You are on page 1of 7

expected is an analysis of our present situation success of drawing this distinction and repression

with s'ome general guidelines for the transition to must be directed only to those in the former cate-
socialism. Dialectical change provides us with gory. Such an ethic is based on the conception of
ever new situations which for an understanding human beings as re/producers of their own and not
demand that a wide range of experience .be drawn a class reality and as such is universalistic. But
upon from within and without the revolutionary core. it is universalism with a difference, being historic-
This in turn requires a respect for the opinions ally specific it recognizes the existence of class
and efforts of others although of course not neces- struggle and hence the necessity of excluding some
sarily all. To be able to do this necessitates once from the realm of autonomy. Because this exclu-
more a distinction between real enemies and those sion threatens the objective validation by all of
that can be brought into alliance or tolerated as 0[:£'\' S moral ideology - albeit a Marxist one - it
non-conformists. There is, as we remarked earlier, D1 .... t be done with care in some of the ways I have
a need to distinguish between what could be called just mentioned so as not to be forever exclusivist.
the positively reactionary, those forces directed That is, the ideal of the classless society must be
against the very heart of socialism, and those maintained and made the place where all can develop
forces which are hindrances of a non-fatal variety. and construct their own reality to a degree hitherto
A socialist ethic depends very heavily on the unattained in any previous historical epoch.

0. Malerialisms
KateSoper study and his political activity, but also as a philo-
logist, Leopardi scholar and student of nineteenth-
Hitherto, Sebastiano Timpanaro' s work has been century culture (2). Only the fourth chapter on
known to English readers only through the occasional 'Structuralism and its Successors' wa,s written for
extract from his books published in New Left Review. the book. Despite its piecemeal formation the book
Now, with the publication in full of what are perhaps reads as a coherent whole since its first four chap-
his most controversial works - On Materialism, and ters represent the development of Timpanaro's
more recently The Freudian Slip - we are given a main theme: the construction of a hedonist-
much more substantial basis for assessing his peSSimist-Marxism and the recognition of the rele-
contribution. vance of Engels in this respect. Only the last chap-
Timpanaro writes in an aggressive style that ter, which is a study of Korsch's critique of Lenin's
elicits and even invites peremptory and dismiSSive philosophy, can be said to stand apart from the rest
jUdgements on his work. But it would only be to ape of the book, though it too continues the idealism-
the cruder aspects of his own polemic to dismiss materialism theme.
him straightforwardly as a 'vulgar materialist',
'Popperian', 'crude empiricist' etc. Even though On re-thinking Marxism
such labels may not be wholly inappropriate, they Timpanaro's starting point has become something of
must fail to do justice to the sensitivity'which in- a cliche: a need to re-think Marxism in the light of
forms Timpanaro's work. His contribution to debate what has happened in the capitalist West, in RUSSia,
on the problems relating to the materialismjideal- in ,China and in the Third World. More polemically,
ism distinction, the science/ideology couple, the he proceeds immediately to reject the respective
relations between synchrony/diachrony, theory and contributions of both the two main 'schools' of 20th
practice etc cannot easily be neglected. Even if·at century Marxism. The Frankfurt school and its
times his formulation of these issues is incomplete various offspring on the one hand, and Althusserian-
and dogmatic, it is nonetheless true that at other ism, on the other, "allow very little of Marxism to
times he reveals an unnerving ability to touch to the survive"; moreover, they "represent in many res-
heart of matters that must be the concern of anyone, pects a step backwards". The former is retrogres-
whatever his or her particular philosophical align- sive because it ignores the need to found a 'scienti-
ment, who has not simply opted for a credo, whether fic socialism' and sees in science only bourgeois
:of empiricist or non-empiricist, humanist or anti- false objectivity; the latter because, although it
humanist form, but is still prepared to admit and insists on the scientific character of Marxism, it
discuss the unresolved nature of the problems adopts from current epistemology what Timpanaro
around which the contemporary oPPositional formul- refers to as a 'Platonist conception of science',
ae of Marxist studies have been erected. Moreover, which, he claims, makes it impossible to pose
Timpanaro's no-nonsense approach makes a refresh- correctly the question of the relations between
ing change from more soft-pedalling incursions into theory and practice.
