 June 2026

The Philosophical Collapse of Gerry Healy: Idealism, Mystification, and the Crisis of the WRP

 I. Introduction: Philosophy and the Degeneration of a Revolutionary Movement

The crisis that affected the Workers Revolutionary Party (WRP) in the late 1970s and early 1980s was not solely due to tactical errors, organisational excesses, or Gerry Healy's personal decline. Its origins are much deeper, rooted in a significant theoretical confusion that was most clearly reflected in Healy’s Studies in Dialectical Materialism. These writings, which were presented to the membership as the pinnacle of Marxist philosophy since Lenin’s Philosophical Notebooks, actually represented a rejection of the fundamental principles of dialectical materialism.

David North’s 'A Contribution to a Critique of G. Healy’s “Studies in Dialectical Materialism"' (1982) should be seen not as an academic critique but as a significant political act. It was crafted during a time when the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) faced its most serious threat to both its theory and organisation since the fight against Pabloite revisionism. The WRP’s alliances with bourgeois nationalist regimes, its suppression of internal democracy, and the cult of Healy’s infallibility were not mere mistakes but stemmed from a deep philosophical crisis.

Healy’s “Studies” served as the ideological backbone for this degeneration. They offered a pseudo-theoretical rationale for discarding historical materialism, prioritising subjective perception over objective reality, and replacing the tangible class struggle with abstract logical concepts. As the document states, Healy’s philosophical education turned into "a form of ideological mystification aimed at producing uncritical cadres.”

North’s critique defends classical Marxism, citing works such as The German Ideology, Capital, Lenin’s Materialism and Empirio-Criticism, and Trotsky’s In Defence of Marxism. It reaffirmed the materialist view of history in opposition to the idealist distortions that had entered the WRP. The critique also points out that the WRP's crisis was not accidental but resulted from a method that strayed from Marxist principles. This struggle was crucial, as it could determine the survival of the Fourth International as a revolutionary Marxist entity.

II. The Historical Setting: From Anti‑Pabloism to Opportunist Degeneration

The WRP's decline into political and theoretical chaos must be seen in the context of its past successes. The Socialist Labour League (SLL), which later became the WRP, was pivotal in the ICFI’s fight against Pabloite liquidationism during the early 1960s. It upheld the Leninist view of the revolutionary party, opposing the SWP’s acceptance of Castroism and the concept of “blunted counterrevolution.”

By the late 1970s, the WRP had diverged from its core principles. Its political approach became more opportunistic, accepting funding from regimes like Libya and Iraq and tailoring its program to fit their diplomatic goals. Internal dissent was suppressed, and Healy’s authority was almost revered. This decline was not just political but also involved a shift towards idealist philosophy. Healy’s “Studies” became the ideological foundation for this opportunism, replacing Marxist class analysis with ideas like “cognition,” the “creative element,” and the “infinite development of consciousness.” North’s critique highlights this philosophical shift as a key factor in the WRP’s political downfall. Abandoning materialism in theory led to abandoning proletarian independence in practice.

III. The Central Indictment: Healy’s Rejection of the Marx–Hegel Break

North criticises Healy for erasing the fundamental break between Marx and Hegel. Healy often mentions training cadres “in the spirit of Hegel, Marx, Engels and Lenin,” implying these thinkers belong to a single, ongoing philosophical tradition. This isn’t just an oversight; it’s a rejection of Marxism.

Between 1843 and 1847, Marx's intellectual development involved a shift from Hegel’s philosophy to The German Ideology, characterised by his rejection of Hegelian idealism. In the Afterword to the second German edition of Capital, Marx asserted, “My dialectical method is not only different from the Hegelian, but is its direct opposite.” Therefore, Healy’s attempt to combine Hegel and Marx reflects a return to the views of the Left Hegelians, whom Marx and Engels critiqued in works like The Holy Family and The German Ideology.

North shows that Healy replicates exactly the mistakes Marx criticised: viewing logical categories as the underlying essence of reality, deriving the concrete from the abstract, and replacing the movement of history with the flow of thought. This is not true Marxism but a return to pre-Marxian idealism.

IV. The Idealist Deformation of Cognition

A key aspect of Healy’s approach is his view of cognition as an “infinite process.” Healy states that “the development of consciousness is an infinite process” and that “the cognition of the external world is an infinite process." North highlights the idealist undertones in this idea. While thought is indeed evolving historically, it is always rooted in concrete, socially situated human beings. To see cognition as an abstract, endless process is to disconnect it from its material foundation and to turn it into a self-sustaining Absolute Idea. This interpretation aligns with pure Hegelian philosophy.

Healy extends this idea by asserting that the “process of cognition” allows modern Marxists to “stand on the shoulders” of Marx, Engels, and Lenin. North counters that it is not cognition but the actual development of global capitalism and the historical efforts of the working class that make this possible. Attributing historical progress solely to the movement of thought is, according to him, to abandon materialism entirely.

V. The Political Consequences: Mystification, Falsification, and the Cult of Leadership

Healy’s philosophical mistakes in the “Studies” extend beyond theory, directly impacting politics. North explains that Healy’s idealist approach results in distortions of history. For instance, Healy asserts that Stalin was “deliberately plotting” to destroy the Left Opposition as early as 1924. North counters this by quoting Trotsky’s "Stalin," pointing out that Trotsky explicitly rejected such a view.

This falsification is deliberate, arising from a method that replaces objective historical progress with subjective intent — a characteristic of Left Hegelianism. Furthermore, Healy’s philosophical mystification aimed to legitimise the cult of leadership within the WRP. By turning cognition into an abstract, almost mystical process, Healy cast himself as the ultimate interpreter of this process. The cadres were educated not in Marxism, but in obedience to the leader’s “method.”

VI. Conclusion: The Defence of Marxism and the Future of the Fourth International

North’s critique of Healy’s “Studies” stands as a key theoretical document in the history of the ICFI. It reaffirms the core principles of dialectical materialism, countering idealist distortions. The critique shows that the WRP's crisis stemmed from a philosophical betrayal of Marxism. Additionally, it laid the groundwork for the 1985–86 political split, which maintained continuity within the Fourth International.

The fight against Healyism is thus a crucial lesson for modern Marxists, not just a historical aside. Idealism continues to underpin all revisionist trends — from Pabloism to the pseudo-left. North’s critique offers the essential theoretical tools to counter these threats and uphold the materialist view of history.

VII. The Philosophical Structure of Healy’s Idealism: The Return of the Absolute Idea

To fully understand Healy’s deviation, it is important to analyse the core of his philosophical reasoning. North reveals that it is not merely a collection of isolated mistakes but a consistent—albeit unconscious—rebuilding of the Hegelian Absolute on a pseudo-Marxist base.

Healy’s “Studies” focus on the progression of abstract logical categories such as Being, Essence, Notion, Appearance, and Contradiction. However, these categories do not originate from an analysis of specific social relations. Instead, they are not derived from the material world, as Marx emphasised in the Introduction to the Grundrisse, where he stated that the movement from abstract to concrete is “the method of rising from the abstract to the concrete" because the abstract itself is a historical construct based on real relations.

Healy contradicts this approach by starting with the logical category before moving to the concrete. This is the exact reversal that Marx criticised in Hegel: Marx viewed the logical as reflecting the real, whereas Hegel saw the real as a manifestation of the logical. Despite using Marxist terminology, Healy’s method aligns more with Hegel’s perspective.

North precisely characterises this inversion. Healy views the logical category as the “hidden essence” underlying all phenomena, with the goal of cognition being to uncover this essence. This aligns with Proudhon's perspective, which Marx refuted in The Poverty of Philosophy. Proudhon thought that contradictions in political economy could be resolved through the manipulation of logical categories. Healy echoes this mistake in philosophical terms.

The outcome is a system where the progression of thought drives history forward. The Absolute Idea — presented without Hegelian terms but keeping its core structure — reemerges as the “infinite development of cognition." This is not dialectical materialism; rather, it is the revival of idealism disguised as Marxist pedagogy.

 

VIII. The Hedging of Materialism: “Being is Primary… Under These Conditions”

A particularly critical moment in North’s critique focuses on Healy’s statement that “Being is primary, consciousness is secondary… under these conditions.” Although it appears to be a minor qualification, it actually represents a philosophical concession. Materialism is not a conditional claim; it is the fundamental principle of Marxist theory: the dominance of matter over consciousness and objective reality over subjective perception.

By adding the phrase “under these conditions,” Healy suggests that consciousness could be primary in different circumstances. This mirrors Hegel's approach in the Phenomenology of Spirit, where the initial concept of “Being” is quickly evolved into the dominance of consciousness.

