On Contradiction
Mao Tsetung (1937)

The law of contradiction in things, that is, the law of the
unity of opposites, is the basic law of materialist dialectics. Lenin said,
"Dialectics in the proper sense is the study of contradiction in the very essence
of objects.'' [1] Lenin often called this law the essence of
dialectics; he also called it the kernel of dialectics. [2] In studying
this law, therefore, we cannot but touch upon a variety of questions, upon a number of
philosophical problems. If we can become clear on all these problems, we shall arrive at a
fundamental understanding of materialist dialectics. The problems are: the two world
outlooks, the universality of contradiction, the particularity of contradiction, the
principal contradiction and the principal aspect of a contradiction, the identity and
struggle of the aspects of a contradiction, and the place of antagonism in contradiction.
The criticism to which the idealism of the Deborin
school has been subjected in Soviet philosophical circles in recent years has aroused
great interest among us. Deborin's idealism has exerted a very bad influence in the
Chinese Communist Party, and it cannot be said that the dogmatist thinking in our Party is
unrelated to the approach of that school. Our present study of philosophy should therefore
have the eradication of dogmatist thinking as its main objective.
I. THE TWO WORLD OUTLOOKS
T hroughout the history of human knowledge, there
have been two conceptions concerning the law of development of the universe, the
metaphysical conception and the dialectical conception, which form two opposing world
outlooks. Lenin said:
The two basic (or two possible? or two historically observable?)
conceptions of development (evolution) are: development as decrease and increase, as
repetition, and development as a unity of opposites (the division of a unity into
mutually exclusive opposites and their reciprocal relation). [3]
Here Lenin was referring to these two different world outlooks.
In China another name for metaphysics is hsuan-hsueh. For a
long period in history whether in China or in Europe, this way of thinking, which is part
and parcel of the idealist world outlook, occupied a dominant position in human thought.
In Europe, the materialism of the bourgeoisie in its early days was also metaphysical. As
the social economy of many European countries advanced to the stage of highly developed
capitalism, as the forces of production, the class struggle and the sciences developed to
a level unprecedented in history, and as the industrial proletariat became the greatest
motive force in historical development, there arose the Marxist world outlook of
materialist dialectics. Then, in addition to open and barefaced reactionary idealism,
vulgar evolutionism emerged among the bourgeoisie to oppose materialist dialectics.
The metaphysical or vulgar evolutionist world outlook sees things
as isolated, static and one-sided. It regards all things in the universe, their forms and
their species, as eternally isolated from one another and immutable. Such change as there
is can only be an increase or decrease in quantity or a change of place. Moreover, the
cause of such an increase or decrease or change of place is not inside things but outside
them, that is, the motive force is external. Metaphysicians hold that all the different
kinds of things in the universe and all their characteristics have been the same ever
since they first came into being. All subsequent changes have simply been increases or
decreases in quantity. They contend that a thing can only keep on repeating itself as the
same kind of thing and cannot change into anything different. In their opinion, capitalist
exploitation, capitalist competition, the individualist ideology of capitalist society,
and so on, can all be found in ancient slave society, or even in primitive society, and
will exist for ever unchanged. They ascribe the causes of social development to factors
external to society, such as geography and climate. They search in an over-simplified way
outside a thing for the causes of its development, and they deny the theory of materialist
dialectics which holds that development arises from the contradictions inside a thing.
Consequently they can explain neither the qualitative diversity of things, nor the
phenomenon of one quality changing into another. In Europe, this mode of thinking existed
as mechanical materialism in the 17th and 18th centuries and as vulgar evolutionism at the
end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. In China, there was the
metaphysical thinking exemplified in the saying "Heaven changeth not, likewise the
Tao changeth not", [4] and it was supported by the decadent feudal
ruling classes for a long time. Mechanical materialism and vulgar evolutionism, which were
imported from Europe in the last hundred gears, are supported by the bourgeoisie.
As opposed to the metaphysical world outlook, the world outlook of
materialist dialectics holds that in order to understand the development of a thing we
should study it internally and in its relations with other things; in other words, the
development of things should be seen as their internal and necessary self-movement, while
each thing in its movement is interrelated with and interacts on the things around it. The
fundamental cause of the development of a thing is not external but internal; it lies in
the contradictoriness within the thing. There is internal contradiction in every single
thing, hence its motion and development. Contradictoriness within a thing is the
fundamental cause of its development, while its interrelations and interactions with other
things are secondary causes. Thus materialist dialectics effectively combats the theory of
external causes, or of an external motive force, advanced by metaphysical mechanical
materialism and vulgar evolutionism. It is evident that purely external causes can only
give rise to mechanical motion, that is, to changes in scale or quantity, but cannot
explain why things differ qualitatively in thousands of ways and why one thing changes
into another. As a matter of fact, even mechanical motion under external force occurs
through the internal contradictoriness of things. Simple growth in plants and animals,
their quantitative development, is likewise chiefly the result of their internal
contradictions. Similarly, social development is due chiefly not to external but to
internal causes. Countries with almost the same geographical and climatic conditions
display great diversity and unevenness in their development. Moreover, great social
changes may take place in one and the same country although its geography and climate
remain unchanged. Imperialist Russia changed into the socialist Soviet Union, and feudal
Japan, which had locked its doors against the world, changed into imperialist Japan,
although no change occurred in the geography and climate of either country. Long dominated
by feudalism, China has undergone great changes in the last hundred years and is now
changing in the direction of a new China, liberated and-free, and yet no change has
occurred in her geography and climate. Changes do take place in the geography and climate
of the earth as a whole and in every part of it, but they are insignificant when compared
with changes in society; geographical and climatic changes manifest themselves in terms of
tens of thousands of years, while social changes manifest themselves in thousands,
hundreds or tens of years, and even in a few years or months in times of revolution.
According to materialist dialectics, changes in nature are due chiefly to the development
of the internal contradictions in nature. Changes in society are due chiefly to the
development of the internal contradictions in society, that is, the contradiction between
the productive forces and the relations of production, the contradiction between classes
and the contradiction between the old and the new; it is the development of these
contradictions that pushes society forward and gives the impetus for the supersession of
the old society by the new. Does materialist dialectics exclude external causes? Not at
all. It holds that external causes are the condition of change and internal causes are the
basis of change, and that external causes become operative through internal causes. In a
suitable temperature an egg changes into a chicken, but no temperature can change a stone
into a chicken, because each has a different basis. There is constant interaction between
the peoples of different countries. In the era of capitalism, and especially in the era of
imperialism and proletarian revolution, the interaction and mutual impact of different
countries in the political, economic and cultural spheres are extremely great. The October
Socialist Revolution ushered in a new epoch in world history as well as in Russian
history. It exerted influence on internal changes in the other countries in the world and,
similarly and in a particularly profound way, on internal changes in China. These changes,
however, were effected through the inner laws of development of these countries, China
included. In battle, one army is victorious and the other is defeated, both the victory
and the defeat are determined by internal causes The one is victorious either because it
is strong or because of its competent generalship, the other is vanquished either because
it is weak or because of its incompetent generalship; it is through internal causes that
external causes become operative. In China in 1927, the defeat of the proletariat by the
big bourgeoisie came about through the opportunism then to be found within the Chinese
proletariat itself (inside the Chinese Communist Party). When we liquidated this
opportunism, the Chinese revolution resumed its advance. Later, the Chinese revolution
again suffered severe setbacks at the hands of the enemy, because adventurism had risen
within our Party. When we liquidated this adventurism, our cause advanced once again. Thus
it can be seen that to lead the revolution to victory, a political party must depend on
the correctness of its own political line and the solidity of its own organization.
The dialectical world outlook emerged in ancient times both in
China and in Europe. Ancient dialectics, however, had a somewhat spontaneous and naive
character; in the social and historical conditions then prevailing, it was not yet able to
form a theoretical system, hence it could not fully explain the world and was supplanted
by metaphysics. The famous German philosopher Hegel, who lived in the late 18th and early
19th centuries, made most important contributions to dialectics, but his dialectics was
idealist. It was not until Marx and Engels, the great protagonists of the proletarian
movement, had synthesized the positive achievements in the history of human knowledge and,
in particular, critically absorbed the rational elements of Hegelian dialectics and
created the great theory of dialectical and historical materialism that an unprecedented
revolution occurred in the history of human knowledge. This theory was further developed
by Lenin and Stalin. As soon as it spread to China, it wrought tremendous changes in the
world of Chinese thought.
This dialectical world outlook teaches us primarily how to observe
and analyse the movement of opposites in different things and, on the basis of such
analysis, to indicate the methods for resolving contradictions. It is therefore most
important for us to understand the law of contradiction in things in a concrete way.