these areas and from ultra-sophisticated and jargon- Marxism, he argues, if it is to avoid becoming
ised discussions of the issues involved. Timpanaro merely a 'revolutionary sociology', must refer it-
may lose some of the trees, but at least we keep the self again to the fundamental question posed by
wood in sight. Marx and Engels of the 'real liberation ' of mankind.
On Materialism, which first appeared in Italian in For Timpanaro, this is a question of re confirming
1970, comprises a collection of essays which were and developing materialism, through the provision
originally published in the journal Quaderni of a 'theory of needs' which is not "as so often,
Piacentini, and evoked a good deal of response in reduced to a compromise between Marx and Freud,
Italy (1) - where Timpanaro is widely known and but which confronts on a wider basis the problem of
respected, not only for his contribution to Marxist .the relation between nature and society". We must
1 See 'll dibattito suI materialismo' that was conducted in Quaderni recognize nature's continued conditioning of man,
Piacentini nos. 29, 30 and 32. The main bone of contention related to not in a way which reduces the social to the biologi-
Timpanaro's assertion of the need to recognize the paSSive element in cal, but in a way that asserts the autonomy of the
experience, and the dispute was conducted to a large extent from the stand-
point of a 'philosophy of praxis', of which, to my mind, Timpanaro is right!) biological relation to the demand for happiness".
critical. The second chapter of his book is a translation of his reply to these _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
criticS.
2 His major work in this respect is Classicismo e llluminismo nell 'Ottocento
Sebastiano,Timpanaro: On Materialism, NLB, 1976,
It!Jialw.. 260pp, £5.75

14
It is his ipsistence on the fundamental interconnex- central deficiencies of the traditional ,humanist posi-
ion between the struggle for communism and human tion. I shall discuss firstly Timpanarci's formulation
happiness that leads Timpanaro to align himself of the biological-social relationship, and secondly
with the blend of hedonism and pessimism to be the epistemology of his approach to the materialism-
found in the work of the nineteenth-century Italian idealism distinction.
poet Giacomo Leopardi. Leopardi' s theme is that
the struggle against nature is a struggle for pleas- The social-biological relationship
ure, for happiness, but it is also continually and Timpanaro's formulation of the relationship has the
inevitably constrained by the biological frailty of merit of insisting on the specificity of the biological
mankind. Timpanaro argues in turn for a revolu- dimension rather than reducing it, as for example
tionary socialism that both recognizes the imposi- L. Seve tends to, wholly to social relations - even if
tions and limits attaching to our biological exist- the biological aspect of our existence is always a
ence and asserts the intimate connexion between .socialized biology, there is nonetheless something
emancipation and pleasure . specific to this aspect which allows us to relate to it
. Timpanaro takes pains to define his particular precisely as the biological (and not, for example,
type of materialism. He is right to do so, for it the economic, or the artistic) component of exist-
might be argued that the battle waged by contempor- ence. But it has the de-merit of being un-dialectical:
ary Marxists to correct reductionist tendencies, on the one hand he places social production with its
whether of economistic or biologistic complexion, particular evolutionary' pace.- and on the other hand,
has made such good ground that anyone who ventures, nature, including man as biological entity, which
as Timpanaro does, even to suggest the prior deter- 'also changes as evolutionism has taught us, but at
mination of the -biological on the social will automat- an immensely slower tempo'. We are then told,
ically be dismissed as 'vulgar' materialist. Hence rather baldly, that the latter has its particular
the care with which he dissociates himself from all effects on human progress and that account must be
forms of reactionary biologism (see the arguments taken of these. But this schematic statement of the
in the Preface to the English edition against Baker separate and autonomous progress of the social and
and Eysenck, Skinner and certain trends in animal biological 'modes' of existence does not, in fact,
ethology), and from any attempt either to isolate enlighten us on the crucial problem of their relation-
the biological from the social, or to conflate these ship. Our concern is not with charting separate pro-
two. It is rather than his materialism represents a gresses but with the process of interaction of the
refusal to make a reduction at the level of the social: two historicities, and the problem should be formul-
man has a biological specificity vhich must not be ated in a way that allows us to concentrate on the
absorbed entirely within the specificity of his social specificity of the relations between determinants
existence. Hence his quarrel with both Colletti and deriving from the biological and natural order at any
Seve (3). given time, and socio-economic factors.
