Is There a Marxist Personal Morality?

Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 7:171-192 (1981)
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Abstract

Man must prove the truth i.e., the reality and power, the this-sidedness of his thinking in practice.As individuals express their life, so they are.Karl Marx.The idea of a Marxian personal morality is in some ways irresistible. It strikes a personal chord in us, as most Marxian ideas may not, and it brings us close to the heart of the Marxian vision, its concern for the welfare of oppressed others.Yet Marxist theory, with its emphasis on classes, social laws, and historical determinism, seems to rule out the domains of the personal and the moral in principle. And this standard theoretical preemption is reflected in practice. Marxists rarely examine, or seek to revolutionize, their individual lives as they do societies. Indeed they may be inclined to be disdainful of any such venture as a sort of ‘bourgeois individualism.’

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