II. THE UNIVERSALITY OF CONTRADICTION
F or convenience of exposition, I shall deal first
with the universality of contradiction and then proceed to the particularity of
contradiction. The reason is that the universality of contradiction can be explained more
briefly, for it has been widely recognized ever since the materialist-dialectical world
outlook was discovered and materialist dialectics applied with outstanding success to
analysing many aspects of human history and natural history and to changing many aspects
of society and nature (as in the Soviet Union) by the great creators and continuers of
Marxism -- Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin; whereas the particularity of contradiction is
still not dearly understood by many comrades, and especially by the dogmatists. They do
not understand that it is precisely in the particularity of contradiction that the
universality of contradiction resides. Nor do they understand how important is the study
of the particularity of contradiction in the concrete things confronting us for guiding
the course of revolutionary practice. Therefore, it is necessary to stress the study of
the particularity of contradiction and to explain it at adequate length. For this reason,
in our analysis of the law of contradiction in things, we shall first analyse the
universality of contradiction, then place special stress on analysing the particularity of
contradiction, and finally return to the universality of contradiction.
The universality or absoluteness of contradiction has a twofold
meaning. One is that contradiction exists in the process of development of all things, and
the other is that in the process of development of each thing a movement of opposites
exists from beginning to end.
Engels said, "Motion itself is a contradiction." [5] Lenin defined the law of the unity of opposites as "the
recognition (discovery) of the contradictory, mutually exclusive, opposite
tendencies in all phenomena and processes of nature (including mind and
society)". [6] Are these ideas correct? Yes, they are. The
interdependence of the contradictory aspects present in all things and the struggle
between these aspects determine the life of all things and push their development forward.
There is nothing that does not contain contradiction; without contradiction nothing would
exist.
Contradiction is the basis of the simple forms of motion (for
instance, mechanical motion) and still more so of the complex forms of motion.
Engels explained the universality of contradiction as follows:
If simple mechanical change of place contains a contradiction, this is
even more true of the higher forms of motion of matter, and especially of organic life and
its development. ... life consists precisely and primarily in this -- that a being is at
each moment itself and yet something else. Life is therefore also a contradiction which is
present in things and processes themselves, and which constantly originates and resolves
itself; and as soon as the contradiction ceases, life, too, comes to an end, and death
steps in. We likewise saw that also in the sphere of thought we could not escape
contradictions, and that for example the contradiction between man's inherently unlimited
capacity for knowledge and its actual presence only in men who are externally limited and
possess limited cognition finds its solution in what is -- at least practically, for us --
an endless succession of generations, in infinite progress.
... one of the basic principles of higher mathematics is the
contradiction that in certain circumstances straight lines and curves may be the same....
But even lower mathematics teems with contradictions. [7]
Lenin illustrated the universality of contradiction as follows:
In mathematics: + and -- . Differential and integral.
In mechanics: action and reaction.
In physics: positive and negative electricity.
In chemistry: the combination and dissociation of atoms.
In social science: the class struggle. [8]
In war, offence and defence, advance and retreat, victory and defeat are
all mutually contradictory phenomena. One cannot exist without the other. The two aspects
are at once in conflict and in interdependence, and this constitutes the totality
of a war, pushes its development forward and solves its problems.
Every difference in men's concepts should be regarded as
reflecting an objective contradiction. Objective contradictions are reflected in
subjective thinking, and this process constitutes the contradictory movement of concepts,
pushes forward the development of thought, and ceaselessly solves problems in man's
thinking.
Opposition and struggle between ideas of different kinds
constantly occur within the Party; this is a reflection within the Party of contradictions
between classes and between the new and the old in society. If there were no
contradictions in the Party and no ideological struggle& to resolve them, the Party's
life would come to an end.
Thus it is already clear that contradiction exists universally and
in all processes, whether in the simple or in the complex forms of motion, whether in
objective phenomena or ideological phenomena. But does contradiction also exist at the
initial stage of each process?
Is there a movement of opposites from beginning to end in the
process of development of every single thing?
As can be seen from the articles written by Soviet philosophers
criticizing it, the Deborin school maintains that contradiction appears not at the
inception of a process but only when it has developed to a certain stage. If this were the
case, then the cause of the development of the process before that stage would be external
and not internal. Deborin thus reverts to the metaphysical theories of external causality
and of mechanism. Applying this view in the analysis of concrete problems, the Deborin
school sees only differences but not contradictions between the kulaks and the peasants in
general under existing conditions in the Soviet Union, thus entirely agreeing with
Bukharin. In analysing the French Revolution, it holds that before the Revolution there
were likewise only differences but not contradictions within the Third Estate, which was
composed of the workers, the peasants and the bourgeoisie. These views of the Deborin
school are anti-Marxist. This school does not understand that each and every difference
already contains contradiction and that difference itself is contradiction. Labour and
capital have been in contradiction ever since the two classes came into being, only at
first the contradiction had not yet become intense. Even under the social conditions
existing in the Soviet Union, there is a difference between workers and peasants and this
very difference is a contradiction, although, unlike the contradiction between labour and
capital, it will not become intensified into antagonism or assume the form of class
struggle; the workers and the peasants have established a firm alliance in the course of
socialist construction and are gradually resolving this contradiction in the course of the
advance from socialism to communism. The question is one of different kinds of
contradiction, not of the presence or absence of contradiction. Contradiction is universal
and absolute, it is present in the process of development of all things and permeates
every process from beginning to end.
What is meant by the emergence of a new process? The old unity
with its constituent opposites yields to a new unity with its constituent opposites,
whereupon a new process emerges to replace the old. The old process ends and the new one
begins. The new process contains new contradictions and begins its own history of the
development of contradictions.
As Lenin pointed out, Marx in his Capital gave a model
analysis of this movement of opposites which runs through the process of development of
things from beginning to end. This is the method that must be employed in studying the
development of all things. Lenin, too, employed this method correctly and adhered to it in
all his writings.
In his Capital, Marx first analyses the simplest, most
ordinary and fundamental, most common and everyday relation of bourgeois
(commodity) society, a relation encountered billions of times, viz. the exchange of
commodities. In this very simple phenomenon (in this "cell" of bourgeois
society) analysis reveals all the contradictions (or the germs of all the
contradictions) of modern society. The subsequent exposition shows us the development (both
growth and movement) of these contradictions and of this society in the [summation]
of its individual parts, from its beginning to its end.
Lenin added, "Such must also be the method of exposition (or
study) of dialectics in general." [9]
Chinese Communists must learn this method; only then will they be
able correctly to analyse the history and the present state of the Chinese revolution and
infer its future.
III. THE PARTICULARITY OF CONTRADICTION
C ontradiction is present in the process of
development of all things; it permeates the process of development of each thing from
beginning to end. This is the universality and absoluteness of contradiction which we have
discussed above. Now let us discuss the particularity and relativity of contradiction.
This problem should be studied on several levels.
First, the contradiction in each form of motion of matter has its
particularity. Man's knowledge of matter is knowledge of its forms of motion, because
there is nothing in this world except matter in motion and this motion must assume certain
forms. In considering each form of motion of matter, we must observe the points which it
has in common with other forms of motion. But what is especially important and necessary,
constituting as it does the foundation of our knowledge of a thing, is to observe what is
particular to this form of motion of matter, namely, to observe the qualitative difference
between this form of motion and other forms. Only when we have done so can we distinguish
between things. Every form of motion contains within itself its own particular
contradiction. This particular contradiction constitutes the particular essence which
distinguishes one thing from another. It is the internal cause or, as it may be called,
the basis for the immense variety of things in the world. There are many forms of motion
in nature, mechanical motion, sound, light, heat, electricity, dissociation, combination,
and so on. All these forms are interdependent, but in its essence each is different from
the others. The particular essence of each form of motion is determined by its own
particular contradiction. This holds true not only for nature but also for social and
ideological phenomena. Every form of society, every form of ideology, has its own
particular contradiction and particular essence.
The sciences are differentiated precisely on the basis of the
particular contradictions inherent in their respective objects of study. Thus the
contradiction peculiar to a certain field of phenomena constitutes the object of study for
a specific branch of science. For example, positive and negative numbers in mathematics;
action and reaction in mechanics; positive and negative electricity in physics;
dissociation and combination in chemistry; forces of production and relations of
production, classes and class struggle, in social science; offence and defence in military
science; idealism and materialism, the metaphysical outlook and the dialectical outlook,
in philosophy; and so on -- all these are the objects of study of different branches of
science precisely because each branch has its own particular contradiction and particular
essence. Of course, unless we understand the universality of contradiction, we have no way
of discovering the universal cause or universal basis for the movement or development of
things; however, unless we study the particularity of contradiction, we have no way of
determining the particular essence of a thing which differentiates it from other things,
no way of discovering the particular cause or particular basis for the movement or
development of a thing, and no way of distinguishing one thing from another or of
demarcating the fields of science.