Timpanaro's point is that Western Marxism, in To be told that there are general aspects of the
its zeal to defend itself against the accusation of 'human condition' which persist beyond changes in
materialism, has cast out, together with mechan- the mode of prOduction is not, in fact, to be told
ism and vulgarity, materialism as such. Moreover, very much. Nor is it clear quite what Timpanaro's
he argues, much of the debate within the various purpose is in reminding us of our biological frailty.
Marxist groups revolves on the selection of the best I would have preferred a clear statement of the
means of safeguarding against materialism, and the necessary connexion which he obviously sees bet-
alternatives chosen are broadly those of a Hegelian- ween the abandonment of the natural and biological
ized Marxism with strong existentialist undertones, basis of Marxism and the fall into the twin idealisrds
on the one hand, and a pragmatic scientism, on the of a humanist disregard for science, on the one:r 'ld
other. Timpanaro recognizes the authenticity of the and a 'Platonist' conception of science on the oU Jr.
polemic against vulgar materialism, but he also Or rather, while in the one instance it is' clear tha.t
argu~ that the insistence on the polemic has for a a flight from the advances made in the human
long time now not corresponded to any important sciences (and not just in biology, but also in psych-
influence or even effective presence in Western ology - an area which Timpanaro, as we shall see,
Marxism (4). Rather, he claims, the struggle today fails to deal with adequately, and for Significant
is between two types of idealism - a historicist and reasons) goes along with the retention of a merely
humanist idealism arid an empirio- criticist and speculative anthropolqgy that characterizes much
pragmatic idealism. What is at issue, then, is humanist Marxism, and is responsible for its
whether his intervention transcends the stasis of the utopian deviations, it is not so clear what the neces-
present humanist/anti-humanist confrontation in a sary connexion is between the lapse into Platunism
way that does not involve regreSSion to the old battle that Timpanaro insists characterizes Althusserian
ground of 'vulgar' versus 'Marxist' materialism. Marxism and the failure, as he sees it, to come to
I shall argue that Timpanaro does not get us beyond terms with the biological and natural dimension.
the circle of contemporary dispute since he opts for It is not enough merely to reiterate dismissive
a brand of Marxism that ultimately reproduces the phrases regarding Althusser's epistemology (and
3 Against Colletti (who has accused Timpanaro of an ingenuolfB type of natural- structuralism, which he more or less identifies
ism) Timpanaro argues that "to reduce man to what is specific about him with the former): Timpanaro must submit it to a
with respect to other animals is just as one sided as to reduce him (as vulgar
materialists do) to what he has in common with them. " He discusses L. much more detailed examination m r .~t expose its
Seve's work (Marxisme et theorie de la personnalite) at some length and 'idealism' and relate this to hi8)Wnr~laterialism'
accuses him of an excessive anti-!::iological phobia whose ultimate effect is -in a more forthright \\va.y, rath~' th'p .merely re-
that the specificity of the biological is wholly absorbed within the social -
thus compromising his materialism. At the same time, Timpanaro endorses 'stating the juxtaposition and ('Vposi' ",<1 of the two.