North’s critique emphasises that Healy’s hedging is deliberate, stemming from a view that regards cognition as an autonomous, limitless process. If consciousness is limitless and cognition drives historical change, then the dominance of matter is simply an empirical observation — valid for now but not necessarily fundamental. This underpins the WRP’s political opportunism: by placing consciousness above objective reality, the party leadership—seen as the epitome of “cognition"—becomes the ultimate authority. Consequently, the material world is subordinate to the leader’s interpretation. Thus, a single phrase — “under these conditions” — reveals the entire structure of Healy’s idealism.

IX. The Falsification of Lenin: Selective Quotation as Method

North’s presentation of Healy’s falsification of Lenin is a particularly notable example of the document. Healy cites Lenin’s claim that the “highest task” of dialectics is understanding “the objective logic.” However, he leaves out the important phrase that comes after: “the objective logic of economic evolution (the evolution of social life).”

Removing the historical-materialist aspects, Healy reinterprets Lenin as a Hegelian metaphysician focused on the movement of abstract logical categories. This is a significant editorial choice, reflecting a deliberate restructuring of Lenin’s argument to support Healy’s idealist view. In his polemic in Materialism and Empirio-Criticism, Lenin explicitly criticises such idealist abstraction. He emphasises that the “objective logic” is simply the laws governing the material world, especially those of capitalist development.

Healy’s truncation thus distorts Lenin’s philosophical views. It employs a quotation method that reflects his advocated approach to understanding: abstract, decontextualised, and disconnected from historical reality. North’s effort to restore the full passage is more than just a philological correction; it is a political stance. It reaffirms the materialist basis of Leninism in opposition to Healy’s effort to repurpose Lenin for an idealist agenda.

X. Historical Materialism and the Erasure of Class Struggle

One of the most damaging aspects of Healy’s “Studies” is their almost complete lack of historical materialism. Healy describes human history as “the history of the growth of the creative element, man’s initiative, both employers and working class." This perspective directly rejects Marx’s view of history as driven by class struggle. Instead, it reduces historical progress to the development of a “creative element,” a concept rooted not in Marxism but in the Left Hegelian tradition associated with Feuerbach, Bauer, and Stirner.

North situates this as a return to the perspective of The Holy Family, where Marx and Engels critiqued the Left Hegelians for replacing real social relations with "critical activity." Marx emphasised that the foundation of historical analysis must be grounded in "real, active men” and their material life processes. Healy, however, starts from the idea of the material world rather than the world itself. He focuses on the concept of "creativity" rather than class struggle. Additionally, Healy begins with the movement of thought rather than the movement of history.

This explains why Healy’s “Studies” lack an analysis of capitalism, fail to examine the contradictions of imperialism, and do not address the global economic crisis. The material world is only shown as an example of logical concepts, not as the basis of theory.

XI. The Political Function of Mystification in the WRP

Healy's philosophical deviations were more than just theoretical mistakes; they served as ideological tools for WRP leaders to sustain their power and defend their opportunistic strategy. Mystification played a specific political role. The decline of the WRP was characterised by alliances with bourgeois nationalist regimes, suppression of internal dissent, elevation of Healy’s authority to infallibility, and neglect of a class-based analysis of global politics.

These developments needed a theoretical framework to explain them. Healy’s “Studies” offered exactly that. By depicting cognition as an autonomous, endless process accessible only to the “trained dialectician,” Healy established himself as the ultimate authority on reality. The cadre was instructed not to analyse the world but to interpret it using Healy’s categories.

North highlights that the “philosophical training” was not merely a teaching activity; it served as a tool of political control. As the philosophical concepts grew more abstract and idealistic, the cadre grew more reliant on the leader who claimed to understand them. The mystification of dialectics reflected the ideological side of the WRP’s bureaucratic decline. The personality cult around Healy was not a mistake but a natural result of a method that prioritised subjective understanding over objective reality.

XII. Opportunism and the Abandonment of the Materialist Conception of History

The link between Healy’s idealism and the WRP’s opportunist politics is deliberate. Opportunism consistently entails placing the working class under the control of alien class forces. To rationalize this approach, the objective laws of capitalist development are either hidden or denied. Idealism offers the philosophical tools to achieve this.

By separating cognition from the material world, Healy established a theoretical realm where political decisions were justified not through class analysis but by the perceived insights of leadership. The partnerships with bourgeois nationalist regimes—such as Libya, Iraq, and the PLO leadership—were justified not by imperialism analysis but by the leader’s “dialectical” understanding of the regimes' progressive nature.

North’s critique reaffirms the Marxist perspective: the revolutionary party must base its program on the objective laws governing capitalism's development, rather than on the subjective impressions of its leaders. The materialist view of history is not just a philosophical stance; it is essential for maintaining proletarian independence. Healy’s abandonment of historical materialism thus led to the WRP’s political surrender. Consequently, the party stopped representing the conscious interests of the working class and instead became an extension of bourgeois nationalist forces.

XIII. North’s Critique as the Restoration of Classical Marxism

North’s Contribution to a Critique should be seen as part of a wider theoretical initiative by the ICFI in the early 1980s. Authored alongside Leon Trotsky and the Development of Marxism, it aims to systematically reaffirm the core principles of dialectical materialism in opposition to the idealist distortions promoted by Healy.

North’s intervention is significant for several reasons: it reaffirms the Marx–Hegel break as the cornerstone of Marxist philosophy, emphasizes the importance of objective reality over subjective understanding, underscores the central role of historical materialism and class struggle, and reveals how philosophical deviations can lead to political consequences, showing that idealism often results in opportunism. Additionally, it equips the cadre for the political struggle that ultimately led to the 1985–86 split with the WRP.

In this context, North’s critique not only rejects Healy but also reaffirms the entire theoretical tradition of the Fourth International. It continues the SLL’s opposition to Pabloism, the Workers League’s resistance to Wohlforth’s pragmatism, and Trotsky’s own defense of Marxism against Stalinist distortions. Therefore, this document is a significant milestone in revolutionary Marxism history, signifying the ICFI’s reassertion of its theoretical independence and the preservation of the Marxist method’s continuity.

XIV. Contemporary Relevance: Idealism and the Pseudo‑Left

Healy's philosophical tendencies still persist and have resurfaced in new ways within today's pseudo-left. These include replacing class with consciousness, prioritizing subjective identity over social relations, and retreating into academic idealism, all of which echo the same core approach that North identified in 1982.

Today’s pseudo-left movements—whether based on postmodernism, identity politics, or the academic obsession with “radical theory”—have several common traits with Healy’s method. They view consciousness as the main force shaping history. They replace concrete class relations with abstract notions like race, gender, and identity. They disconnect theory from the material realities of capitalist production. Additionally, they prioritize subjective experience over objective analysis.

North’s critique offers essential theoretical tools to counter these tendencies. It shows that defending dialectical materialism is inherently linked to maintaining the political independence of the working class. The fight against idealism — whether through Healyism or modern pseudo-leftism — is fundamentally a defense of the Marxist method. Thus, the importance of North’s document is not just historical but urgent, as it directly addresses the current theoretical challenges facing the revolutionary movement.

XV. The Dialectic of Theory and Practice in the ICFI’s Struggle

The fight by the International Committee of the Fourth International against Healy’s philosophical distortions is not just an intellectual debate. It exemplifies the dialectical connection between theory and practice. The ICFI’s support for Marxist philosophy is directly linked to its safeguarding of the political independence of the working class.

Marxism is fundamentally a guide for revolutionary action, not merely contemplative thought. Its validity is judged by how well it reveals the inherent contradictions of capitalism and guides the working class toward resolving them. Healy’s approach failed this criterion because it prioritized cognition over real-world objective reality, breaking the essential connection between theory and practice. Consequently, the party stopped analyzing the world directly and instead began interpreting it through the leader’s abstractions.

North’s critique reaffirms the essential unity of theory and practice through dialectical reasoning. It emphasizes that: theory should stem from analyzing objective reality, rather than from the self-driven development of thought; practice must be directed by theory rather than subjective leader impressions; and the revolutionary party's program should be grounded in the laws governing capitalism's dynamics, not in the unpredictable factors of diplomatic alliances or nationalist regimes.

In this context, the ICFI’s opposition to Healyism reaffirmed the Marxist view of the party as the conscious expression of the working class's historical movement. It also denounced the bureaucratic approach where party leaders replace their understanding with the actual interests of the proletariat.

XVI. The Philosophical Roots of Bureaucratic Degeneration

The bureaucratic degeneration of the WRP did not arise spontaneously. It was rooted in a philosophical method that elevated the subjective authority of the leadership above the objective laws of history. Idealism is the philosophical foundation of bureaucracy.

Healy’s “Studies” created a theoretical environment in which the leader’s cognition became the ultimate arbiter of truth. The cadre were trained not to analyse the world but to interpret it through the categories provided by Healy. This produced a form of intellectual dependency that mirrored the membership's organisational dependency on the leadership.

North’s critique highlights the core mechanism of this process: idealism breaks down the objective constraints of reality, enabling leadership to justify any political shift. The focus shifts from the collective cognition to the leader, who asserts exclusive insight into the flow of thought. Suppressing criticism becomes a philosophical necessity, as dissent is seen as a failure to understand the leader’s dialectical perspective. Consequently, the party drifts away from the working class, since its direction is shaped not by objective conditions but by the leader’s subjective interpretations.

This is why the WRP’s political decline was accompanied by increasingly authoritarian internal practices, which the philosophical method required. When cognition is viewed as the main driver of history, the leader symbolizes this cognition, turning the party into an extension of his will. Consequently, the ICFI’s opposition to Healyism was a defense against the bureaucratic distortion of the revolutionary party. It aimed to uphold the Leninist idea of democratic centralism, where unity in action depends on the maximum freedom for theoretical debate.

XVII. The Restoration of the Marxist Method After the Split

The split with the WRP in 1985–86 was more than just an organizational split; it was the result of a long-standing theoretical conflict. North’s critique was instrumental in readying the cadre for this division by revealing the philosophical foundations behind the WRP’s decline.

Following the split, the ICFI embarked on a systematic effort to revive the Marxist method. This included reaffirming the importance of historical materialism as the foundation of revolutionary theory, reestablishing the Marx–Hegel rupture as the core of dialectical materialism, and shifting the movement toward objective analysis of world capitalism instead of focusing on leaders' subjective impressions. They aimed to rebuild the party based on democratic centralism, emphasizing theoretical clarity and political independence, while reconnecting with the working class, whose struggles form the objective basis for revolutionary action.

This restoration was not a simple return to previous practices but a renewal of the Marxist method adapted to current conditions. It reaffirmed the ongoing existence of the Fourth International and guaranteed that the experiences gained from the fight against Healyism would guide the movement's future growth.

XVIII. Toward a Concluding Synthesis: The Significance of North’s Critique

North’s Contribution to a Critique remains one of the most vital theoretical texts in ICFI history. Its importance is not only in countering Healy’s philosophical mistakes but also in reaffirming core Marxist principles. The document shows that philosophical errors have political effects: idealism results in opportunism, bureaucracy, and neglect of the working class. Defending dialectical materialism is linked to defending proletarian political independence. The revolutionary party must base its program on the objective laws of capitalism’s development, not just the subjective understanding of its leaders. Combating revisionism is an ongoing task, demanding continuous vigilance and clear theory. The survival of the Fourth International relies on maintaining the Marxist method, which underpins revolutionary practice.

By highlighting the idealist roots of Healy’s “Studies,” North not only defended Marxism from misrepresentation but also set the stage for future political battles. His critique continues to be an essential resource for modern Marxists facing the rise of idealism through identity politics, postmodernism, and the pseudo-left. Consequently, this document is more than just a historical record; it remains a vital and active contribution to the ongoing fight to preserve the theoretical and political integrity of the revolutionary movement.

XIX. Conclusion: The Struggle for Marxism Against Idealist Degeneration

David North's critique in *A Contribution to a Critique of G. Healy’s “Studies in Dialectical Materialism’* marks a significant moment in the history of the Fourth International. It goes beyond simply countering philosophical mistakes to exemplify the unbreakable link between Marxist theory and revolutionary action. The fight against Healy’s idealism was fundamentally a battle to defend the scientific basis of the revolutionary movement.

The degeneration of the WRP exposed a core truth: a revolutionary party’s crisis is fundamentally a crisis of Marxist theory. Opportunism doesn’t occur randomly; it appears when the leadership departs from the materialist approach, replacing objective analysis with subjective feelings. This shift is rooted in idealism, which erodes the constraints of reality, boosts leadership authority, and turns the party into a tool of bureaucratic control.

Healy’s “Studies” were the ideological expression of this process. By reconstructing the Hegelian Absolute in the guise of Marxist dialectics, Healy severed the connection between theory and the material world. Cognition became an autonomous, infinite process; the leader became the embodiment of this process; and the cadre became passive recipients of his insights. The result was a party that no longer oriented itself to the working class but to the diplomatic needs of bourgeois nationalist regimes.

North’s critique dismantled this ideological structure, reaffirming the Marx–Hegel division as the core of dialectical materialism. It emphasized the importance of objective reality over subjective perception, reaffirmed the significance of historical materialism and class struggle, and highlighted the political outcomes of philosophical errors, showing how idealism naturally results in opportunism, bureaucracy, and the loss of proletarian independence.

The importance of this struggle goes well beyond the specific collapse of the WRP. The tendencies associated with Healy—such as replacing class analysis with individual consciousness, prioritizing subjective identity over social relations, and turning to abstract idealism—have reappeared in new ways within today's pseudo-left. The academic obsession with “radical theory,” the fixation on identity, and the dismissing of universal class politics all demonstrate the same fundamental approach that North identified in 1982.

The defense of dialectical materialism is an ongoing necessity rather than a one-time historical task. The revolutionary movement must constantly reaffirm the materialist view of history, resisting the influence of idealism. Its program should be grounded in the objective laws governing capitalism's development, not in the subjective perceptions of leaders or the ideological trends of the petty-bourgeois intelligentsia. Additionally, it must maintain the unity of theory and practice, understanding that the validity of a philosophical approach is measured by its ability to guide the working class toward seizing political power.

North’s critique continues to stand as a prime example of Marxist polemic. It merges philosophical thoroughness with political clarity, offering historical insight aligned with revolutionary aims. The critique shows that the fight for Marxism is inherently linked to resisting all types of idealist mystification. It also stresses that the ongoing existence of the Fourth International relies on maintaining the Marxist method—the scientific basis for the proletarian revolution.

In this context, criticizing Healy’s “Studies” goes beyond being just a chapter in the history of the ICFI. It serves as a contribution to the ongoing fight for the ideological and political unity of the revolutionary movement. It reminds us that defending Marxism is not simply an academic matter but a vital practical necessity, crucial for the emancipation of the working class and the achievement of socialism worldwide.

 

The Philosophical Catastrophe of Stalinism: Yakhot and the Historiography of Suppression

I. Introduction: Philosophy as a Site of Class Struggle

Any thorough analysis of Marxism must recognise that the Stalinist counterrevolution was not just a political shift but a profound epistemic rupture. The eradication of the Left Opposition, the liquidation of the Old Bolsheviks, and the bureaucratic strengthening in the 1930s were all accompanied by a targeted attack on Marxism's philosophical roots. This key insight is captured in Yakhot’s The Suppression of Philosophy in the USSR, a work that transcends the usual boundaries of Soviet intellectual history. Yakhot argues that Stalinism’s triumph involved destroying dialectical reasoning, silencing ideological debates, and physically eliminating the philosophical scholars.

In this context, Yakhot’s book serves not only as a historical record but also as a historiographical intervention. It highlights the philosophical dimension of the bureaucratic counterrevolution—an aspect frequently concealed by Stalinist falsification and post-Soviet liberal revisionism. For a monograph examining the development of Marxist theory during Stalin’s period, Yakhot’s work is indispensable.

II. The Early Soviet Philosophical Renaissance and Its Historiographical Erasure

Yakhot starts by analysing the intellectual culture of the early Soviet era, directly challenging mainstream historical accounts. Contrary to the simplified view of Bolshevism as anti-intellectual, he illustrates that the period after 1917 experienced an extraordinary surge in Marxist theoretical activity. The publication of Under the Banner of Marxism, featuring key letters by Lenin and Trotsky, marked the alliance of revolutionary action with philosophical exploration.

This is an important point in historiography. The Stalinist narrative, later embraced by Cold War liberalism, claims that Marxism is deeply dogmatic, opposes intellectual freedom, and is unable to evolve philosophically. Yakhot’s analysis of the 1920s shows this view as a retrospective interpretation. In fact, the early Soviet period was the most intellectually dynamic phase in Marxism’s history. Therefore, the latter catastrophe should be seen not as a natural consequence of Marxism’s internal logic but as the violent rejection of its foundational ideas.