As regards the sequence in the movement of man's knowledge, there
is always a gradual growth from the knowledge of individual and particular things to the
knowledge of things in general. Only after man knows the particular essence of many
different things can he proceed to generalization and know the common essence of things.
When man attains the knowledge of this common essence, he uses it
as a guide and proceeds to study various concrete things which have not yet been studied,
or studied thoroughly, and to discover the particular essence of each; only thus is he
able to supplement, enrich and develop his knowledge of their common essence and prevent
such knowledge from withering or petrifying. These are the two processes of cognition:
one, from the particular to the general, and the other, from the general to the
particular. Thus cognition always moves in cycles and (so long as scientific method is
strictly adhered to) each cycle advances human knowledge a step higher and so makes it
more and more profound. Where our dogmatists err on this question is that, on the one
hand, they do not understand that we have to study the particularity of contradiction and
know the particular essence of individual things before we can adequately know the
universality of contradiction and the common essence of things, and that, on the other
hand, they do not understand that after knowing the common essence of things, we must go
further and study the concrete things that have not yet been thoroughly studied or have
only just emerged. Our dogmatists are lazy-bones. They refuse to undertake any painstaking
study of concrete things, they regard general truths as emerging out of the void, they
turn them into purely abstract unfathomable formulas, and thereby completely deny and
reverse the normal sequence by which man comes to know truth. Nor do they understand the
interconnection of the two processes in cognition -- from the particular to the general
and then from the general to the particular. They understand nothing of the Marxist theory
of knowledge.
It is necessary not only to study the particular contradiction and
the essence determined thereby of every great system of the forms of motion of matter, but
also to study the particular contradiction and the essence of each process in the long
course of development of each form of motion of matter. In every form of motion, each
process of development which is real (and not imaginary) is qualitatively different. Our
study must emphasize and start from this point.
Qualitatively different contradictions can only be resolved by
qualitatively different methods. For instance, the contradiction between the proletariat
and the bourgeoisie is resolved by the method of socialist revolution; the contradiction
between the great masses of the people and the feudal system is resolved by the method of
democratic revolution; the contradiction between the colonies and imperialism is resolved
by the method of national revolutionary war; the contradiction between the working class
and the peasant class in socialist society is resolved by the method of collectivization
and mechanization in agriculture; contradiction within the Communist Party is resolved by
the method of criticism and self-criticism; the contradiction between society and nature
is resolved by the method of developing the productive forces. Processes change, old
processes and old contradictions disappear, new processes and new contradictions emerge,
and the methods of resolving contradictions differ accordingly. In Russia, there was a
fundamental difference between the contradiction resolved by the February Revolution and
the contradiction resolved by the October Revolution, as well as between the methods used
to resolve them. The principle of using different methods to resolve different
contradictions is one which Marxist-Leninists must strictly observe. The dogmatists do not
observe this principle; they do not understand that conditions differ in different kinds
of revolution and so do not understand that different methods should be used to resolve
different contradictions; on the contrary, they invariably adopt what they imagine to be
an unalterable formula and arbitrarily apply it everywhere, which only causes setbacks to
the revolution or makes a sorry mess of what was originally well done.
In order to reveal the particularity of the contradictions in any
process in the development of a thing, in their totality or interconnections, that is, in
order to reveal the essence of the process, it is necessary to reveal the particularity of
the two aspects of each of the contradictions in that process; otherwise it will be
impossible to discover the essence of the process. This likewise requires the utmost
attention in our study.
There are many contradictions in the course of development of any
major thing. For instance, in the course of China's bourgeois-democratic revolution, where
the conditions are exceedingly complex, there exist the contradiction between all the
oppressed classes in Chinese society and imperialism, the contradiction between the great
masses of the people and feudalism, the contradiction between the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie, the contradiction between the peasantry and the urban petty bourgeoisie on
the one hand and the bourgeoisie on the other, the contradiction between the various
reactionary ruling groups, and so on. These contradictions cannot be treated in the same
way since each has its own particularity; moreover, the two aspects of each contradiction
cannot be treated in the same way since each aspect has its own characteristics. We who
are engages in the Chinese revolution should not only understand the particularity of
these contradictions in their totality, that is, in their interconnections, but should
also study the two aspects of each contradiction as the only means of understanding the
totality. When we speak of understanding each aspect of a contradiction, we mean
understanding what specific position each aspect occupies, what concrete forms it assumes
in its interdependence and in its contradiction with its opposite, and what concrete
methods are employed in the struggle with its opposite, when the two are both
interdependent and in contradiction, and also after the interdependence breaks down. It is
of great importance to study these problems. Lenin meant just this when he said that the
most essential thing in Marxism, the living soul of Marxism, is the concrete analysis of
concrete conditions. [10] Our dogmatists have violated Lenin's
teachings; they never use their brains to analyse anything concretely, and in their
writings and speeches they always use stereotypes devoid of content, thereby creating a
very bad style of work in our Party.
In studying a problem, we must shun subjectivity, one-sidedness
and superficiality. To be subjective means not to look at problems objectively, that is,
not to use the materialist viewpoint in looking at problems. I have discussed this in my
essay "On Practice". To be one-sided means not to look at problems all-sidedly,
for example, to understand only China but not Japan, only the Communist Party but not the
Kuomintang, only the proletariat but not the bourgeoisie, only the peasants but not the
landlords, only the favourable conditions but not the difficult ones, only the past
but not the future, only individual parts but not the whole, only the defects but not the
achievements, only the plaintiff's case but not the defendant's, only underground
revolutionary work but not open revolutionary work, and so on. In a word, it means not to
understand the characteristics of both aspects of a contradiction. This is what we mean by
looking at a problem one-sidedly. Or it may be called seeing the part but not the whole,
seeing the trees but not the forest. That way it is impossible to kind the method for
resolving a contradiction, it is impossible to accomplish the tasks of the revolution, to
carry out assignments well or to develop inner-Party ideological struggle correctly. When
Sun Wu Tzu said in discussing military science, "Know the enemy and know yourself,
and you can fight a hundred battles with no danger of defeat'', [11] he
was referring to the two sides in a battle. Wei Chengi [12] of the Tang
Dynasty also understood the error of one-sidedness when he said, "Listen to both
sides and you will be enlightened, heed only one side and you will be benighted." But
our comrades often look at problems one-sidedly, and so they often run into snags. In the
novel Shui Hu Chuan, Sung Chiang thrice attacked Chu Village. [13]
Twice he was defeated because he was ignorant of the local conditions and used the wrong
method. Later he changed his method; first he investigated the situation, and he
familiarized himself with the maze of roads, then he broke up the alliance between the Li,
Hu and Chu Villages and sent his men in disguise into the enemy camp to lie in wait, using
a stratagem similar to that of the Trojan Horse in the foreign story. And on the third
occasion he won. There are many examples of materialist dialectics in Shui Hu Chuan,
of which the episode of the three attacks on Chu Village is one of the best. Lenin said:
... in order really to know an object we must embrace, study, all its
sides, all connections and "mediations". We shall never achieve this completely,
but the demand for all-sidedness is a safeguard against mistakes and rigidity. [14]
We should remember his words. To be superficial means to consider
neither the characteristics of a contradiction in its totality nor the characteristics of
each of its aspects; it means to deny the necessity for probing deeply into a thing and
minutely studying the characteristics of its contradiction, but instead merely to look
from afar and, after glimpsing the rough outline, immediately to try to resolve the
contradiction (to answer a question, settle a dispute, handle work, or direct a military
operation). This way of doing things is bound to lead to trouble. The reason the dogmatist
and empiricist comrades in China have made mistakes lies precisely in their subjectivist,
one-sided and superficial way of looking at things. To be one-sided and superficial is at
the same time to be subjective. For all objective things are actually interconnected and
are governed by inner laws, but instead of undertaking the task of reflecting things as
they really are some people only look at things one-sidedly or superficially and who know
neither their interconnections nor their inner laws, and so their method is subjectivist.
Not only does the whole process of the movement of opposites in
the development of a thing, both in their interconnections and in each of the aspects,
have particular features to which we must give attention, but each stage in the
process has its particular features to which we must give attention too.
The fundamental contradiction in the process of development of a
thing and the essence of the process determined by this fundamental contradiction will not
disappear until the process is completed; but in a lengthy process the conditions usually
differ at each stage. The reason is that, although the nature of the fundamental
contradiction in the process of development of a thing and the essence of the process
remain unchanged, the fundamental contradiction becomes more and more intensified as it
passes from one stage to another in the lengthy process. In addition, among the numerous
major and minor contradictions which are determined or influenced by the fundamental
contradiction, some become intensified, some are temporarily or partially resolved or
mitigated, and some new ones emerge; hence the process is marked by stages. If people do
not pay attention to the stages in the process of development of a thing, they cannot deal
with its contradictions properly.