many of Seve's criticisms of Althusser and psychoanalytic theory. Otherwise, one suspects that .vhat concealed
4 This statement shOuld perhaps be qualified ~·.for while it may be true that
the charge of vulgar materialism no longer has any real target '!Yill!!n. the within the attack on the str".'turaH - concept of
discourse of Marxists themselves, it is not so obvious that Marxism taken knowledge is an identificat,n uf :;erialism with
as a whole has definitively convinced its opponents of the inappropriateness empiricism.
of such an accusation. One can become so engrossed in the rarified atmos-
phere of Marxology, and its internal disputes, that one loses a sense of What is lacking in Timp '-aro\" Nork is a clear
perspective on the wider issue of the relations of Marxism to bourgeois recognition of the theoret~ ~ pr :hem that lies at the
sociology and philosophy.
heart of the humanist/anti ~!!la.'''~st debate, and a
15
cl~ar statement of his alignment within the terms of totally relative, but has a more universal applica-
that debate. Though he might want to reject the tion to human society, it must in turn be related not
terminology, I believe that his emphasis on the just to biological but also to psychological factors.
biological dimension is an attempt to supply Marxism Unless we identify happiness simply with physical
with the ontology and ethics that are the necessary comfort, lack of pain etc, then we must recognise
accompaniment of any non-positivistic social theory. that it is a psychological concept referring us to
I do not believe that this problem can in any sense be more than our neuro-physiological make-up; and it
directly resolved, but I do believe that there are cere should also be acknowledged that unless we are in a
taiI1' essential components in any Marxist 'theory of position to provide an account on the basis of scient-
needs': (a) articulation of the general philosophical ific knowledge in biology, psychology etc of human
issue it raises- which is not specific to Marxism but needs, desires, pleasures, pains, that underly our
emerges constantly as the axis around which any use of the term 'happiness' then the latter must re-
'fact'/'value' debate rotates; (b) a self-critical atti- main an ideological term (i. e. one whi"ch is vacuous
tude towards essentialist accounts of needs; and (c), und-er the guise of plenitude: it covers only an ab-
the rejection of descriptive and·psychological con- sence of knowledge of the area of which it purports
cepts (such as 'alienation', 'fulfilment', 'happiness' to supply knowledge). My own pOSition is that the
etc. ) if the aim is to provide a science of human work of the Althusserians, however unsatisfactory
development - the phenomenology of needs thus be- it is in some respects, has laid the correct founda-
comes a study in its own right, but it is separate tion for the provision of this kind of knowledge - for
from an analysis of their production. supplementing Marxism with an account of man
Timpanaro clearly recognizes that you abandon all derived from biology, psychoanalysis, linguistics,
the gains and insights of historical materialism if and the other human sciences, and that such know-
you simply resort to an essentialist account of ledge cannot be provided so long as we remain at
human nature in order to combat any positivistic the level of concepts such as 'happiness'.
