III. THE PARTICULARITY OF CONTRADICTION
Contradiction 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment