ON PRACTICE
On the Relation Between Knowledge and Practice, Between Knowing and Doing -1
Before Marx, materialism examined the problem of knowledge apart
from the social nature of man and apart from his historical development, and
was therefore incapable of understanding the dependence of knowledge on social
practice, that is, the dependence of knowledge on production and the class
struggle.
Above all, Marxists regard man's activity in production as the
most fundamental practical activity, the determinant of all his other
activities. Man's knowledge depends mainly on his activity in material production,
through which he comes gradually to understand the phenomena, the properties
and the laws of nature, and the relations between himself and nature; and
through his activity in production he also gradually comes to understand, in
varying degrees, certain relations that exist between man and man. None of this
knowledge can be acquired apart from activity in production. In a classless
society every person, as a member of society, joins in common effort with the
other members, enters into definite relations of production with them and
engages in production to meet man's material needs. In all class societies, the
members of the different social classes also enter, in different ways, into
definite relations of production and engage in production to meet their
material needs. This is the primary source from which human knowledge develops.
Man's social practice is not confined to activity in production,
but takes many other forms--class struggle, political life, scientific and
artistic pursuits; in short, as a social being, man participates in all spheres
of the practical life of society. Thus man, in varying degrees, comes to know
the different relations between man and man, not only through his material life
but also through his political and cultural life (both of which are intimately
bound up with material life). Of these other types of social practice, class
struggle in particular, in all its various forms, exerts a profound influence
on the development of man's knowledge. In class society everyone lives as a
member of a particular class, and every kind of thinking, without exception, is
stamped with the brand of a class.
Marxists hold that in human society activity in production
develops step by step from a lower to a higher level and that consequently man's
knowledge, whether of nature or of society, also develops step by step from a
lower to a higher level, that is, from the shallower to the deeper, from the
one-sided to the many-sided. For a very long period in history, men were
necessarily confined to a one-sided understanding of the history of society
because, for one thing, the bias of the exploiting classes always distorted
history and, for another, the small scale of production limited man's outlook.
It was not until the modern proletariat emerged along with immense forces of
production (large-scale industry) that man was able to acquire a comprehensive,
historical understanding of the development of society and turn this knowledge
into a science, the science of Marxism.
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