tendencies. His 'theory of needs' is certainly not It was s~ggested above that Timpanaro's silence
directly essentialist in this sense since he allows for on psychology was significant. Why isolate the bio-
the historicity even of the biological (despite its logical facts of death, old age, illness as exemplify-
much slower evolutionary pace) and would concede ing that primary and more univer~allevel of condi-
the extent to which even our biological existence is tioning, and not raise' the issue of equally longlasting
a product as much of social relations as of any feat- psychological determinants? I suggest the issue is
ures inherent in the 'human condition' as such. But not raised because once Timpanaro has rejected any
he does ultimately opt for an essentialist account in psychoanalytic account of human psychology (5), he
that the entire rationale of his emphasiS on the bio- must have recourse to an empirical psychology
logical is the promotion of what is in fact a quite a- whose implications are much more obviously sus-
historical conception of 'human happiness'. He pect from a political point of view. As a Marxist,
remains remarkably blind to the function that this Timpanaro cannot afford to extend what he has to
concept of happiness plays in his philosophy, and to say about universal and relatively innate features of
his failure to explain its content. If we spell out the our biological existence (a relatively 'neutral'
hedonist-pessimist theme, what it amounts to is affair! ) to psychological features, for this would
this: the search for happiness is innate in all human lead to speculations about innate tendencies to
beings and provides the dynamic of all social devel- aggression or apathy and so on. There is one point
opment (even if this development is actually marred when Timpanaro does venture into this delicate area,
.and hindered by all sorts of regressive tendencies); though he does not explore its implications. This is
but we can never achieve full happiness because the when he refers to a comment by Luciano Della Mea,
human condition as such (biological frailty, old age, who questions why Tim,Panaro has ·al ways stressed
death) is incompatible with perfect happiness; so we man's physical frailty rather than his not so obvious·
,should not have any utopian and unrealistic concep- ly biological features such as his lack of political
tions as to the ability of science, even under comm- educability" Having remarked that the question of
unism, to overcome this incompatibility. But at the the Marxist, and specifically Engelsian association
very point where he would appear to be warning of communism with the complete mastery of nature
against any metaphYSical delusions regarding the remains unsettled, Timpanaro goes on to say "also
realm of freedom, and to be arguing a more health- unsettled is the question of the extent to which cer-
ily pragmatic relationship to existence, Timpanaro tain 'apolilt ical' (as opposed to generically 'ego-
himself must surely be said to have opted for an a- tistical ') tendencies on the part of the great majority
historical metaphysic of happiness. For what sense of men are themselves a part of 'human nature'
can we make of a concept of human happiness which which is not readily altered - leavlp.g aside those
implies the deficiency of all actual happiness? moments of exceptional social tension when the maj-
There is more than a hint in Timpanaro' s exposition ority becomes politicized - and therefore represent
that we would be 'happier' if we were immortal and an obstacle to the realisation and maintenance of a
perpetually youthful; such a transcendal concept of communist society which is 'classless' in the broad-
happiness is scarcely consistent with the profession est sense of the term". But once you have specul-
of realistic materialism. It has more affinity with ated on the more or less inherent nature of political
existentialist themes of necessary loss and angst in apathy, you might as well speculate on the innate-
face of the bitter reality of the world - themes which ness of aggression, of chauvinist and racist atti-
Timpanaro himself would of course regard as char- tudes, of intellectual ability etc - in fact all those
acterising the most decadent forms of mystico- factors which Marxism relates to as the effect of
religious idealism. But the lapse into essentialism the development of social relations on the terrain of
.is inevitable so long as Timpanaro underpins his cl~ss division. I am not suggesting that one is imp-
Marxism with an unexamined, a-historical concep- licated in making such speculations simply by open-
tion of happiness, and refuses to explore the extent ing the door to them, but only pointing to the un-
to which (a) we must relativise the concept of happi- resolved,nature of the middle ground that Timpanaro
ness and relate it to the production of "different types would want to tread between rejection of any reaction-
of individual under the impact of changes in so.cial ary vulgar materialism a la Eysenck and Skinner,
relations, and to which,(b) if the concept is not 5 See The Fre.udian Slip (NLB 1976)

16
on the pne hand, and allowing a relative unalterabil- carned with other objects, as obviously non-mater-
ity to c'ertain psychological characteristics, on the ialist - because 'abstract' and non-empirical.