For instance, when the capitalism of the era of free competition
developed into imperialism, there was no change in the class nature of the two classes in
fundamental contradiction, namely, the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, or in the
capitalist essence of society; however, the contradiction between these two classes became
intensified, the contradiction between monopoly and non-monopoly capital emerged, the
contradiction between the colonial powers and the colonies became intensified, the
contradiction among the capitalist countries resulting from their uneven development
manifested itself with particular sharpness, and thus there arose the special stage of
capitalism, the stage of imperialism. Leninism is the Marxism of the era of imperialism
and proletarian revolution precisely because Lenin and Stalin have correctly explained
these contradictions and correctly formulated the theory and tactics of the proletarian
revolution for their resolution.
Take the process of China's bourgeois-democratic revolution, which
began with the Revolution of 1911; it, too, has several distinct stages. In particular,
the revolution in its period of bourgeois leadership and the revolution in its period of
proletarian leadership represent two vastly different historical stages. In other words,
proletarian leadership has fundamentally changed the whole face of the revolution, has
brought about a new alignment of classes, given rise to a tremendous upsurge in the
peasant revolution, imparted thoroughness to the revolution against imperialism and
feudalism, created the possibility of the transition from the democratic revolution to the
socialist revolution, and so on. None of these was possible in the period when the
revolution was under bourgeois leadership. Although no change has taken place in the
nature of the fundamental contradiction in the process as a whole, i.e., in the
anti-imperialist, anti-feudal, democratic-revolutionary nature of the process (the
opposite of which is its semi-colonial and semi-feudal nature), nonetheless this process
has passed through several stages of development in the course of more than twenty years;
during this time many great events have taken place -- the failure of the Revolution of
1911 and the establishment of the regime of the Northern warlords, the formation of the
first national united front and the revolution of 1924-27, the break-up of the united
front and the desertion of the bourgeoisie to the side of the counterrevolution, the wars
among the new warlords, the Agrarian Revolutionary War, the establishment of the second
national united front and the War of Resistance Against Japan. These stages are marked by
particular features such as the intensification of certain contradictions (e.g.,
the Agrarian Revolutionary War and the Japanese invasion of the four northeastern
provinces), the partial or temporary resolution of other contradictions (e.g., the
destruction of the Northern warlords and our confiscation of the land of the landlords),
and the emergence of yet other contradictions (e.g., the conflicts among the new
warlords, and the landlords' recapture of the land after the loss of our revolutionary
base areas in the south).
In studying the particularities of the contradictions at each
stage in the process of development of a thing, we must not only observe them in their
interconnections or their totality, we must also examine the two aspects of each
contradiction.
For instance, consider the Kuomintang and the Communist Party.
Take one aspect, the Kuomintang. In the period of the first united front, the Kuomintang
carried out Sun Yat-sen's Three Great Policies of alliance with Russia, co-operation with
the Communist Party, and assistance to the peasants and workers; hence it was
revolutionary and vigorous, it was an alliance of various classes for the democratic
revolution. After 1927, however, the Kuomintang changed into its opposite and became a
reactionary bloc of the landlords and big bourgeoisie. After the Sian Incident in December
1936, it began another change in the direction of ending the civil war and co-operating
with the Communist Party for joint opposition to Japanese imperialism. Such have been the
particular features of the Kuomintang in the three stages. Of course, these features have
arisen from a variety of causes. Now take the other aspect, the Chinese Communist Party.
In the period of the first united front, the Chinese Communist Party was in its infancy;
it courageously led the revolution of 1924-27 but revealed its immaturity in its
understanding of the character, the tasks and the methods of the revolution, and
consequently it became possible for Chen Tu-hsiuism, which appeared during the latter part
of this revolution, to assert itself and bring about the defeat of the revolution. After
1927, the Communist Party courageously led the Agrarian Revolutionary War and created the
revolutionary army and revolutionary base areas; however, it committed adventurist errors
which brought about very great losses both to the army and to the base areas. Since 1935
the Party has corrected these errors and has been leading the new united front for
resistance to Japan; this great struggle is now developing. At the present stage, the
Communist Party is a Party that has gone through the test of two revolutions and acquired
a wealth of experience. Such have been the particular features of the Chinese Communist
Party in the three stages. These features, too, have arisen from a variety of causes.
Without studying both these sets of features we cannot understand the particular relations
between the two parties during the various stages of their development, namely, the
establishment of a united front, the break-up of the united front, and the establishment
of another united front. What is even more fundamental for the study of the particular
features of the two parties is the examination of the class basis of the two parties and
the resultant contradictions which have arisen between each party and other forces at
different periods. For instance, in the period of its first cooperation with the Communist
Party, the Kuomintang stood in contradiction to foreign imperialism and was therefore
anti-imperialist; on the other hand, it stood in contradiction to the great masses of the
people within the country -- although in words it promised many benefits to the working
people, in fact it gave them little or nothing. In the period when it carried on the
anti-Communist war, the Kuomintang collaborated with imperialism and feudalism against the
great masses of the people and wiped out all the gains they had won in the revolution, and
thereby intensified its contradictions with them. In the present period of the
anti-Japanese war, the Kuomintang stands in contradiction to Japanese imperialism and
wants co-operation with the Communist Party, without however relaxing its struggle against
the Communist Party and the people or its oppression of them. As for the Communist Party,
it has always, in every period, stood with the great masses of the people against
imperialism and feudalism, but in the present period of the anti-Japanese war, it has
adopted a moderate policy towards the Kuomintang and the domestic feudal forces because
the Kuomintang has «pressed itself in favour of resisting Japan. The above circumstances
have resulted now in alliance between the two parties and now in struggle between them,
and even during the periods of alliance there has been a complicated state of simultaneous
alliance and struggle. If we do not study the particular features of both aspects of the
contradiction, we shall fail to understand not only the relations of each party with the
other forces, but also the relations between the two parties.
It can thus be seen that in studying the particularity of any kind
of contradiction -- the contradiction in each form of motion of matter, the contradiction
in each of its processes of development, the two aspects of the contradiction in each
process, the contradiction at each stage of a process, and the two aspects of the
contradiction at each stage -- in studying the particularity of all these contradictions,
we must not be subjective and arbitrary but must analyse it concretely. Without concrete
analysis there can be no knowledge of the particularity of any contradiction. We must
always remember Lenin's words, the concrete analysis of concrete conditions.
Marx and Engels were the first to provide us with excellent models
of such concrete analysis.
When Marx and Engels applied the law of contradiction in things to
the study of the socio-historical process, they discovered the contradiction between the
productive forces and the relations of production, they discovered the contradiction
between the exploiting and exploited classes and also the resultant contradiction between
the economic base and its superstructure (politics, ideology, etc.), and they discovered
how these contradictions inevitably lead to different kinds of social revolution in
different kinds of class society.
When Marx applied this law to the study of the economic structure
of capitalist society, he discovered that the basic contradiction of this society is the
contradiction between the social character of production and the private character of
ownership. This contradiction manifests itself in the contradiction between the organized
character of production in individual enterprises and the anarchic character of production
in society as a whole. In terms of class relations, it manifests itself in the
contradiction between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.
Because the range of things is vast and there is no limit to their
development, what is universal in one context becomes particular in another. Conversely,
what is particular in one context becomes universal in another. The contradiction in the
capitalist system between the social character of production and the private ownership of
the means of production is common to all countries where capitalism exists and develops;
as far as capitalism is concerned, this constitutes the universality of contradiction. But
this contradiction of capitalism belongs only to a certain historical stage in the general
development of class society; as far as the contradiction between the productive forces
and the relations of production in class society as a whole is concerned, it constitutes
the particularity of contradiction. However, in the course of dissecting the particularity
of all these contradictions in capitalist society, Marx gave a still more profound, more
adequate and more complete elucidation of the universality of the contradiction between
the productive forces and the relations of production in class society in general.
Since the particular is united with the universal and since the
universality as well as the particularity of contradiction is inherent in everything,
universality residing in particularity, we should, when studying an object, try to
discover both the particular and the universal and their interconnection, to discover both
particularity and universality and also their interconnection within the object itself,
and to discover the interconnections of this object with the many objects outside it. When
Stalin explained the historical roots of Leninism in his famous work, The Foundations
of Leninism, he analysed the international situation in which Leninism arose, analysed
those contradictions of capitalism which reached their culmination under imperialism, and
showed how these contradictions made proletarian revolution a matter for immediate action
and created favourable conditions for a direct onslaught on capitalism. What is more, he
analysed the reasons why Russia became the cradle of Leninism, why tsarist Russia became
the focus of all the contradictions of imperialism, and why it was possible for the
Russian proletariat to become the vanguard of the international revolutionary proletariat.
Thus, Stalin analysed the universality of contradiction in imperialism, showing why
Leninism is the Marxism of the era of imperialism and proletarian revolution, and at the
same time analysed the particularity of tsarist Russian imperialism within this general
contradiction, showing why Russia became the birthplace of the theory and tactics of
proletarian revolution and how the universality of contradiction is contained in this
particularity. Stalin's analysis provides us with a model for understanding the
particularity and the universality of contradiction and their interconnection.
