People on this board often talk about the objective interest of the working class, and how workers would be objectively better off under communism, but how can this be if interest is inherently subjective? Obviously this raises questions about the nature of concepts like class interest and false consciousness.
Any thoughts?
The shortest answer to your question is - this cannot be so, and it isn't so as there isn't an object-like thing called "interest" apart from how specific people lead their lives. You're right insofar as interests need to be understood as either a) needs arising from the physiological constitution of human beings (what 870 claims about hurt) b) various historically specific and contigent desires and wants.
The precise problem is that the facile and unproductive, conventional Marxist take on this is that it avoids problems associated with particular people's articulation of wants and desires and action taken to that end, in favor of simply preaching to the choir about class traitors who're obviously blinded by bourgeois ideology to the deeper objective reality where something like a common interest exists independently of interacting people. If they only listened to enlightened intellectuals they would be able to see the light. As you can imagine, this is the general program of idealism in pretty much all of its variants as it rests on mystifying a very particular and limited set of articulated wants (or if you will, a social-political) as an underlying essence behind the multitude of particular experiences (which are then said to be illusory, mere "appearances"). Of course, this doesn't mean that this limited set of articulated wants and means to achieve them can't be generalized across a population (in case of communist politics, across the working class population and perhaps some really small sections of other social classes).
The remedy for this mistake is to admit that class interest is historically formed and "subjective" insofar as its articulation and status as effective force depends on concrete people facing concrete historical conditions. This also necessarily implies the rejection of the idea that the vanguard is to reveal the underlying "class interest" to workers who'd otherwise stumble in the dark. One hypothetical scenario that reveals all the absurdity of this position could be constructed like this: imagine a pre-revolutionary situation where a leading intelectual of the communiust vanguard confronts a group of workers and urges them to realize their true objective interest which just happens to be the overthrow of the bourgeois state and communist social transformation. The intelectual is greeted with doubt and fear on grounds of ideas that the bourgeois class will violently defend its hegemony. The workers conclude it's not really a good idea to risk their lives. What does the communist do? Conclude that such fear is the result of indoctrination or any conceivable defect of understanding objective class interest by workers themselves? If the communist does reach that kind of a conclusion, all the worse for them.
Anyway. I think it's high time to ditch this unintelligible notion.
I don't see how interest is subjective - in fact there is broad agreement on what hurts people and what is pleasing or helpful to them, either as a biological organism or a member of society.
This is mere wishful thinking when it comes to a postulated "broad agreement" on what is destructive for people as members of society. Anyway, even if there were (which is up for debate), the mere fact that nothing is done about it signals that we're not dealing with effective interest (with particularly determined avenues for its fulfillment, e.g. working class fightback as opposed to class fragmentation and people going for petite bourgeois entrpreneurial solutions - either legal or illegal).
The word isn't of course used only to denote what's harmful and what's productive from the perspective of biologically determined necessities of life. When it is used as in "It's not in your best interest to" it already presupposes a formed set of wants and even goals which cannot be said to be "objective" for the simple reason of this being a particular person's set of wants and goals (while it is entirely possible that many more people share one, many or even more elements of it).
And while we're at it, I don't even think terms like "subjective" and "objective" are productive here. They seem to create more confusion than clarity. Obviously the kinds of judgement they distinguish from - e.g. objective judgement as statements of how things are as opposed to subjhective judgement as statement of (yet unchecked) belief or statements of enjoyment and assigning value (e.g. cultural artefacts) - are in need to be distinguished. But apart from this simple aspect I don't see a use for them.
Last edited by Thirsty Crow; 17th August 2014 at 20:09.
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