III. The Mechanists, the Deborinists, and the Political Stakes of Philosophical Debate

Yakhot’s approach to the mechanist–Deborinist debate is crucial for historiography. He avoids simplifying the discussion to factional rivalry or superficial Sovietology labels. Instead, he demonstrates that both sides made sincere efforts to engage with Marxism's philosophical heritage during a time of revolutionary change.

The mechanists, who reduced dialectics to natural science through a positivist approach, represented the pressures of a society struggling to industrialise. In contrast, the Deborinists upheld the Hegelian core of Marxist methodology. Their focus on contradiction, mediation, and totality aligned, whether explicitly or implicitly, with the intellectual seriousness of the Left Opposition. Yakhot’s historical analysis highlights that the philosophical debates of the 1920s were deeply intertwined with the political conflict between the proletarian vanguard and the growing bureaucracy. The Deborinists’ connection to Trotsky’s ideas made them unacceptable to the emerging Stalinist regime. Their defeat was less about losing a philosophical argument and more about bureaucratic force suppressing intellectual independence.

IV. Stalin’s Intervention: Philosophy as a Police Operation

As Yakhot explains, the pivotal moment occurred when Stalin, in December 1930, accused Deborin of “Menshevizing idealism.” This accusation is logically meaningless; its purpose is political. Stalin’s directive for philosophers to "expose the philosophical foundations of Trotskyism" exposes the true aim of the purge.

Historically, this moment is pivotal because it marks philosophy's transformation from a simple field of study to a means of political dominance. Yakhot’s analysis shows how bureaucracy suppresses theory not through discussion but through administrative commands, accusations, and intimidation. Philosophy becomes indoctrination, dialectics turn into inflexible doctrine, and Marxism becomes a lifeless relic. This point requires rewriting the historiography of Soviet philosophy. The eradication of philosophical debate was less about intellectual disagreement and more a class struggle within the realm of theory.

V. Diamat as Bureaucratic Ideology

Yakhot’s critique of Stalinist “Diamat” stands as a significant contribution to the historiography of Marxist philosophy. He argues that Diamat was not an evolution of Marxism but its bureaucratic perversion. It is overly simplistic, rigid, resistant to contradiction, and unable to comprehend the social totality fully.

Historically, many see Diamat as the official philosophy of Marxism, a view held by Stalinists, anti-communists, and some Western Marxists. However, Yakhot shows this is incorrect. Instead, Diamat was used as an ideological tool to control, providing the bureaucracy with a universal justification for its arbitrary authority. Equating Diamat with Marxism means accepting Stalinist distortions without question. Yakhot’s research offers an essential correction.

VI. The Great Terror and the Physical Liquidation of Marxist Philosophy

Yakhot’s description of the Great Terror forms the moral core of his book. He outlines the destruction of the philosophical intelligentsia with a sober tone, heightening the sense of horror. The Institute of Red Professors is dismantled; its students and faculty are arrested, executed, or vanish. Philosophical journals are cleansed; archives are rewritten; names disappear from bibliographies.

From a historiographical perspective, this chapter is devastating. It demonstrates that Stalinism did not just distort Marxism but ultimately eradicated it. The annihilation of Soviet philosophy was not merely an intellectual loss but a political atrocity. The ruling bureaucracy maintained its power by physically eradicating those who embodied Marxist ideals. This is the point at which the historiography of the USSR must confront the full implications of the Stalinist counterrevolution. 

VII. Trotsky’s Philosophical Legacy and Its Restoration

Yakhot’s effort to reestablish Trotsky’s philosophical importance stands as one of the most daring parts of the book. In 1981, he challenged decades of Stalinist distortions and post-Soviet liberal reinterpretations. Trotsky’s analyses of Plekhanov, Lenin, and dialectics are given the serious attention they merit. From a historiographical perspective, this is crucial. Trotsky has been systematically omitted from Soviet philosophical history, not because of irrelevance but because his presence highlights the intellectual failures of Stalinism. Yakhot’s act of reclaiming Trotsky’s role is inherently political: it reaffirms the continuity of Marxist theory in opposition to the bureaucratic break.

VIII. The Long Shadow of Suppression: From Zhdanov to Gorbachev

Yakhot’s analysis of the post-Stalin period emphasises the lasting effects of a philosophical crisis. The stagnation during Brezhnev’s rule and Gorbachev’s ideological uncertainty are connected to the rupture in the 1930s. This perspective is important in historical studies. The collapse of the USSR should be seen as linked to the disintegration of Marxist philosophy. A society that discards its fundamental theoretical basis cannot sustain a socialist system.

IX. Conclusion: Yakhot and the Historiography of Marxist Catastrophe

Yakhot’s The Suppression of Philosophy in the USSR is more than just a historical analysis; it is a crucial intervention in historiography. It reasserts the philosophical aspects of the Stalinist counterrevolution, highlights the intellectual destruction caused by the bureaucracy, and reestablishes Trotsky's importance in Soviet philosophical history. For a monograph on the trajectory of Marxist theory, Yakhot’s work is essential. It shows that defending Marxism goes hand in hand with clarifying its philosophical roots—and that revitalising Marxism depends on revisiting its dialectical principles.

X. 1. Yakhot and the International Historiography of Marxism

Yakhot’s work gains greater significance when viewed within the wider context of international Marxist historiography. For many years, mainstream narratives— ranging from Stalinist and liberal to much of Western Marxism—have shared a central idea: that the decline of Soviet philosophy was an intrinsic part of Marxism itself. This perspective is often expressed through terms like “Leninist authoritarianism,” “the totalitarian logic of dialectics,” or “the inherent dogmatism of Marxist theory,” which collectively reinforce the idea of an ideological victory by the bureaucracy.

Yakhot’s intervention challenges this consensus by showing that the destruction of philosophy was not a result of Marxism’s internal contradictions, but rather a bureaucratic denial of Marxism. This marks a major historiographical break, reasserting the role of revolutionary intellectuals, emphasising the political substance of philosophical discussions, and highlighting the class nature of the Stalinist counterrevolution.

In this context, Yakhot’s work subtly aligns—though not overtly—with the Trotskyist historiography tradition of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI). Both emphasise that the trajectory of Marxist theory is linked to the political conflict between the proletarian vanguard and the bureaucratic caste.

X. 2. Against the “Totalitarian” Paradigm: Yakhot’s Materialist Corrective

A key historiographical function of Yakhot’s book is its critique of the “totalitarian” paradigm that has dominated Western scholarship since the Cold War. This model claims that Stalinism naturally results from Leninism and that the suppression of philosophy merely reflects a unified, ideology-driven state.

Yakhot’s evidence systematically challenges this view. The early Soviet state enjoyed a rich, diverse, and creative intellectual environment. The suppression of philosophy was not rooted in Marxist ideology but served as a political move by a rising bureaucratic class. The attack on dialectics was driven not by ideological dogmatism but by bureaucratic necessity to suppress theoretical awareness.

In essence, Yakhot reestablishes the specific historical context that the totalitarian framework usually overlooks. He argues that Stalinism did not represent the peak of Marxism but was actually its opposite—a point Trotsky emphasised repeatedly, yet one that mainstream history has often ignored.

X. 3. Yakhot and the Critique of Western Marxism

Yakhot’s work highlights the limitations of Western Marxism, especially in branches that discarded dialectical materialism in favour of structuralism, phenomenology, or neo-Kantianism. These trends often viewed Soviet philosophy as a single entity, overlooking the lively debates of the 1920s and the rigid dogma of the 1930s. By reconstructing the real philosophical struggles of the early USSR, Yakhot prompts a rethinking of the development of Western Marxism. 

He argues that the decline of dialectics in the West was not due to Marxism’s fundamental flaws but was a response to the Stalinist caricature of Marxist thought. Thus, Western Marxism internalised the distortions it aimed to oppose. Overall, Yakhot’s work serves a dual purpose: it recovers the suppressed history of Soviet philosophy and reveals the ideological distortions that influenced Western Marxist self-perception.

X. 4. The Historiographical Stakes: Marxism, Bureaucracy, and the Destruction of Theory

Yakhot’s book teaches that the fate of Marxist philosophy is tied to the class struggle within the Soviet Union. The dismantling of dialectics was not just an intellectual mistake but a political move by the bureaucracy. Stalinism’s philosophical collapse is inherently linked to the political collapse of the Soviet Union. This understanding significantly affects Marxist historiography: it contradicts the idea that Marxism is inherently authoritarian or dogmatic. Instead, it shows that suppressing theory was a counterrevolutionary action. It reaffirms the connection between Marx, Lenin, and Trotsky as proponents of dialectical materialism. It also reveals how Stalinist and liberal histories serve ideological purposes. Yakhot’s work becomes an important tool in reclaiming Marxism from its distorters.

X. 5. Transition: From Yakhot to the ICFI’s Philosophical Struggle

Yakhot’s work holds particular historiographical importance when compared to the philosophical debates within the International Committee of the Fourth International during the 1982–86 crisis. As Frederick Choate notes in his preface, Yakhot’s manuscript circulated within the ICFI at a critical time, when the organisation was grappling with internal disagreements over dialectics, Hegel, and Marxist philosophy. There are clear parallels: in both instances, the core issue was defending dialectical materialism against idealist distortions. Additionally, in both cases, the philosophical struggle was closely linked to political orientation, and the eventual outcome shaped the future of the revolutionary movement. From the Soviet Catastrophe to the Crisis of Marxist Method: Why Yakhot Matters for the ICFI

Yakhot’s work has far-reaching historiographical implications beyond the Soviet Union. His analysis of Stalinism's philosophical collapse prompts a re-evaluation of the global trajectory of Marxist theory in the 20th century. If the breakdown of dialectics was a prerequisite for the USSR's bureaucratic counterrevolution, then defending dialectical materialism becomes a crucial goal for any revolutionary movement aiming to prevent a similar outcome.

This is where the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) comes into view. Unlike other Marxist factions, the ICFI emphasised that fighting Stalinism was inherently linked to defending Marxist philosophy. The internal crisis within the ICFI between 1982 and 1986—focused on Britain’s Workers Revolutionary Party (WRP)—was not incidental but a confrontation with the same philosophical issues Yakhot highlights in the 1920s Soviet Union.

Hence, Yakhot’s work acts as a conceptual link between the philosophical devastation under Stalinism and the internal struggles within the Trotskyist movement. These parallels are not surface-level; they are indeed structural.

X. 7. The Recurrence of the Philosophical Question: Dialectics as the Axis of Revolutionary Continuity

Yakhot’s notable contribution lies in demonstrating that the philosophical debates of the 1920s were more than mere academic disputes; they reflected the class struggle within the Soviet Union. The mechanists’ positivism, the Deborinists’ Hegelianism, and the bureaucratic enforcement of Diamat all served as political stances cloaked as philosophical ideas. This understanding carries significant implications for the history of the ICFI.

The 1982–86 crisis also centred on philosophical conflicts that revealed underlying political trends: the WRP leadership’s shift toward idealism, subjectivism, and pseudo-Hegelian voluntarism, the move away from historical materialism towards an impressionistic, “practice-based” epistemology, the rise of charismatic authority over theoretical clarity, and the weakening of the Marxist view of the party as the conscious representative of the working class.

These trends reflect, albeit distantly, the philosophical decline that Yakhot identified in the Soviet Union during the 1930s. Unlike the Soviet intelligentsia, however, the ICFI had a deliberate theoretical foundation—Trotsky’s In Defence of Marxism—which helped it resist and ultimately overcome the revisionist tendencies. Thus, Yakhot’s analysis offers illumination on the ICFI’s fight by presenting a historical example: the dismantling of dialectics invariably leads to political decline.

X. 8. The Bureaucratic Logic of Philosophical Revisionism

Yakhot’s analysis of how Stalinist repression targeted philosophy uncovers a key rule of bureaucratic systems: they cannot accept dialectical thinking because it reveals their internal contradictions. This principle extends beyond the Soviet context and applies to any organisation where bureaucratic tendencies develop. The decline of the WRP exemplifies this pattern vividly: the leadership’s rejection of theoretical debate, the prioritisation of “practice” over theory to justify opportunism, the labelling of criticism as disloyalty, and the turning of philosophical issues into personal loyalty tests. 

These mechanisms mirror Stalin’s actions against the Deborinists—different forms, same underlying logic. Bureaucratic power suppresses dialectical consciousness to maintain control. Thus, the ICFI's fight against the WRP leadership was not only organisational but also deeply philosophical, aimed at defending the integrity of the Marxist method.

X. 9. Yakhot and the Necessity of Philosophical Vigilance

Yakhot’s core argument is that the future of Marxist philosophy is fundamentally linked to the fate of the revolutionary movement. The collapse of dialectics in the USSR enabled a bureaucratic counterrevolution. Therefore, defending dialectics within the ICFI was not merely theoretical but a vital political act.

This understanding justifies the next part of this monograph. The ICFI’s struggle from 1982 to 86 should be seen not as an internal conflict but as the ongoing battle—on a different level—of the same struggle lost in the Soviet Union during the 1920s. Yakhot’s work thus offers a conceptual framework for understanding the ICFI’s crisis.

The following will explore the philosophical fight within the ICFI, illustrating how defending dialectical materialism was crucial to maintaining Marxism's continuity amid bureaucratic decline.

The ICFI’s Philosophical Struggle (1982–86):

Dialectics, Bureaucracy, and the Fight Against Neo-Hegelian Revisionism

I. Introduction: The Return of the Philosophical Question

The conflict within the International Committee of the Fourth International from

The period from 1982 to 1986 was more than an organisational dispute or a clash of personalities. It centred on the core issue highlighted by Yakhot: the future of dialectical materialism under bureaucratic pressure. Just as the Stalinist bureaucracy could not accept the existence of a philosophically aware Marxist intelligentsia, the rising bureaucratic currents within the Workers Revolutionary Party (WRP) in Britain clashed with Marxist theoretical principles. Consequently, the struggle within the ICFI was not just about tactics or leadership but fundamentally about the philosophical method that supports the revolutionary movement.

Yakhot’s reinterpretation of the Soviet 1920s offers the essential concept for understanding this crisis. The similarities are clear: in both instances, the suppression or misrepresentation of dialectics acted as the ideological foundation for political decline.

II. The WRP’s Drift into Idealism: The Philosophical Roots of Opportunism

The decline of the WRP leadership under Gerry Healy primarily manifested in philosophical issues. What initially seemed like political opportunism—including alliances with bourgeois nationalist regimes, unprincipled dealings with Middle Eastern governments, and the abandonment of a consistent working-class focus—stemmed from a deeper shift in theory. The WRP leadership increasingly adopted a neo-Hegelian subjectivism, where the party’s “practice” became the final measure of truth. This voluntarist approach reversed the Marxist method: practice was no longer seen as the unity of theory and action shaped by social relations but as the direct expression of the leadership’s will.

This was the philosophical equivalent of the bureaucratic logic Yakhot describes in Stalin’s intervention against the Deborinists. In both cases, the leadership replaced dialectical analysis of objective contradictions with its own authority. The WRP’s philosophical revisionism thus provided the ideological basis for its political opportunism. Dropping dialectics was not just an intellectual mistake but a political necessity as the leadership moved away from the working class. III. The ICFI’s Response: Reasserting the Marxist Method

The International Committee’s response to the WRP’s decline was rooted in defending dialectical materialism. This was more than an abstract philosophical debate; it was a political effort to maintain the unity of the Marxist movement. The ICFI emphasised the importance of objective social contradictions over subjective perceptions, the link between theory and practice, the historical nature of consciousness, and the role of the working class as the revolutionary agent. These principles were not merely theoretical ideas but the core methodological principles of Trotskyism. Consequently, the ICFI’s critique of the WRP leadership was a reassertion of Marxist methodology against bureaucratic misrepresentation.

This struggle mirrors the Deborinists’ defence of dialectics against mechanists and, later, against Stalin’s suppression. However, unlike Soviet philosophers of the 1930s, the ICFI had a clear theoretical tradition—Trotsky’s In Defence of Marxism—that allowed it to resist and eventually overcome the revisionist trend.

IV. The Philosophical Stakes: Dialectics or Bureaucracy

The main issue in the ICFI’s 1982–86 conflict was similar to what Yakhot describes in the Soviet 1920s: whether Marxist philosophy would stay the conscious approach of the revolutionary movement or be replaced by a bureaucratic pseudo-theory. The WRP leadership’s neo-Hegelianism acted as a form of ideological self-justification. By placing the party’s “practice” above objective analysis, it protected the leadership from criticism and turned theoretical disputes into political disloyalty. This mechanism mirrors Yakhot’s description of Stalin’s criticism of the Deborinists: philosophy becomes a test of obedience rather than a tool for understanding.

The ICFI’s support for dialectics was thus a defence of the revolutionary party as a conscious, collective, and historically rooted organisation. It opposed the bureaucratic approach that had dismantled Soviet philosophy and jeopardised the Trotskyist movement.