On the question of using dialectics in the study of objective
phenomena, Marx and Engels, and likewise Lenin and Stalin, always enjoin people not to be
in any way subjective and arbitrary but, from the concrete conditions in the actual
objective movement of these phenomena, to discover their concrete contradictions, the
concrete position of each aspect of every contradiction and the concrete interrelations of
the contradictions. Our dogmatists do not have this attitude in study and therefore can
never get anything right. We must take warning from their failure and learn to acquire
this attitude, which is the only correct one in study.
The relationship between the universality and the particularity of
contradiction is the relationship between the general character and the individual
character of contradiction. By the former we mean that contradiction exists in and runs
through all processes from beginning to end; motion, things, processes, thinking -- all
are contradictions. To deny contradiction is to deny everything. This is a universal truth
for all times and all countries, which admits of no exception. Hence the general
character, the absoluteness of contradiction. But this general character is contained in
every individual character; without individual character there can be no general
character. If all individual character were removed, what general character would remain?
It is because each contradiction is particular that individual character arises. All
individual character exists conditionally and temporarily, and hence is relative.
This truth concerning general and individual character, concerning
absoluteness and relativity, is the quintessence of the problem of contradiction in
things; failure to understand it is tantamount to abandoning dialectics.
IV. THE PRINCIPAL CONTRADICTION
AND THE PRINCIPAL ASPECT OF A CONTRADICTION
T here are still two points in the problem of the
particularity of contradiction which must be singled out for analysis, namely, the
principal contradiction and the principal aspect of a contradiction.
There are many contradictions in the process of development of a
complex thing, and one of them is necessarily the principal contradiction whose existence
and development determine or influence the existence and development of the other
contradictions.
For instance, in capitalist society the two forces in
contradiction, the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, form the principal contradiction. The
other contradictions, such as those between the remnant feudal class and the bourgeoisie,
between the peasant petty bourgeoisie ant the bourgeoisie, between the proletariat and the
peasant petty bourgeoisie, between the non-monopoly capitalists and the monopoly
capitalists, between bourgeois democracy and bourgeois fascism, among the capitalist
countries and between imperialism and the colonies, are all determined or influenced by
this principal contradiction.
In a semi-colonial country such as China, the relationship between
the principal contradiction and the non-principal contradictions presents a complicated
picture.
When imperialism launches a war of aggression against such a
country, all its various classes, except for some traitors, can temporarily unite in a
national war against imperialism. At such a time, the contradiction between imperialism
and the country concerned becomes the principal contradiction, while all the
contradictions among the various classes within the country (including what was the
principal contradiction, between the feudal system and the great masses of the people) are
temporarily relegated to a secondary and subordinate position. So it was in China in the
Opium War of 1840, the Sino-Japanese War of 1894 and the Yi Ho Tuan War of 1900, and so it
is now in the present Sino-Japanese War.
But in another situation, the contradictions change position. When
imperialism carries on its oppression not by war, but by milder means -- political,
economic and cultural -- the ruling classes in semi-colonial countries capitulate to
imperialism, and the two form an alliance for the joint oppression of the masses of the
people. At such a time, the masses often resort to civil war against the alliance of
imperialism and the feudal classes, while imperialism often employs indirect methods
rather than direct action in helping the reactionaries in the semi-colonial countries to
oppress the people, and thus the internal contradictions become particularly sharp. This
is what happened in China in the Revolutionary War of 1911, the Revolutionary War of
1924-27, and the ten years of Agrarian Revolutionary War after 1997. Wars among the
various reactionary ruling groups in the semi-colonial countries, e.g., the wars among the
warlords in China, fall into the same category.
When a revolutionary civil war develops to the point of
threatening the very existence of imperialism and its running dogs, the domestic
reactionaries, imperialism often adopts other methods in order to maintain its rule; it
either tries to split the revolutionary front from within or sends armed forces to help
the domestic reactionaries directly. At such a time, foreign imperialism and domestic
reaction stand quite openly at one pole while the masses of the people stand at the other
pole, thus forming the principal contradiction which determines or influences the
development of the other contradictions. The assistance given by various capitalist
countries to the Russian reactionaries after the October Revolution is an example of armed
intervention. Chiang Kai-shek's betrayal in 1927 is an example of splitting the
revolutionary front.
But whatever happens, there is no doubt at all that at every stage
in the development of a process, there is only one principal contradiction which plays the
leading role.
Hence, if in any process there are a number of' contradictions, one of
them must be the principal contradiction playing the leading and decisive role, while the
rest occupy a secondary and subordinate position. Therefore, in studying any complex
process in which there are two or more contradictions, we must devote every effort to
funding its principal contradiction. Once this principal contradiction is grasped, all
problems can be readily solved. This is the method Marx taught us in his study of
capitalist society. Likewise Lenin and Stalin taught us this method when they studied
imperialism and the general crisis of capitalism and when they studied the Soviet economy.
There are thousands of scholars and men of action who do not understand it, and the result
is that, lost in a fog, they are unable to get to the heart of a problem and naturally
cannot find a way to resolve its contradictions.
As we have said, one must not treat all the contradictions in a
process as being equal but must distinguish between the principal and the secondary
contradictions, and pay special attention to grasping the principal one. But, in any given
contradiction, whether principal or secondary, should the two contradictory aspects be
treated as equal? Again, no. In any contradiction the development of the contradictory
aspects is uneven. Sometimes they seem to be in equilibrium, which is however only
temporary and relative, while unevenness is basic. Of the two contradictory aspects, one
must be principal and the other secondary. The principal aspect is the one playing the
leading role in the contradiction. The nature of a thing is determined mainly by the
principal aspect of a contradiction, the aspect which has gained the dominant position.
But this situation is not static; the principal and the
non-principal aspects of a contradiction transform themselves into each other and the
nature of the thing changes accordingly. In a given process or at a given stage in the
development of a contradiction, A is the principal aspect and B is the non-principal
aspect; at another stage or in another process the roles are reversed -- a change
determined by the extent of the increase or decrease in the force of each aspect in its
struggle against the other in the course of the development of a thing.
We often speak of "the new superseding the old". The
supersession of the old by the new is a general, eternal and inviolable law of the
universe. The transformation of one thing into another, through leaps of different forms
in accordance with its essence and external conditions -- this is the process of the new
superseding the old. In each thing there is contradiction between its new and its old
aspects, and this gives rise to a series of struggles with many twists and turns. As a
result of these struggles, the new aspect changes from being minor to being major and
rises to predominance, while the old aspect changes from being major to being minor and
gradually dies out. And the moment the new aspect gains dominance over the old, the old
thing changes qualitatively into a new thing. It can thus be seen that the nature of a
thing is mainly determined by the principal aspect of the contradiction, the aspect which
has gained predominance. When the principal aspect which has gained predominance changes,
the nature of a thing changes accordingly.
In capitalist society, capitalism has changed its position from
being a subordinate force in the old feudal era to being the dominant force, and the
nature of society has accordingly changed from feudal to capitalist. In the new,
capitalist era, the feudal forces changed from their former dominant position to a
subordinate one, gradually dying out. Such was the case, for example, in Britain and
France. With the development of the productive forces, the bourgeoisie changes from being
a new class playing a progressive role to being an old class playing a reactionary role,
until it is finally overthrown by the proletariat and becomes a class deprived of
privately owned means of production and stripped of power, when it, too, gradually dies
out. The proletariat, which is much more numerous than the bourgeoisie and grows
simultaneously with it but under its rule, is a new force which, initially subordinate to
the bourgeoisie, gradually gains strength, becomes an independent class playing the
leading role in history, and finally seizes political power and becomes the ruling class.
Thereupon the nature of society changes and the old capitalist society becomes the new
socialist society. This is the path already taken by the Soviet Union, a path that all
other countries will inevitably take.
Look at China, for instance. Imperialism occupies the principal
position in the contradiction in which China has been reduced to a semi-colony, it
oppresses the Chinese people, and China has been changed from an independent country into
a semi-colonial one. But this state of affairs will inevitably change; in the struggle
between the two sides, the power of the Chinese people which is growing under the
leadership of the proletariat will inevitably change China from a semi-colony into an
independent country, whereas imperialism will be overthrown and old China will inevitably
change into New China.
The change of old China into New China also involves a change in
the relation between the old feudal forces and the new popular forces within the country.
The old feudal landlord class will be overthrown, and from being the ruler it will change
into being the ruled; and this class, too, will gradually die out. From being the ruled
the people, led by the proletariat, will become the rulers. Thereupon, the nature of
Chinese society will change and the old, semi-colonial and semi-feudal society will change
into a new democratic society.
