III. THE PARTICULARITY OF CONTRADICTION - 3
There are many contradictions in the course of development of any
major thing. For instance, in the course of China's bourgeois-democratic
revolution, where the conditions are exceedingly complex, there exist the
contradiction between all the oppressed classes in Chinese society and
imperialism, the contradiction between the great masses of the people and
feudalism, the contradiction between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, the
contradiction between the peasantry and the urban petty bourgeoisie on the one
hand and the bourgeoisie on the other, the contradiction between the various
reactionary ruling groups, and so on. These contradictions cannot be treated in
the same way since each has its own particularity; moreover, the two aspects of
each contradiction cannot be treated in the same way since each aspect has its
own characteristics. We who are engages in the Chinese revolution should not
only understand the particularity of these contradictions in their totality,
that is, in their interconnections, but should also study the two aspects of
each contradiction as the only means of understanding the totality. When we
speak of understanding each aspect of a contradiction, we mean understanding
what specific position each aspect occupies, what concrete forms it assumes in
its interdependence and in its contradiction with its opposite, and what
concrete methods are employed in the struggle with its opposite, when the two
are both interdependent and in contradiction, and also after the
interdependence breaks down. It is of great importance to study these problems.
Lenin meant just this when he said that the most essential thing in Marxism,
the living soul of Marxism, is the concrete analysis of concrete conditions. [10] Our dogmatists have violated Lenin's teachings; they never use
their brains to analyse anything concretely, and in their writings and speeches
they always use stereotypes devoid of content, thereby creating a very bad
style of work in our Party.
In studying a problem, we must shun subjectivity, one-sidedness
and superficiality. To be subjective means not to look at problems objectively,
that is, not to use the materialist viewpoint in looking at problems. I have
discussed this in my essay "On Practice". To be one-sided means not
to look at problems all-sidedly, for example, to understand only China but not
Japan, only the Communist Party but not the Kuomintang, only the proletariat
but not the bourgeoisie, only the peasants but not the landlords, only the favourable
conditions but not the difficult ones, only the past but not the
future, only individual parts but not the whole, only the defects but not the
achievements, only the plaintiff's case but not the defendant's, only
underground revolutionary work but not open revolutionary work, and so on. In a
word, it means not to understand the characteristics of both aspects of a
contradiction. This is what we mean by looking at a problem one-sidedly. Or it
may be called seeing the part but not the whole, seeing the trees but not the
forest. That way it is impossible to kind the method for resolving a
contradiction, it is impossible to accomplish the tasks of the revolution, to
carry out assignments well or to develop inner-Party ideological struggle
correctly. When Sun Wu Tzu said in discussing military science, "Know the
enemy and know yourself, and you can fight a hundred battles with no danger of
defeat", [11] he was referring to the two sides in a battle. Wei Chengi [12] of the Tang Dynasty also understood the error of one- sidedness
when he said, "Listen to both sides and you will be enlightened, heed only
one side and you will be benighted." But our comrades often look at
problems one-sidedly, and so they often run into snags. In the novel Shui
Hu Chuan, Sung Chiang thrice attacked Chu Village. [13] Twice he was defeated because he was ignorant of the local
conditions and used the wrong method. Later he changed his method; first he
investigated the situation, and he familiarized himself with the maze of roads,
then he broke up the alliance between the Li, Hu and Chu Villages and sent his
men in disguise into the enemy camp to lie in wait, using a stratagem similar
to that of the Trojan Horse in the foreign story. And on the third occasion he
won. There are many examples of materialist dialectics in Shui Hu
Chuan, of which the episode of the three attacks on Chu Village is one
of the best. Lenin said:
... in order really to
know an object we must embrace, study, all its sides, all connections and
"mediations". We shall never achieve this completely, but the demand
for all-sidedness is a safeguard against mistakes and rigidity.[14]
No comments:
Post a Comment