V. THE IDENTITY AND STRUGGLE OF THE ASPECTS OF A CONTRADICTION - 3
War and peace, as everybody knows, transform themselves into each other. War is transformed into peace; for instance, the First World War was transformed into the post-war peace, and the civil war in China has now stopped, giving place to internal peace. Peace is transformed into war; for instance, the Kuomintang-Communist co-operation was transformed into war in 1927, and today's situation of world peace may be transformed into a second world war. Why is this so? Because in class society such contradictory things as war and peace have an identity in given conditions.
War and peace, as everybody knows, transform themselves into each other. War is transformed into peace; for instance, the First World War was transformed into the post-war peace, and the civil war in China has now stopped, giving place to internal peace. Peace is transformed into war; for instance, the Kuomintang-Communist co-operation was transformed into war in 1927, and today's situation of world peace may be transformed into a second world war. Why is this so? Because in class society such contradictory things as war and peace have an identity in given conditions.
All contradictory things are interconnected; not only do they
coexist in a single entity in given conditions, but in other given conditions,
they also transform themselves into each other. This is the full meaning of the
identity of opposites. This is what Lenin meant when he discussed "how
they happen to be (how they become) identical--under what
conditions they are identical, transforming themselves into one another".
Why is it that "the human mind should take these opposites
not as dead, rigid, but as living, conditional, mobile, transforming themselves
into one another"? Because that is just how things are in objective
reality. The fact is that the unity or identity of opposites in objective
things is not dead or rigid, but is living, conditional, mobile, temporary and
relative; in given conditions, every contradictory aspect transforms itself
into its opposite. Reflected in man's thinking, this becomes the Marxist world
outlook of materialist dialectics. It is only the reactionary ruling classes of
the past and present and the metaphysicians in their service who regard opposites
not as living, conditional, mobile and transforming themselves into one
another, but as dead and rigid, and they propagate this fallacy everywhere to
delude the masses of the people, thus seeking to perpetuate their rule. The
task of Communists is to expose the fallacies of the reactionaries and
metaphysicians, to propagate the dialectics inherent in things, and so
accelerate the transformation of things and achieve the goal of revolution.
In speaking of the identity of opposites in given conditions, what
we are referring to is real and concrete opposites and the real and concrete
transformations of opposites into one another. There are innumerable
transformations in mythology, for instance, Kua Fu's race with the sun in Shan
Hai Ching, [17] Yi's shooting down of nine suns in Huai Nan
Tzu, [18] the Monkey King's seventy-two metamorphoses inHsi Yu
Chi, [19] the numerous episodes of ghosts and foxes
metamorphosed into human beings in the Strange Tales of Liao
Chai, [20] etc. But these legendary transformations of
opposites are not concrete changes reflecting concrete contradictions. They are
naive, imaginary, subjectively conceived transformations conjured up in men's
minds by innumerable real and complex transformations of opposites into one
another. Marx said, "All mythology masters and dominates and shapes the
forces of nature in and through the imagination; hence it disappears as soon as
man gains mastery over the forces of nature." [21] The myriads of changes in mythology (and also in nursery tales)
delight people because they imaginatively picture man's conquest of the forces
of nature, and the best myths possess "eternal charm", as Marx put
it; but myths are not built out of the concrete contradictions existing in
given conditions and therefore are not a scientific reflection of reality. That
is to say, in myths or nursery tales the aspects constituting a contradiction
have only an imaginary identity, not a concrete identity. The scientific
reflection of the identity in real transformations is Marxist dialectics.
Why can an egg but not a stone be transformed into a chicken? Why
is there identity between war and peace and none between war and a stone? Why
can human beings give birth only to human beings and not to anything else? The
sole reason is that the identity of opposites exists only in necessary given
conditions. Without these necessary given conditions there can be no identity
whatsoever.
Why is it that in Russia in 1917 the bourgeois-democratic February
Revolution was directly linked with the proletarian socialist October
Revolution, while in France the bourgeois revolution was not directly linked
with a socialist revolution and the Paris Commune of 1871 ended in failure? Why
is it, on the other hand, that the nomadic system of Mongolia and Central Asia
has been directly linked with socialism? Why is it that the Chinese revolution
can avoid a capitalist future and be directly linked with socialism without
taking the old historical road of the Western countries, without passing
through a period of bourgeois dictatorship? The sole reason is the concrete
conditions of the time. When certain necessary conditions are present, certain
contradictions arise in the process of development of things and, moreover, the
opposites contained in them are interdependent and become transformed into one
another; otherwise none of this would be possible.
Such is the problem of identity. What then is struggle? And what
is the relation between identity and struggle?
Lenin said:
The unity (coincidence,
identity, equal action) of opposites is conditional, temporary, transitory,
relative. The struggle of mutually exclusive opposites is absolute, just as
development and motion are absolute. [22]
What does this passage mean?
All processes have a beginning and an end, all processes transform
themselves into their opposites. The constancy of all processes is relative,
but the mutability manifested in the transformation of one process into another
is absolute.
There are two states of motion in all things, that of relative
rest and that of conspicuous change. Both are caused by the struggle between
the two contradictory elements contained in a thing. When the thing is in the
first state of motion, it is undergoing only quantitative and not qualitative
change and consequently presents the outward appearance of being at rest. When
the thing is in the second state of motion, the quantitative change of the
first state has already reached a culminating point and gives rise to the
dissolution of the thing as an entity and thereupon a qualitative change
ensues, hence the appearance of a conspicuous change. Such unity, solidarity,
combination, harmony, balance, stalemate, deadlock, rest, constancy,
equilibrium, solidity, attraction, etc., as we see in daily life, are all the
appearances of things in the state of quantitative change. On the other hand,
the dissolution of unity, that is, the destruction of this solidarity,
combination, harmony, balance, stalemate, deadlock, rest, constancy,
equilibrium, solidity and attraction, and the change of each into its opposite
are all the appearances of things in the state of qualitative change, the
transformation of one process into another. Things are constantly transforming
themselves from the first into the second state of motion; the struggle of
opposites goes on in both states but the contradiction is resolved through the
second state. That is why we say that the unity of opposites is conditional,
temporary and relative, while the struggle of mutually exclusive opposites is
absolute.
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