Instances of such reciprocal transformation are found in our past
experience. The Ching Dynasty which ruled China for nearly three hundred years was
overthrown in the Revolution of 1911, and the revolutionary Tung Meng Hui under Sun
Yat-sen's leadership was victorious for a time. In the Revolutionary War of 1924-27, the
revolutionary forces of the Communist-Kuomintang alliance in the south changed from being
weak to being strong and won victory in the Northern Expedition, while the Northern
warlords who once ruled the roost were overthrown. In 1927, the people's forces led by the
Communist Party were greatly reduced numerically under the attacks of Kuomintang reaction,
but with the elimination of opportunism within their ranks they gradually grew again. In
the revolutionary base areas under Communist leadership, the peasants have been
transformed from being the ruled to being the rulers, while the landlords have undergone a
reverse transformation. It is always so in the world, the new displacing the old, the old
being superseded by the new, the old being eliminated to make way for the new, and the new
emerging out of the old.
At certain times in the revolutionary struggle, the difficulties
outweigh the favourable conditions and so constitute the principal aspect of the
contradiction and the favourable conditions constitute the secondary aspect. But through
their efforts the revolutionaries can overcome the difficulties step by step and open up a
favourable new situation; thus a difficult situation yields place to a favourable one.
This- is what happened after the failure of the revolution in China in 1927 and during the
Long March of the Chinese Red Army. In the present Sino-Japanese War, China is again in a
difficult position, but we can change this and fundamentally transform the situation as
between China and Japan. Conversely, favourable conditions can be transformed into
difficulty if the revolutionaries make mistakes. Thus the victory of the revolution of
1924-27 turned into defeat. The revolutionary base areas which grew up in the southern
provinces after 1927 had all suffered defeat by 1934.
When we engage in study, the same holds good for the contradiction
in the passage from ignorance to knowledge. At the very beginning of our study of Marxism,
our ignorance of or scanty acquaintance with Marxism stands in contradiction to knowledge
of Marxism. But by assiduous study, ignorance can be transformed into knowledge, scanty
knowledge into substantial knowledge, and blindness in the application of Marxism into
mastery of its application.
Some people think that this is not true of certain contradictions.
For instance, in the contradiction between the productive forces and the relations of
production, the productive forces are the principal aspect; in the contradiction between
theory and practice, practice is the principal aspect; in the contradiction between the
economic base and the superstructure, the economic base is the principal aspect; and there
is no change in their respective positions. This is the mechanical materialist conception,
not the dialectical materialist conception. True, the productive forces, practice and the
economic base generally play the principal and decisive role; whoever denies this is not a
materialist. But it must also be admitted that in certain conditions, such aspects as the
relations of production, theory and the superstructure in turn manifest themselves in the
principal and decisive role. When it is impossible for the productive forces to develop
without a change in the relations of production, then the change in the relations of
production plays the principal and decisive role. The creation and advocacy of
revolutionary theory plays the principal and decisive role in those times of which Lenin
said, "Without revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary movement.'' [15] When a task, no maker which, has to be performed, but there is as yet
no guiding line, method, plan or policy, the principal and decisive thing is to decide on
a guiding line, method, plan or policy. When the superstructure (politics, culture, etc.)
obstructs the development of the economic base, political and cultural changes become
principal and decisive. Are we going against materialism when we say this? No. The reason
is that while we recognize that in the general development of history the material
determines the mental and social being determines social consciousness, we also -- and
indeed must -- recognize the reaction of mental on material things, of social
consciousness on social being and of the superstructure on the economic base. This does
not go against materialism; on the contrary, it avoids mechanical materialism and firmly
upholds dialectical materialism.
In studying the particularity of contradiction, unless we examine
these two facets -- the principal and the non-principal contradictions in a process, and
the principal and the non-principal aspects of a contradiction -- that is, unless we
examine the distinctive character of these two facets of contradiction, we shall get
bogged down in abstractions, be unable to understand contradiction concretely and
consequently be unable to find the correct method of resolving it. The distinctive
character or particularity of these two facets of contradiction represents the unevenness
of the forces that are in contradiction. Nothing in this world develops absolutely evenly;
we must oppose the theory of even development or the theory of equilibrium. Moreover, it
is these concrete features of a contradiction and the changes in the principal and
non-principal aspects of a contradiction in the course of its development that manifest
the force of the new superseding the old. The study of the various states of unevenness in
contradictions, of the principal and non-principal contradictions and of the principal and
the non-principal aspects of a contradiction constitutes an essential method by which a
revolutionary political party correctly determines its strategic and tactical policies
both in political and in military affairs. All Communists must give it attention.
V. THE IDENTITY AND STRUGGLE
OF THE ASPECTS OF A CONTRADICTION
W hen we understand the universality and the
particularity of contradiction, we must proceed to study the problem of the identity and
struggle of the aspects of a contradiction.
Identity, unity, coincidence, interpenetration, interpermeation,
interdependence (or mutual dependence for existence), interconnection or mutual
co-operation -- all these different terms mean the same thing and refer to the
following two points: first, the existence of each of the two aspects of a contradiction
in the process of the development of a thing presupposes the existence of the other
aspect, and both aspects coexist in a single entity; second, in given conditions, each of
the two contradictory aspects transforms itself into its opposite. This is the meaning of
identity.
Lenin said:
Dialectics is the teaching which shows how opposites can
be and how they happen to be (how they become) identical -- under what conditions
they are identical, transforming themselves into one another, -- why the human mind should
take these opposites not as dead, rigid, but as living, conditional, mobile, transforming
themselves into one another. [16]
What does this passage mean?
The contradictory aspects in every process exclude each other,
struggle with each other and are in opposition to each other. Without exception, they are
contained in the process of development of all things and in all human thought. A simple
process contains only a single pair of opposites, while a complex process contains more.
And in turn, the pairs of opposites are in contradiction to one another.)
That is how all things in the objective world and all human
thought are constituted and how they are set in motion.
This being so, there is an utter lack of identity or unity. How
then can one speak of identity or unity?
The fact is that no contradictory aspect can exist in isolation.
Without its opposite aspect, each loses the condition for its existence. Just think, can
any one contradictory aspect of a thing or of a concept in the human mind exist
independently? Without life, there would be no death; without death, there would be no
life. Without "above", there would be no "below") without
"below", there would be no "above". Without misfortune, there would be
no good fortune; without good fortune, these would be no misfortune. Without facility,
there would be no difficulty) without difficulty, there would be no facility. Without
landlords, there would be no tenant-peasants; without tenant-peasants, there would be no
landlords. Without the bourgeoisie, there would be no proletariat; without the
proletariat, there would be no bourgeoisie. Without imperialist oppression of nations,
there would be no colonies or semi-colonies; without colonies or semicolonies, there would
be no imperialist oppression of nations. It is so with all opposites; in given conditions,
on the one hand they are opposed to each other, and on the other they are interconnected,
interpenetrating, interpermeating and interdependent, and this character is described as
identity. In given conditions, all contradictory aspects possess the character of
non-identity and hence are described as being in contradiction. But they also possess the
character of identity and hence are interconnected. This is what Lenin means when he says
that dialectics studies "how opposites can be ... identical". How
then can they be identical? Because each is the condition for the other's existence. This
is the first meaning of identity.
But is it enough to say merely that each of the contradictory
aspects is the condition for the other's existence, that there is identity between them
and that consequently they can coexist in a single entity? No, it is not. The matter does
not end with their dependence on each other for their existence; what is more important is
their transformation into each other. That is to say, in given conditions, each of the
contradictory aspects within a thing transforms itself into its opposite, changes its
position to that of its opposite. This is the second meaning of the identity of
contradiction.
Why is there identity here, too? You see, by means of revolution
the proletariat, at one time the ruled, is transformed into the ruler, while the
bourgeoisie, the erstwhile ruler, is transformed into the ruled and changes its position
to that originally occupied by its opposite. This has already taken place in the Soviet
Union, as it will take place throughout the world. If there were no interconnection and
identity of opposites in given conditions, how could such a change take place?
The Kuomintang, which played a certain positive role at a certain
stage in modern Chinese history, became a counter-revolutionary party after 1927 because
of its inherent class nature and because of imperialist blandishments (these being the
conditions); but it has been compelled to agree to resist Japan because of the sharpening
of the contradiction between China and Japan and because of the Communist Party's policy
of the united front (these being the conditions). Things in contradiction change into one
another, and herein lies a definite identity.
Our agrarian revolution has been a process in which the landlord
class owning the land is transformed into a class that has lost its land, while the
peasants who once lost their land are transformed into small holders who have acquired
land, and it will be such a process once again. In given conditions having and not having,
acquiring and losing, are interconnected; there is identity of the two sides. Under
socialism, private peasant ownership is transformed into the public ownership of socialist
agriculture; this has already taken place in the Soviet Union, as it will take place
everywhere else. There is a bridge leading from private property to public property, which
in philosophy is called identity, or transformation into each other, or interpenetration.
To consolidate the dictatorship of the proletariat or the
dictatorship of the people is in fact to prepare the conditions for abolishing this
dictatorship and advancing to the higher stage when all state systems are eliminated. To
establish and build the Communist Party is in fact to prepare the conditions for the
elimination of the Communist Party and all political parties. To build a revolutionary
army under the leadership of the Communist Party and to carry on revolutionary war is in
fact to prepare the conditions for the permanent elimination of war. These opposites are
at the same time complementary.
War and peace, as everybody knows, transform themselves into each
other. War is transformed into peace; for instance, the First World War was transformed
into the post-war peace, and the civil war in China has now stopped, giving place to
internal peace. Peace is transformed into war; for instance, the Kuomintang-Communist
co-operation was transformed into war in 1927, and today's situation of world peace may be
transformed into a second world war. Why is this so? Because in class society such
contradictory things as war and peace have an identity in given conditions.
All contradictory things are interconnected; not only do they
coexist in a single entity in given conditions, but in other given conditions, they also
transform themselves into each other. This is the full meaning of the identity of
opposites. This is what Lenin meant when he discussed "how they happen to be (how
they become) identical -- under what conditions they are identical, transforming
themselves into one another".
Why is it that "the human mind should take these opposites
not as dead, rigid, but as living, conditional, mobile, transforming themselves into one
another"? Because that is just how things are in objective reality. The fact is that
the unity or identity of opposites in objective things is not dead or rigid, but is
living, conditional, mobile, temporary and relative; in given conditions, every
contradictory aspect transforms itself into its opposite. Reflected in man's thinking,
this becomes the Marxist world outlook of materialist dialectics. It is only the
reactionary ruling classes of the past and present and the metaphysicians in their service
who regard opposites not as living, conditional, mobile and transforming themselves into
one another, but as dead and rigid, and they propagate this fallacy everywhere to delude
the masses of the people, thus seeking to perpetuate their rule. The task of Communists is
to expose the fallacies of the reactionaries and metaphysicians, to propagate the
dialectics inherent in things, and so accelerate the transformation of things and achieve
the goal of revolution.
In speaking of the identity of opposites in given conditions, what
we are referring to is real and concrete opposites and the real and concrete
transformations of opposites into one another. There are innumerable transformations in
mythology, for instance, Kua Fu's race with the sun in Shan Hai Ching, [17] Yi's shooting down of nine suns in Huai Nan Tzu, [18] the Monkey King's seventy-two metamorphoses in Hsi Yu Chi, [19] the numerous episodes of ghosts and foxes metamorphosed into human
beings in the Strange Tales of Liao Chai, [20] etc. But these
legendary transformations of opposites are not concrete changes reflecting concrete
contradictions. They are naive, imaginary, subjectively conceived transformations conjured
up in men's minds by innumerable real and complex transformations of opposites into one
another. Marx said, "All mythology masters and dominates and shapes the forces of
nature in and through the imagination; hence it disappears as soon as man gains mastery
over the forces of nature.'' [21] The myriads of changes in mythology
(and also in nursery tales) delight people because they imaginatively picture man's
conquest of the forces of nature, and the best myths possess "eternal charm", as
Marx put it; but myths are not built out of the concrete contradictions existing in given
conditions and therefore are not a scientific reflection of reality. That is to say, in
myths or nursery tales the aspects constituting a contradiction have only an imaginary
identity, not a concrete identity. The scientific reflection of the identity in real
transformations is Marxist dialectics.
Why can an egg but not a stone be transformed into a chicken? Why
is there identity between war and peace and none between war and a stone? Why can human
beings give birth only to human beings and not to anything else? The sole reason is that
the identity of opposites exists only in necessary given conditions. Without these
necessary given conditions there can be no identity whatsoever.
Why is it that in Russia in 1917 the bourgeois-democratic February
Revolution was directly linked with the proletarian socialist October Revolution, while in
France the bourgeois revolution was not directly linked with a socialist revolution and
the Paris Commune of 1871 ended in failure? Why is it, on the other hand, that the nomadic
system of Mongolia and Central Asia has been directly linked with socialism? Why is it
that the Chinese revolution can avoid a capitalist future and be directly linked with
socialism without taking the old historical road of the Western countries, without passing
through a period of bourgeois dictatorship? The sole reason is the concrete conditions of
the time. When certain necessary conditions are present, certain contradictions arise in
the process of development of things and, moreover, the opposites contained in them are
interdependent and become transformed into one another; otherwise none of this would be
possible.
Such is the problem of identity. What then is struggle? And what
is the relation between identity and struggle?
Lenin said:
The unity (coincidence, identity, equal action) of opposites is
conditional, temporary, transitory, relative. The struggle of mutually exclusive opposites
is absolute, just as development and motion are absolute. [22]
What does this passage mean?
All processes have a beginning and an end, all processes transform
themselves into their opposites. The constancy of all processes is relative, but the
mutability manifested in the transformation of one process into another is absolute.
There are two states of motion in all things, that of relative
rest and that of conspicuous change. Both are caused by the struggle between the two
contradictory elements contained in a thing. When the thing is in the first state of
motion, it is undergoing only quantitative and not qualitative change and consequently
presents the outward appearance of being at rest. When the thing is in the second state of
motion, the quantitative change of the first state has already reached a culminating point
and gives rise to the dissolution of the thing as an entity and thereupon a qualitative
change ensues, hence the appearance of a conspicuous change. Such unity, solidarity,
combination, harmony, balance, stalemate, deadlock, rest, constancy, equilibrium,
solidity, attraction, etc., as we see in daily life, are all the appearances of things in
the state of quantitative change. On the other hand, the dissolution of unity, that is,
the destruction of this solidarity, combination, harmony, balance, stalemate, deadlock,
rest, constancy, equilibrium, solidity and attraction, and the change of each into its
opposite are all the appearances of things in the state of qualitative change, the
transformation of one process into another. Things are constantly transforming themselves
from the first into the second state of motion; the struggle of opposites goes on in both
states but the contradiction is resolved through the second state. That is why we say that
the unity of opposites is conditional, temporary and relative, while the struggle of
mutually exclusive opposites is absolute.
When we said above that two opposite things can coexist in a
single entity and can transform themselves into each other because there is identity
between them, we were speaking of conditionality, that is to say, in given conditions two
contradictory things can be united and can transform themselves into each other, but in
the absence of these conditions, they cannot constitute a contradiction, cannot coexist in
the same entity and cannot transform themselves into one another. It is because the
identity of opposites obtains only in given conditions that we have said identity is
conditional and relative. We may add that the struggle between opposites permeates a
process from beginning to end and makes one process transform itself into another, that it
is ubiquitous, and that struggle is therefore unconditional and absolute.
The combination of conditional, relative identity and
unconditional, absolute struggle constitutes the movement of opposites in all things.
We Chinese often say, "Things that oppose each other also
complement each other." [23] That is, things opposed to each other
have identity. This saying is dialectical and contrary to metaphysics. "Oppose each
other" refers to the mutual exclusion or the struggle of two contradictory aspects.
"Complement each other" means that in given conditions the two contradictory
aspects unite and achieve identity. Yet struggle is inherent in identity and without
struggle there can be no identity.
In identity there is struggle, in particularity there is
universality, and in individuality there is generality. To quote Lenin, "... there is
an absolute in the relative." [24]
VI. THE PLACE OF ANTAGONISM IN CONTRADICTION
T he question of the struggle of opposites
includes the question of what is antagonism. Our answer is that antagonism is one form,
but not the only form, of the struggle of opposites.
In human history, antagonism between classes exists as a
particular manifestation of the struggle of opposites. Consider the contradiction between
the exploiting and the exploited classes. Such contradictory classes coexist for a long
time in the same society, be it slave society, feudal society or capitalist society, and
they struggle with each other; but it is not until the contradiction between the two
classes develops to a certain stage that it assumes the form of open antagonism and
develops into revolution. The same holds for the transformation of peace into war in class
society.
Before it explodes, a bomb is a single entity in which opposites
coexist in given conditions. The explosion takes place only when a new condition,
ignition, is present. An analogous situation arises in all those natural phenomena which
finally assume the form of open conflict to resolve old contradictions and produce new
things.
It is highly important to grasp this fact. It enables us to
understand that revolutions and revolutionary wars are inevitable in class society and
that without them, it is impossible to accomplish any leap in social development and to
overthrow the reactionary ruling classes and therefore impossible for the people to win
political power. Communists must expose the deceitful propaganda of the reactionaries,
such as the assertion that social revolution is unnecessary and impossible. They must
firmly uphold the Marxist-Leninist theory of social revolution and enable the people to
understand that social revolution is not only entirely necessary but also entirely
practicable, and that the whole history of mankind and the triumph of the Soviet Union
have confirmed this scientific truth.
However, we must make a concrete study of the circumstances of
each specific struggle of opposites and should not arbitrarily apply the formula discussed
above to everything. Contradiction and struggle are universal and absolute, but the
methods of resolving contradictions, that is, the forms of struggle, differ according to
the differences in the nature of the contradictions. Some contradictions are characterized
by open antagonism, others are not. In accordance with the concrete development of things,
some contradictions which were originally non-antagonistic develop into antagonistic ones,
while others which were originally antagonistic develop into nonantagonistic ones.
As already mentioned, so long as classes exist, contradictions
between correct and incorrect ideas in the Communist Party are reflections within the
Party of class contradictions. At first, with regard to certain issues, such
contradictions may not manifest themselves as antagonistic. But with the development of
the class struggle, they may grow and become antagonistic. The history of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union shows us that the contradictions between the correct thinking of
Lenin and Stalin and the fallacious thinking of Trotsky, Bukharin and others did not at
first manifest themselves in an antagonistic form, but that later they did develop into
antagonism. There are similar cases in the history of the Chinese Communist Party. At
first the contradictions between the correct thinking of many of our Party comrades and
the fallacious thinking of Chen Tu-hsiu, Chang Kuo-tao and others also did not manifest
themselves in an antagonistic form, but later they did develop into antagonism. At present
the contradiction between correct and incorrect thinking in our Party does not manifest
itself in an antagonistic form, and if comrades who have committed mistakes can correct
them, it will not develop into antagonism. Therefore, the Party must on the one hand wage
a serious struggle against erroneous thinking, and on the other give the comrades who have
committed errors ample opportunity to wake up. This being the case, excessive struggle is
obviously inappropriate. But if the people who have committed errors persist in them and
aggravate them, there is the possibility that this contradiction will develop into
antagonism.
Economically, the contradiction between town and country is an
extremely antagonistic one both in capitalist society, where under the rule of the
bourgeoisie the towns ruthlessly plunder the countryside, and in the Kuomintang areas in
China, where under the rule of foreign imperialism and the Chinese big comprador
bourgeoisie the towns most rapaciously plunder the countryside. But in a socialist country
and in our revolutionary base areas, this antagonistic contradiction has changed into one
that is non-antagonistic; and when communist society is reached it will be abolished.
Lenin said, "Antagonism and contradiction are not at all one
and the same. Under socialism, the first will disappear, the second will remain." [25] That is to say, antagonism is one form, but not the only form, of the
struggle of opposites; the formula of antagonism cannot be arbitrarily applied everywhere.
VII. CONCLUSION
We may now say a few words to sum up. The law of
contradiction in things, that is, the law of the unity of opposites, is the fundamental
law of nature and of society and therefore also the fundamental law of thought. It stands
opposed to the metaphysical world outlook. It represents a great revolution in the history
of human knowledge. According to dialectical materialism, contradiction is present in all
processes of objectively existing things and of subjective thought and permeates all these
processes from beginning to end; this is the universality and absoluteness of
contradiction. Each contradiction and each of its aspects have their respective
characteristics; this is the particularity and relativity of contradiction. In given
conditions, opposites possess identity, and consequently can coexist in a single entity
and can transform themselves into each other; this again is the particularity and
relativity of contradiction. But the struggle of opposites is ceaseless, it goes on both
when the opposites are coexisting and when they are transforming themselves into each
other, and becomes especially conspicuous when they are transforming themselves into one
another; this again is the universality and absoluteness of contradiction. In studying the
particularity and relativity of contradiction, we must give attention to the distinction
between the principal contradiction and the non-principal contradictions and to the
distinction between the principal aspect and the non-principal aspect of a contradiction;
in studying the universality of contradiction and the struggle of opposites in
contradiction, we must give attention to the distinction between the different forms of
struggle. Otherwise we shall make mistakes. If, through study, we achieve a real
understanding of the essentials explained above, we shall be able to demolish dogmatist
ideas which are contrary to the basic principles of Marxism-Leninism and detrimental to
our revolutionary cause, and our comrades with practical experience will be able to
organize their experience into principles and avoid repeating empiricist errors. These are
a few simple conclusions from our study of the law of contradiction.
NOTER
[1] V. I. Lenin, "Conspectus of Hegel's Lectures
on the History of Philosophy" Collected Works, Russ. ea., Moscow, 1958, Vol.
XXXVIII, p. 249.
[2] In his essay "On the Question of
Dialectics", Lenin said, "The splitting in two of a single whole and the
cognition of its contradictory parts (see the quotation from Philo on Heraclitus at the
beginning of Section 3 'On Cognition' in Lassalle's book on Heraclitus) is the essence
(one of the 'essentials', one of the principal, if not the principal, characteristics or
features) of dialectics." (Collected Works, Russ. ea., Moscow, 1958, Vol.
XXXVIII, p. 357.) In his "Conspectus of Hegel's The Science of Logic", he
said, "In brief, dialectics can be defined as the doctrine of the unity of opposites.
This grasps the kernel of dialectics, but it requires explanations and development."
(Ibid., p. 215.)
[3] V. 1. Lenin, "On the Question of
Dialectics", Coaected Works, Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 358.
[4] A saying of Tung Chung-shu (179-104
B.C.), a well-known exponent of Confucianism in the Han Dynasty.
[5] Frederick Engels, "Dialectics.
Quantity and Quality", Anti-Duhring, Eng. ed., FLPH, Moscow, 1959, p. 166.
[6] V. I. Lenin, "On the Question of
Dialectics", Collected Works, Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, pp.
357-58
[7] Frederick Engels, op. cit., pp.
166-67.
[8] V. I. Lenin, "On the Question of
Dialectics", Collected Works, Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 3S7.
[9] Ibid., pp. 358-59
[10] See "Problems of Strategy in
China's Revolutionary War."
[11] See "Problems of Strategy in
China's Revolutionary War."
[12] Wei Cheng (A.D. 580-643) was a
statesman and historian of the Tang Dynasty.
[13] Shui Hu Chuan (Heroes of
the Marshes), a famous 14th century Chinese novel, describes a peasant war towards the
end of the Northern Sung Dynasty. Chu Village was in the vicinity of Liangshanpo, where
Sung Chiang, leader of the peasant uprising and hero of the novel, established his base.
Chu Chao-feng, the head of this village, was a despotic landlord.
[14] V. I. Lenin, "Once Again on the
Trade Unions, the Present Situation and the Mistakes of Trotsky and Bukharin", Selected
Works, Eng. ed., International Publishers, New York, 1943, Vol. IX, p. 66.
[15] V. I. Lenin, "What Is to Be
Done?", Collected Works, Eng. ed., FLPH, Moscow, 1961, Vol. V, p. 369.
[16] V. I. Lenin, "Conspectus of
Hegel's The Science of Logic", Collected Works, Russ. ea., Moscow, 1958, Vol.
XXXVIII, pp. 97-98.
[17] Shan Hai Chug (Book of
Mountains and Seas) was written in the era of the Warring States (403-221 B.C.). In
one of its fables Kua Fu, a superman, pursued and overtook the sun. But he died of thirst,
whereupon his staff was transformed into the forest of Teng.
[18] Yi is one of the legendary heroes of
ancient China, famous for his archery. According to a legend in Huai Nan Tzu,
compiled in the 2nd century B.C., there were ten suns in the sky in the days of Emperor
Yao. To put an end to the damage to vegetation caused by these scorching suns, Emperor Yao
ordered Yi to shoot them down. In another legend recorded by Wang Yi (2nd century A.D.),
the archer is said to have shot down nine of the ten suns.
[19] Hsi Yu Chi (Pilgrimage to the West)
is a 16th century novel, the hero of which is the monkey god Sun Wu-kung. He could
miraculously change at will into seventy-two different shapes, such as a bird, a tree and
a stone.
[20] The Strange Tales of Liao Chai,
written by Pu Sung-ling in the 17th century, is a well-known collection of 431 tales,
mostly about ghosts and fox spirits.
[21] Karl Marx, "Introduction to the
Critique of Political Economy", A Contribution to the Critique of Political
Economy, Eng. ed., Chicago, 1904, pp. 310-11.
[22] V. I. Lenin, "On the Question of
Dialectics", Collected Works, Russ. ed., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 358.
[23] The saying "Things that oppose
each other also complement each other" first appeared in the History of the
Earlier Han Dynasty by Pan Ku, a celebrated historian in the 1st century A.D. It has
long been a popular saying.
[24] V. I. Lenin, "On the Question of
Dialectics", Collected Works, Russ. ea., Moscow, 1958, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 358.
[25] V. I. Lenin, "Remarks on N. I.
Bukharin's Economics of the Transitional Period" Selected Works, Russ. ed.,
Moscow-Leningrad, 1931, Vol. XI, p. 357. |