V. The Outcome: The Restoration of Marxist Theory

The defeat of the WRP leadership in 1985–86 marked a decisive victory for Marxist philosophy. The ICFI’s reaffirmation of dialectical materialism prevented the development of a bureaucratic caste within the movement and maintained the continuity of Trotskyism. 

This outcome sharply contrasts with the Soviet experience: while the Deborinists were defeated, the ICFI succeeded; where the Soviet philosophical intelligentsia was destroyed, the ICFI defended and expanded the Marxist method; and where Stalinism triumphed through the suppression of theory, the ICFI succeeded through its defence of theory. In this way, the ICFI’s struggle symbolises the complete rejection of Stalinist philosophical repression. It continues the tradition that Yakhot aims to revive.

VI. Conclusion: Yakhot, the ICFI, and the Continuity of Marxism

Yakhot’s The Suppression of Philosophy in the USSR  offers both a historical and theoretical foundation for understanding the ICFI’s struggles from 1982 to 86. Central to this is the shared issue: the link between dialectical materialism and the political integrity of the revolutionary movement.

This completes the historiographical arc initiated by Yakhot: from the suppression of philosophy under Stalinism to its defence within the ICFI. The next part will examine the implications of this struggle for the contemporary crisis of Marxist theory and the tasks of revolutionary philosophy today.

Dialectical Materialism: A Revolutionary Epistemology: The Method Restored

 I. Introduction: Why Method Matters

The success or failure of any revolutionary movement ultimately depends on its method. While political programs can be changed, tactics can be adjusted, and organisational structures redefined, the core epistemological foundation—the way a movement understands the world—determines whether it can act consciously within that framework. Dialectical materialism is not merely an optional philosophical add-on to Marxism; it constitutes the very essence of Marxist consciousness. Without it, Marxism risks degenerating into empiricism, voluntarism, or bureaucratic dogma.

The earlier chapters have illustrated this with historical accuracy. Yakhot’s analysis of the Soviet collapse indicates that the dismantling of dialectics was essential for the emergence of the Stalinist bureaucracy. Similarly, the ICFI’s fight from 1982 to 1986 demonstrates that defending dialectics was crucial for maintaining Trotskyism. The clear lesson is that the destiny of Marxist philosophy is directly linked to the future of the revolutionary movement.

II. The Essence of Dialectical Materialism: Contradiction, Totality, Mediation

Dialectical materialism starts with the idea that reality is dynamic and inherently contradictory. Social structures do more than exist; they evolve, change, and break down through conflicts between opposing forces. This is a scientific perspective, not a metaphysical one. Capitalism exemplifies a system full of contradictions: conflicts between labour and capital, use-value and exchange-value, the global scope of production versus the national state, and the socialisation of labour versus the appropriation of private surplus value.

Understanding these contradictions is key to understanding the course of history. Dialectics is not just the study of contradiction; it encompasses the study of totality. Every phenomenon must be understood in relation to the entire system. Empirical facts alone reveal nothing on their own. They gain meaning only when considered within the context of social relations. Additionally, dialectics involves studying mediation—the concrete processes through which contradictions develop. Mediation counteracts both mechanical determinism and subjective voluntarism by showing how objective tendencies are realised through human actions and how human agency influences them. This triad—contradiction, totality, and mediation—is fundamental to Marxist epistemology.

III. Against Empiricism: The Poverty of “Facts” Without Theory

Empiricism, the dominant ideology of bourgeois thought, treats facts as self-evident givens. It assumes that knowledge arises from the accumulation of data, that the world reveals itself directly to the senses, and that theory is merely a classificatory tool.

Marxism rejects this. Facts do not speak for themselves; they are interpreted through concepts. The “raw data” of capitalism—prices, wages, profits, productivity—conceal the underlying social relations that produce them. Empiricism, therefore, reproduces the surface appearance of capitalist society and mistakes it for its essence.

This explains why empiricism tends to be politically conservative. It fails to understand the contradictions within capitalism because it only perceives surface appearances. It observes stability amidst crises, continuity amid ruptures, and reform where revolutionary change is needed. Conversely, dialectical materialism uncovers the system's inner dynamics, turning the chaotic flow of empirical information into a clear comprehension of the inevitable course of history. IV. Against Idealism: The Limits of Consciousness Without Materialism

If empiricism leads to passivity, then idealism tends to become voluntarism. Idealism regards consciousness as autonomous, sees history as driven by ideas, and considers political struggle as an expression of subjective will. This underpins both bourgeois liberalism and bureaucratic pseudo-Marxism. The WRP’s neo-Hegelian shift in the 1980s vividly demonstrates this risk. By prioritising the party’s “practice” over objective analysis, the leadership used theory to justify its authority. This mirrors Yakhot’s critique of Stalin’s suppression of the Deborinists: the replacement of objective analysis with subjective authority.

Dialectical materialism dismisses this idea, asserting that consciousness is not independent but mirrors objective social relations. However, consciousness is not passive; it becomes a material force when it recognises the contradictions in reality and acts accordingly. This harmony between objectivity and subjectivity forms the core of the Marxist method.

V. The Party as the Bearer of Dialectical Consciousness

The revolutionary party is more than just an organisational structure; it has served as the bearer of dialectical consciousness throughout history. While the working class directly experiences capitalism's contradictions, it does not naturally develop a scientific understanding of these conflicts. This understanding necessitates theory, particularly the dialectical method. Consequently, the party acts as a bridge between objective contradictions and subjective awareness. It analyses systemic evolution, recognises developmental tendencies, and creates a program that reflects the historical interests of the working class.

However, this function relies entirely on the party being rooted in dialectical materialism. Without this foundation, the party risks becoming either a bureaucratic entity enforcing its authority on the class or a tailist organisation simply following spontaneous movements. Therefore, dialectics is not merely an academic luxury; it is essential for effective revolutionary leadership.

VI. The Restoration of Method: Lessons from the ICFI

The ICFI’s victory in the 1982–86 struggle marks the reestablishment of dialectical materialism within the Trotskyist movement. By opposing the idealist distortions espoused by the WRP leadership, the ICFI emphasised the importance of method in revolutionary politics. This renewal consisted of three key elements: reaffirming objectivity and understanding that the movement should be driven by analysing objective contradictions, not subjective impressions; defending theory by asserting that Marxism is a scientific approach rather than just slogans or opportunist justifications; and reaffirming historical continuity by acknowledging that the fight for dialectics is fundamentally a fight for the ongoing validity of Marxism itself.

In this context, the ICFI’s fight was a rejection of Stalinist suppression of philosophy. While Stalinism eradicated dialectics to strengthen bureaucratic control, the ICFI defended dialectics to maintain revolutionary continuity.

VII. Conclusion: Dialectical Materialism as the Consciousness of the Future

Dialectical materialism remains a vital framework for understanding the future, not just a relic of the past. In today’s era of global economic, ecological, and geopolitical crises, it is more important than ever to analyse capitalism’s inherent contradictions scientifically. Restoring the dialectical method is therefore a political necessity, not just an academic pursuit.

The revolutionary movement depends on a conscious understanding of society’s laws of change. Action requires understanding, which in turn requires a method, and that method is rooted in dialectical materialism. Consequently, revitalising Marxist epistemology is essential for revitalising the revolutionary project itself.

The Contemporary Crisis of Marxist Theory :

Neoliberalism, Postmodernism, and the Eclipse of Dialectics

I. Introduction: The Vacuum After the Counterrevolutions

The fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the subsequent wave of neoliberal triumphalism resulted in more than just a political setback for the working class; it triggered a deep epistemological crisis. Global capitalism's ideological tools declared the “end of history,” claimed Marxism was outdated, and asserted that systemic alternatives were impossible. This ideological push did not merely suppress revolutionary movements; it transformed the very landscape of theoretical thought. Consequently, dialectical materialism faced a significant eclipse. When stripped of its revolutionary aspects, Marxism was either reduced to a cultural critique within academic circles or dismissed as a relic of the 20th century. Meanwhile, postmodernism, identity-focused epistemologies, and neoliberal technocratic approaches filled the void created by the collapse of Soviet philosophy and the fragmentation of the international left.

This part examines the modern crisis of Marxist theory as the ideological reflection of both stability and instability in global capitalism under neoliberalism. It contends that the decline of dialectics is not coincidental but a structural requirement for a system in crisis.

II. Neoliberalism and the Ideology of the Market: The New Empiricism

Neoliberalism presents itself not as an ideology but as a natural order. Its epistemology is empirical, technocratic, and anti-theoretical. It claims that markets are neutral mechanisms, individuals are rational agents, society is a collection of preferences, and history is a series of policy changes. This perspective is a modern version of the empiricism Marx criticised in the 19th century. It simplifies social relations to measurable data, hiding the underlying class dynamics that drive them. Like the 19th-century vulgar economist, the neoliberal economist focuses only on prices, incentives, and equilibria, ignoring exploitation, contradiction, or crisis.

The ideological role of neoliberal empiricism is to obscure capitalism, making it difficult to see its full scope. Reducing social relationships to data points prevents a comprehensive critique. This approach acts as the epistemological equivalent of capital's globalisation. Consequently, dialectical materialism, which emphasises contradiction and totality, clashes with neoliberal ideology. Its decline becomes a political necessity for those in power.

III. Postmodernism and the Fragmentation of Theory: The New Idealism

If neoliberalism is viewed as the new form of empiricism, then postmodernism can be seen as the new idealism. It arose in the late 20th century as a response to the failures of Stalinism and the setbacks faced by the working class. Postmodernism rejects the idea of totality, dismisses the concept of historical necessity, and breaks down social structures into discourses. Its main claims include: There is no single, coherent subject of history; only fragments exist. There is no absolute truth, only narratives. There is no class, only various identities. 

This stance represents a philosophical rejection of Marxism. Unlike Marxism, which aims to uncover society's objective laws of development, postmodernism denies that such laws exist. While Marxism regards the working class as the revolutionary agent, postmodernism dissolves the notion of a unified subject into multiple positionalities. Additionally, where Marxism advocates for the unity of theory and practice, postmodernism reduces theory to textual play. Postmodernism's political role is to make revolutionary action impossible. By rejecting the existence of objective structures, it also denies the possibility of changing them.

IV. The Eclipse of Dialectics: A Convergence of Empiricism and Idealism Neoliberal empiricism and postmodern idealism may seem like opposites, but they both oppose dialectical thinking. They dismiss concepts like totality, contradiction, and the necessity of historical change. Instead, they reduce social reality to surface appearances—be they data points or discourses—and deny the objective laws of motion. This similarity is intentional, stemming from the needs of a capitalist system that cannot endure scientific critiques of its contradictions. Thus, the decline of dialectics symbolises the ongoing crisis of global capitalism.

The outcome is a conceptual framework in which Marxism is either reduced to cultural critique, integrated into identity politics, or regarded as a flawed political endeavour. The revolutionary components of Marxism—such as its class analysis, crisis theory, and idea of historical necessity—are consistently pushed to the margins.

V. The Academic Left and the Retreat from Revolution

The modern academic left has largely given in to this ideological climate. While Marxism persists in universities, it often exists in a diluted form, serving as a tool for literary analysis or cultural studies, or as a historical oddity. The revolutionary aspects of Marxism—its critique of capitalism as a contradictory totality and its emphasis on the working class as the driver of historical change— are frequently missing. 

This shift reflects the defeats the working class faced in the late 20th century. Without a revolutionary movement, Marxism becomes merely academic; without dialectics, it turns eclectic; and without historical materialism, it reduces to cultural theory. Consequently, the crisis within Marxist theory is inherently linked to the crisis in Marxist politics.

VI. The Resurgence of Marxism After 2008: Crisis as Epistemological Rupture

The 2008 global financial crisis broke the ideological base of neoliberalism. It revealed the irrational nature of markets, the vulnerability of global finance, and the structural conflicts within capitalism. Additionally, it sparked renewed interest in Marxism, especially among younger people.

However, this resurgence has been inconsistent. It has brought back Marxist critique but not the Marxist method. Much of today’s left is still caught between empiricism—focused on policy reform—and idealism—centred on identity politics. The dialectical analysis of capitalism as an integrated system remains on the fringe. Therefore, reviving dialectical materialism is directly linked to rebuilding a revolutionary movement.

VII. The ICFI and the Restoration of Method in the 21st Century

The International Committee of the Fourth International remains virtually unique in defending dialectical materialism against both neoliberal empiricism and postmodern idealism. Its focus on the unity of theory and practice, along with its analysis of global capitalism as a contradictory totality and its championing of the working class as the revolutionary subject, continues the tradition Yakhot aimed to recover.

The philosophical struggle of the ICFI from 1982 to 86, discussed in the previous chapter, is not just a historical footnote but a crucial foundation for today's Marxist revival. It maintained the method essential for understanding the ongoing crisis of global capitalism.

VIII. Conclusion: The Necessity of Dialectics in an Age of Crisis

The current crisis in Marxist theory reflects the broader crisis of global capitalism. Neoliberal empiricism and postmodern idealism have overshadowed dialectical materialism, leading to fragmented theory and weakening the left. However, capitalism's inherent contradictions—exacerbated by financial instability, ecological crises, and geopolitical conflicts—necessitate a method capable of understanding totality, contradiction, and historical inevitability. Dialectical materialism is that method, and its revitalisation is not just an academic concern but a revolutionary necessity. The survival of Marxism hinges on reclaiming its epistemological roots.

The Tasks of Revolutionary Philosophy Today:

Dialectics, Class, and the Rebirth of Marxist Theory**

I. Introduction: Philosophy at the Threshold of a New Epoch

The global capitalist crisis has reached a new phase. The prolonged neoliberal cycle—characterised by financialisation, deindustrialisation, and the repression of working-class resistance—has worn out. Economic instability, ecological disasters, imperialist wars, and the revival of class conflict have broken the ideological illusions of the post-1991 world order.

In this context, the role of revolutionary philosophy becomes more urgent than it has been since the early 20th century. The decline of dialectics due to neoliberalism and postmodernism has left the modern left without a strong theoretical foundation. The splintering of Marxist theory, the prominence of identity-based epistemologies, and the move away from class analysis have created a situation in which the fundamental contradictions of capitalism exceed the left's capacity to understand them. Therefore, the main task of revolutionary philosophy today is to rebuild Marxist consciousness globally. This involves reestablishing dialectical materialism as the working class's scientific approach.

II. The Objective Basis for the Rebirth of Dialectics

Dialectical materialism isn't a set of dogmas imposed on reality; rather, it is the conceptual reflection of reality’s inherent contradictory dynamic. Consequently, the revival of dialectical thinking is fundamentally connected to the ongoing objective crisis of capitalism. Three tendencies define the present epoch:

1. The intensification of global contradictions

The contradictions identified by Marx—between labour and capital, production and appropriation, globalisation and the nation-state—have reached explosive levels. These contradictions cannot be understood through empiricism or idealism; they require a dialectical analysis of totality.

2. The re-emergence of the working class as a global force

From logistics strikes to mass protests against austerity, the working class is re-entering history as a conscious agent. This development demands a theoretical framework capable of grasping the unity of global processes and local struggles.

3. The crisis of bourgeois ideology

Neoliberalism has lost its legitimacy; postmodernism has exhausted its intellectual resources. The ideological vacuum created by this collapse opens the space for the revival of Marxist theory. The rebirth of dialectics is therefore not a matter of academic preference but a historical necessity.

III. The Centrality of Class: Against the Fragmentation of the Subject

A key aspect of modern theory is the fragmentation of the subject. Postmodernism breaks down the working class into various identities; neoliberalism views individuals primarily as market participants; academic Marxism often treats class as just one of several factors. Revolutionary philosophy needs to counter this division. The working class should not be viewed as a single identity among many; rather, it is the universal class whose liberation entails eliminating all forms of exploitation. This universality is rooted in the actual structure of capitalist production.

Restoring the concept of class as the key element of revolutionary theory reestablishes the potential for historical agency. Without class, there is no active subject in history; without a subject, the occurrence of revolution becomes impossible.

IV. The Unity of Theory and Practice: The Party as the Organ of Consciousness

The tasks of revolutionary philosophy are inherently linked to revolutionary organisation. The party is not just an external tool imposed on the class; it represents the historical form through which the working class gains awareness of its own role. Therefore, the unity of theory and practice is essential: theory without organisation is merely academic, while organisation without theory risks becoming bureaucratic. 

Their combined unity is what fosters revolutionary consciousness. The ICFI’s effort to defend dialectical materialism during the 1982–86 struggle proved that maintaining Marxist methodology is inseparable from safeguarding the revolutionary party. This principle remains valid today.

V. The Philosophical Tasks of the Present: A Programmatic Outline

Revolutionary philosophy today faces three interrelated tasks:

1. The reconstruction of totality

Marxism must reassert the analysis of capitalism as a global system. This requires integrating economic crisis theory, imperialism, ecological contradictions, and the global division of labour. Only a dialectical conception of totality can grasp the unity of these processes.

