Socialist Party of Great Britain member, Brian
Gardner, reflects on the SPGB's
2007
Summer School that took place this past weekend in Birmingham.
FIRCROFT SUMMER SCHOOL
This
weekend some 40-plus members, sympathisers and Standard-subscribers
from as far afield as Italy, Turkey and USA gathered for a weekend of
discussion and debate at the annual summer school organised by
Birmingham Branch.
Under the theme “Thinkers of the 20th Century”
a range of ideas – from disciplines as diverse as anthropology,
information technology, literature and philosophy - were reviewed from
a socialist perspective and much heated debate followed.
It's not
surprising that a recurring issue throughout such a themed weekend is
that of “freedom”. Much abused in everyday currency, “freedom” often
translates as little more than lower taxes and fewer regulations,
issues of little or no concern to world socialists. In contrast,
socialists are intensely interested in freedom, whether its the freedom
we have to surpass the gene as a constraint on how we live, the freedom
to work co-operatively in software development/use software without
restrictions, or the more abstract freedom of the individual under the
state.
The dystopian visions of Aldous Huxley (Brave
New World) and George Orwell (1984)
then, formed a large part of the discussions around the first two talks
from Richard Headicar and Mike Foster respectively. What sort of state
do we live in now? Which dismal projection has survived the best?
Probably a bit of both is the answer: Orwell's boot stamping on the
face is still prevalent in many parts of the world as the market system
emerges to an ungrateful population of new wage-earners. “Late”
capitalist states on the other hand have clearly evolved more complex
and subtle forms of oppression, including of course the diversions of
Big Brother (the TV “reality” show) and the dubious freedom of consumer
choice.
To what extent can you separate the thinker from
the
thoughts? While Orwell got his hands dirty down mines, in hotel
kitchens and most famously on the frontline in Spain, Aldous Huxley in
common with most of the other thinkers risked little more than a paper
cut in the drawing rooms of Bloomsbury. Does this influence how we read
each author?
As Marx famously noted, “the philosophers have
only interpreted the world the point is to change it”.
Someone who has done very little interpretation of the world, but by
contrast has undeniably changed it is Richard Stallman. A software
engineer turned intellectual property activist, Stallman developed GNU
software, CopyLeft and the free software movement. This has inverted
contract law to ensure that CopyLeft software (such as Linux operating
system) gets the fullest expression of its use value (ie it is free to
copy and use), but has effectively no exchange value as users have to
agree to make available and not restrict access to any amendments made
to it. Tristan Miller discussed how this little oasis of “socialistic”
production has grown unstoppably within the body of capitalism and
effectively mirrors – albeit within the software and digital music
communities – all the features of “from each according to ability,
to each according to need”.
The
subject of freedom of the individual phenotype (eg human) as opposed to
the dubious constraints of biological determinism arose during Adam
Buick's introduction to the cultural anthropologist Ashley Montagu, who
is best known for his contributions during the middle part of last
century to the nature v nurture debate. It is likely that his writings
will stand the test of time better than the more recent fashions of
biological determinism - sociobiology and evolutionary psychology - as
typified by the “popular" science writers Richard Dawkins, E O Wilson
and Steven Pinker. If human nature is slowly becoming less of an
ideological “barrier to socialism” than it once was, it will be due to
the painstaking work of real scientists such as Montagu.
Simon
Wigley got the short straw in having to present the ideas of the
Frankfurt School of philosophy shortly after a large Saturday lunch. He
stuck to the brief given to him admirably however, particularly given
that he had little enthusiasm for these ideas, as he made clear. Whilst
some in the audience wanted to shoot the piano player, others were
grateful that Simon had done the hard work of reading this stuff and
translating it from the English for our benefit.
Personally
speaking I gained most from this talk – even if it was only to gain
confidence that the Frankfurt emperors were indeed just as stark naked
as I had always suspected, and that rather than being extensions to
marxist philosophy, the ideas of Adorno, Habermas et al (along with the
post-modern ideas they set the scene for) are negations of class-based
analysis, of the enlightenment, and even of the scientific method that
drove it.
The material conditions of capitalism really
haven't
changed that much in the last century – and our philosophies really
dont look like they need to change much either. Anyone who thinks that
world socialists are intellectuals, academics or armchair philosophers
would have been pleasantly surprised at the disdain with which these
ideas – far removed from anything actually to do with working class
experience – were discussed. Habermas could have dug coal during the
Spanish Civil War for all I know, but – judged on their own merit - his
ideas still should not be taken seriously.
In summary, there is
of course a perpetual tension between theory and practice that no
political organisation, whether liberal, marxist or anarchist, gets
right all the time. However, assisted by a plentiful supply (according
to need of course) of the local Black Country beer, and the opportunity
to catch up with old comrades and new sympathisers, most attendees I
spoke with left the weekend feeling stimulated, reinvigorated and
better-prepared for the more practical need to spread the socialist
case. Surely, the ideal balance between ideas and action.
BG