ON PRACTICE
On the Relation Between Knowledge and Practice, Between Knowing
and Doing
July 1937
[There used to be a number of comrades in our
Party who were dogmatists and who for a long period rejected the experience of
the Chinese revolution, denying the truth that "Marxism is not a dogma but
a guide to action" and overawing people with words and phrases from
Marxist works, torn out of context. There were also a number of comrades who
were empiricists and who for a long period restricted themselves to their own
fragmentary experience and did not understand the importance of theory for
revolutionary practice or see the revolution as a whole, but worked blindly
though industriously. The erroneous ideas of these two types of comrades, and
particularly of the dogmatists, caused enormous losses to the Chinese
revolution during 1931-34, and yet the dogmatists cloaking themselves as
Marxists, confused a great many comrades. "On Practice" was written
in order to expose the subjectivist errors of dogmatism and empiricism in the
Party, and especially the error of dogmatism, from the standpoint of the
Marxist theory of knowledge. It was entitled "On Practice" because
its stress was on exposing the dogmatist kind of subjectivism, which belittles
practice. The ideas contained in this essay were presented by Comrade Mao
Tse-tung in a lecture at the Anti-Japanese Military and Political College in
Yenan.]
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