2. The restoration of historical materialism

History must be understood as the movement of social contradictions, not as a sequence of cultural narratives or identity-based experiences. This requires rejecting postmodern relativism and reaffirming historical necessity.

3. The re-centring of the working class

The working class must be reestablished as the core revolutionary force. This involves critiquing theories that fragment or overlook class relations and developing a Marxist analysis of current labour processes—ranging from platform work to logistics and global supply chains. These efforts are inherently political, not academic. They form the theoretical basis for reviving the revolutionary movement.

VI. The Role of the ICFI: The Custodian of Marxist Method

The International Committee of the Fourth International occupies a unique position in the contemporary theoretical landscape. It is the only political movement that defends dialectical materialism, analyses capitalism as a global totality, identifies the working class as the revolutionary subject, and maintains the historical continuity of Marxism from Marx to Lenin to Trotsky.

The ICFI’s philosophical struggle from 1982 to 86 was more than an internal disagreement; it was a significant world-historical event. It upheld the approach now essential for understanding the crisis of global capitalism. Today, the goals of revolutionary philosophy are inseparable from the ICFI's political leadership.

VII. Conclusion: Toward a New Epoch of Marxist Theory

The global capitalist crisis has paved the way for a resurgence of Marxist theory. However, this revival will not happen automatically; it requires deliberate efforts to restore dialectical materialism, emphasise the primacy of class as the primary analytical category, and develop a revolutionary party capable of integrating theory and practice. Today, revolutionary philosophy must be dialectical in its approach, materialist in its ontology, historical in its outlook, internationalist in scope, and proletarian in its political stance. The tasks of revolutionary philosophy are inherently linked to revolutionary politics. The revival of Marxist theory is essential for the renewal of the socialist movement.

CONCLUSION  Marxism, History and the Politics of Truth

 I. The Struggle for Marxism as a Struggle for Historical Consciousness

The previous chapters follow a continuous thread through the crises and conflicts of the 20th and 21st centuries: Marxism's fate is closely linked to the survival of historical consciousness. Stalinism's assault on philosophy was not just an intellectual loss; it was a political destruction of the proletariat’s ability to comprehend its own reality. The bureaucratic counterrevolution suppressed dialectics because it exposes social contradictions—and, by extension, the contradictions within the bureaucracy.

Yakhot’s 'The Suppression of Philosophy in the USSR' clearly revealed what few Soviet thinkers dared to say. His account of the philosophical scene in the 1920s and its subsequent destruction showed that Stalin's regime could only strengthen its control by erasing the working class's theoretical awareness. The eradication of the Deborinists, mechanists, Red Professors, and the entire generation of Marxist philosophers was a parallel to the political suppression of the Left Opposition. History, in this sense, is not a neutral record of events. It is a terrain of struggle. The politics of truth is the politics of class.

II. Trotsky, Dialectics, and the Continuity of Marxism

While Stalinism denied the core principles of Marxism, Trotsky upheld its ongoing relevance. His advocacy of dialectical materialism—especially in *In Defence of Marxism*—was driven by political necessity, not just philosophical interest. Trotsky recognised that the revolutionary movement needed a scientific approach to understand capitalism's inherent contradictions to survive. Consequently, the continuity of Marxism was preserved not through Soviet state institutions but via the theoretical efforts of the Fourth International. Trotsky’s emphasis on the inseparability of method and politics continues to underpin revolutionary theory today.

The ICFI’s fight from 1982 to 86 reaffirmed this ongoing tradition. By triumphing over the neo-Hegelian revisionism promoted by the WRP leadership, the ICFI safeguarded the dialectical method from bureaucratic corruption. This victory was not only organisational but also philosophical, ensuring that the disaster that had affected Soviet philosophy would not recur within the Trotskyist movement.

III. The Contemporary Crisis: Capitalism Without Illusions

The collapse of the Soviet Union, the triumph of neoliberalism, and the emergence of postmodernism have triggered a deep crisis in Marxist theory. The decline of dialectics, the fragmentation of the subject, and the avoidance of class analysis left the modern left politically and theoretically unprepared. However, the global crises of the 21st century—such as financial instability, ecological collapse, imperialist conflicts, and renewed class struggles—have broken down the ideological certainties that defined the post-Cold War period.

Capitalism today faces the world without illusions, with its contradictions clear to millions and its legitimacy waning. Its ideological tools are faltering, making the conditions for a Marxist revival not only present but urgent. However, this revival won't happen on its own. It demands a deliberate revival of dialectical materialism, a reaffirmation of class as the key analytical category, and the building of a revolutionary party that can combine theory and practice.

IV. The Politics of Truth: Marxism Against the Falsification of History

The fight for Marxism is fundamentally connected to combating historical distortion. Stalinism manipulated history to legitimise bureaucratic domination.

After the Soviet era, liberalism rewrote history to support the restoration of capitalism. Today, anti-communism distorts history to undermine socialism itself. In response, Marxism maintains that truth relies on objective social relations, not just narratives. Therefore, defending the accurate history of the October Revolution, the Left Opposition, and the global Marxist movement is crucial for supporting revolutionary awareness.

This monograph aimed to support that argument. It demonstrated that the eradication of philosophy under Stalinism was a political crime, that Trotsky’s advocacy of dialectics was a significant historical achievement, that the ICFI’s revival of method marked a crucial victory, and that the current crisis in Marxist theory can only be resolved by deliberately reaffirming dialectical materialism.

V. The Future of Marxism: A Revolutionary Epistemology for a Revolutionary Epoch

Revolutionary philosophy faces daunting tasks today, including reasserting Marxist theory as a scientific critique of global capitalism, reaffirming dialectical materialism as the foundational method of revolutionary consciousness, repositioning the working class as the universal agent of history, and creating a revolutionary party that unites theory with practice. These responsibilities are inherently political, stemming from capitalism's objective contradictions and the inevitable rise of socialist revolution. Marxism is not just a historical doctrine; it embodies the consciousness of the future. Its validity is rooted not in tradition but in the very course of historical development. Therefore, the politics of truth is fundamentally the politics of revolution.

Epilogue — The Open Horizon

History is ongoing. It gathers, solidifies, and erupts. The debates covered in these pages—philosophical, political, and organisational—are not merely isolated incidents of the 20th century. Instead, they represent living contradictions, unresolved issues, and ongoing tasks. The suppression of philosophy during Stalinism, Trotsky's defence of dialectics, the reestablishment of method within the ICFI, and today's crisis in Marxist theory are interconnected moments in a continuous process: the working class's struggle to achieve self-awareness.

Today, we face a world where old certainties have vanished, but new ones haven't emerged yet. Capitalism struggles through repeated crises, failing to resolve its contradictions, yet it can still cause great suffering. The ideologies that once supported it—neoliberal optimism, technocratic rationality, and postmodern relativism—are depleted. The ruling elite governs without conviction; the intellectuals theorise incoherently; and the political leaders govern without legitimacy.

Beneath the surface of fragmentation, the objective forces of history persist in their relentless progress. The working class, once scattered and disoriented for decades, is now reuniting worldwide. Emerging forms of labour, new grounds for struggle, and novel circuits of solidarity are taking shape. The contradictions inherent in capitalism are once again creating their own destroyers. In this context, philosophy evolves beyond mere reflection, serving as guidance, preparation, and a weapon.

Dialectical materialism is not merely something to memorise; it's a way of living it. It involves viewing the world as dynamic, understanding how opposites are interconnected, and recognising the necessity in what seems accidental, as well as the contingency in what appears inevitable. It embodies a class consciousness that requires understanding society as a whole to drive transformation.

Today, the role of revolutionary philosophy isn't to retreat into mere commentary or get lost in academic jargon. Instead, it should engage actively—to clarify, to shed light, and to focus sharply on issues. Its purpose is to reclaim the theoretical legacy stolen from the working class by bureaucratic counterrevolutionaries. It aims to link current struggles with historical lessons, emphasising that history is not a closed loop but an open horizon.

The truth of Marxism is not assured; it must be actively defended and continually fought for. It needs to be protected from falsification, distortion, and erasure, and renewed through ongoing struggle. Making it conscious in the minds of millions is essential.

This book has charted the lengthy history of this struggle — from the philosophical revival of the early Soviet period, through Stalinist repression, to the survival of Marxist methodology in the Fourth International, and now, in the face of the current crisis in theory. However, this trajectory doesn’t stop here. It points toward the future, toward the battles still to come and the consciousness that remains to be gained.

The politics of truth align with the politics of emancipation. The core truth remains unchanged: the working class is the agent of history, and the world it must shape is still ahead of us. The horizon remains open.