Wintermute wrote:
I don't have a lot of time to chat right now, but the idea of what exactly defines human nature is something that always tickles me whenever I read Marx. I'm attracted to his historical materialism, what with the reciprocal relationship between people and their environments, being defined by them and in turn defining them, so in that regard it would be nice to see human nature as somewhat malleable, which would make the reason humans are oftentimes huge pricks due to the fact that the world they grew up in conditioned them to be like this. This is a nice idea, because it allows for a change in human nature, the possibility that we don't inherently have to be pricks. The thing is, I dunno how true this is. I've only ever been a part of one type of society, and that's one where people being self-serving get rewarded. I'm not sure about earlier or future ones. I mean, throughout the past, under different forms of society (this is really vague, sorry), people have still been dicks. And they seem to be continuing to be dicks into the future. So, I dunno, Mr. Marx. I like your optimism, but I dunno if I buy it.
But, I know that some other people here probably know the ins-and-outs of Marxism better than I do, so if I got anything wrong in here, lemme know.
Short answer: I would like for there to be variation and the capacity to change human nature, but I'm not sure how likely that is.
Hey Wintermute, I dig what you're saying.
I'd say there's probably a difference between some innate idea of human nature and ever-changing consciousness (which depends on material environment) in the way Marx talks about.
According to Marx there is an innate, universal thing that separates humans from animals- this is our ability, and our
need, to purposefully enter into a creative process, and to design and make things that we ourselves have devised and planned autonomously. Because under capitalism, most people make things that they are told to by others, they are alienated from their own natural human creative process.
So that is an eternal characteristic of human nature, but our
consciousness (which I suppose is a slightly different thing), i.e. the way we define ourselves, is in an ever-changing relationship with our material environment.
I know what you mean about wanting to see evidence of this. It's not the kind of thing that can be scientifically proved or disproved. If you fancy doing some reading, there are quite a few Marxist writers who have tried to show how human behaviour and consciousness has been shaped by economic transitions. The best one is probably EP Thompson's "The Making of the English Working Class". Thompson basically argues in minute historical detail that the progress of the industrial revolution in England totally altered the way people behaved and defined themselves.
One example that springs to mind is the way in which the growth of mechanised industrial capitalism totally altered the relationship between craftsmen and government. This is obviously a generalisation, but prior to these developments a lot of people seem to have identified strongly as English subjects who were part of a traditional, paternalistic society in which they could expect support from the government in providing for them. The expansion of capitalism basically severed that relationship, and ultimately leads to a very different understanding of "class consciousness", i.e. identifying as working class members with common interests in opposition to the emerging bourgeoisie. This is quite a radical change in people's identities, and it was driven by economic processes.