Bogdanov, Marx, and the limits to growth debate

The European Legacy 9 (3):305-316 (2004)
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Abstract

Bogdanov is a major rival to the philosophical orthodoxy of Plekhanov and Lenin. We explicate the foundational notions of his philosophy—praxis and experience—and trace his revisionism to Kant, Fichte, Mach, and Spencer. We show that Bogdanov's approach represents a predominantly pragmatic reading of Marx, influenced by the empiricism of Mach and Spencer as well as by Kantian apriorism. Bogdanov's version of Unified Science—Tektology—is considered against his philosophical background. The concept of praxis is at the center of the controversy between Marxist orthodoxy and revisionism. We analyze the connection between Bogdanov's philosophy of praxis, and the constructivism of the young Marx. Consequently, we see how Bogdanov's quest for infinite creativity is conceptually connected with the Fichtean–Marxian quest for infinite growth. Furthermore, we consider the issue of technological growth in a framework of the contemporary limits to growth debate.

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References found in this work

Lenin and bogdanov.Karl G. Ballestrem - 1969 - Studies in East European Thought 9 (4):283-310.
Lenin and Bogdanov.Karl G. Ballestrem - 1969 - Studies in Soviet Thought 9 (4):283-310.
Lenin and bogdanov: Protagonists in the 'bolshevik center'.Avraham Yassour - 1981 - Studies in East European Thought 22 (1):1-32.
Draft of a Communist Confession of Faith.Friedrich Engels - 2012 - In Jeffrey C. Isaac (ed.), The Communist Manifesto. Yale University Press. pp. 47-51.
Bogdanov-Malinovsky on party and revolution.Avraham Yassour - 1984 - Studies in Soviet Thought 27 (3):225-236.

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