ON PRACTICE
On the Relation Between Knowledge and Practice, Between Knowing and Doing - 5
To make clear the dialectical-materialist movement of cognition
arising on the basis of the practice which changes reality--to make clear the
gradually deepening movement of cognition--a few additional concrete examples
are given below.
In its knowledge of capitalist society, the proletariat was only
in the perceptual stage of cognition in the first period of its practice, the
period of machine-smashing and spontaneous struggle; it knew only some of the
aspects and the external relations of the phenomena of capitalism. The
proletariat was then still a "class-in-itself". But when it reached the
second period of its practice, the period of conscious and organized economic
and political struggles, the proletariat was able to comprehend the essence of
capitalist society, the relations of exploitation between social classes and
its own historical task; and it was able to do so because of its own practice
and because of its experience of prolonged struggle, which Marx and Engels
scientifically summed up in all its variety to create the theory of Marxism for
the education of the proletariat. It was then that the proletariat became a
"class-for-itself".
Similarly with the Chinese people's knowledge of imperialism. The
first stage was one of superficial, perceptual knowledge, as shown in the
indiscriminate anti-foreign struggles of the Movement of the Taiping Heavenly
Kingdom, the Yi Ho Tuan Movement, and so on. It was only in the second stage
that the Chinese people reached the stage of rational knowledge, saw the
internal and external contradictions of imperialism and saw the essential truth
that imperialism had allied itself with China's comprador and feudal classes to
oppress and exploit the great masses of the Chinese people. This knowledge
began about the time of the May 4th Movement of 1919.
Next, let us consider war. If those who lead a war lack experience
of war, then at the initial stage they will not understand the profound laws
pertaining to the directing of a specific war (such as our Agrarian
Revolutionary War of the past decade). At the initial stage they will merely
experience a good deal of fighting and, what is more, suffer many defeats. But
this experience (the experience of battles won and especially of battles lost)
enables them to comprehend the inner thread of the whole war, namely, the laws
of that specific war, to understand its strategy and tactics, and consequently
to direct the war with confidence. If, at such a moment, the command is turned
over to an inexperienced person, then he too will have to suffer a number of
defeats (gain experience) before he can comprehend the true laws of the war.
"I am not sure I can handle it." We often hear this
remark when a comrade hesitates to accept an assignment. Why is he unsure of
himself? Because he has no systematic understanding of the content and
circumstances of the assignment, or because he has had little or no contact
with such work, and so the laws governing it are beyond him. After a detailed
analysis of the nature and circumstances of the assignment, he will feel more
sure of himself and do it willingly. If he spends some time at the job and
gains experience and if he is a person who is willing to look into matters with
an open mind and not one who approaches problems subjectively, one-sidedly and
superficially, then he can draw conclusions for himself as to how to go about
the job and do it with much more courage. Only those who are subjective,
one-sided and superficial in their approach to problems will smugly issue
orders or directives the moment they arrive on the scene, without considering
the circumstances, without viewing things in their totality (their history and
their present state as a whole) and without getting to the essence of things
(their nature and the internal relations between one thing and another). Such
people are bound to trip and fall.
Thus it can be seen that the first step in the process of
cognition is contact with the objects of the external world; this belongs to
the stage of perception. The second step is to synthesize the data of
perception by arranging and reconstructing them; this belongs to the stage of conception,
judgement and inference. It is only when the data of perception are very rich
(not fragmentary) and correspond to reality (are not illusory) that they can be
the basis for forming correct concepts and theories.
No comments:
Post a Comment