,other, and deriving this not from human institutions Clearly we are at the heart of a most vexed problem,
and social relations, but from 'human nature'. namely what is meant by 'material'. Somewhere, it
The basic flaws, then, of Timpanaro's position would seem, one must put the knife in, and given
are (a) an a-historical concept of human happiness this, perhaps Timpanaro's identification of material-
which it is difficult to relate to what is in other res- ism with the 'natural' (by which he seems to mean
pects a recognition of the essentially historical na- physiological 'matter') is as good as any. But this is
ture of human development, both biological and only to grant that it would be fruitful to clarify our
social, and which becomes metaphysical in the terminology; it does not imply that all study of
sense that it is unattainable given the limitations of ideational systems in themselves is 'idealistic' in
human capacities; and (b) a tendency to separate the the perjorative sense, nor that .a non-empirical and
biological and natural from the social and 'unnatural theoretical study employing different levels of ab-
and to relate to them as two autonomous lines of straction is automatically deprived of the ability to
development. This fails to recognize that the whole provide scientific knowledge of its objects (whether
point of identifying the specificity of these two material 0 rideational). It must be granted that ideas
dimensions is to analyse what then becomes a are as much components of reality as any other fea-
further specificity: the ongoing process of interac- tures (I use tpe word 'components' not to prejudice
tion of these two types and different rates of evolu- the issue by referring to their 'materiality'). Is
tion. The corollary of this tendency is that we are Timpanaro wanting to argue that abstract concepts
left uncertain as to how much autonomy Timpanaro and theory ar'e necessarily· bedevilled by 'idealism'
is ceding to either dimension, and not provided with (in the sense of leading to inaccurate knowledge of
any clear theoretical definition of the 'alterability' the concrete and ~Q retrograd.e political positions)
of this or that aspect of human existence. The simply because they dea] in ideas and relate to non-
vagueness of the concept of 'relative alterability' empirically observable entities? To suggest this
leaves the way open for virtually all aspects to be would be to place such differing types of abstract
merged within an essentialism of the 'human concept as 'maSs', 'energy', the Hegelian 'Universal
condition' . Fruit', the Platonic 'Form of the table', the Marxist
Materialism and empiricism concept 'of 'abstract labour' and the concepts employ-
ed in a sociology of 'types' all in the same basket.
The issue of the 'vulgarity' of the materialism I doubt if Timpanaro would want to do this, nor am I
which Timpanaro insists upon relates not so much suggesting that there is a ready solution to the prob-
to historicity or reductionism, as to empiricism. lem of the differentiation of the status of abstract
That is to say, Timpanaro is not a crass material- categories - but it must be confronted in any dis-
ist in the sense that he either denies the historical cussion of what constitutes materialist science.
nature of biological and social development or wants
to reduce the former to the latter. What really Engels
matters is whether he is saying that from a method- It is consistent with Timpanaro's dismissal of both
ological point of view one can only count as material contemporary schools of Marxism that he should
ist if one is also empiricist. recall us to the work of Engels, who by virtue of the
In his essay on 'Structuralism and its Successors' very contradictoriness of' his thought, has become a
he places his review of nineteenth-century linguist- target of both humanist and anti-humanist Marxists.
ics in the context of the evolving historicization of In a very interesting and wide-ranging essay on
the social and natural sciences. From 1850 to 1880, 'Engels and Free Will', Timpanaro takes issue with
when the historical sciences of nature (geology, the 'anti-Engelsism' which has characterised so
biology) were the avant-garde sciences of European much of recent Marxist writings, and attempts to
culture, what was scientific came to be recognized show that despite the archaic-Hegelianism on the one
as what was historical. However, with the emerg- hand, and the vulgar materialism, on the other, that
ence towards the end of the century of the physico- can at times be "detected in Engels's work, the latter
mathematical sciences, a split once again arises cannot be regarded simply as a compound of crude
between historicists and the new epistemology deri- determinism and uncritical Hegelianism, nor can
ving from those sciences: "Both were in agreement Engels be dismissed as a banalizer and distorter of
in declaring 'Down with materialism'. But the for- Marx's work.
'mer said 'Down with science, which is material- Timpanaro develops his defence of Engels by
istic', the latter 'Long live science, which is the arguing that a Marxism deprived of the cosmological
best refutation of materialism'." Similarly, these perspective and emphasis on the weight of nature on
orientations developed opposing viewpoints with history that Engels brings to it, is a Marxism come
regard to history, even though they had a common adrift from its'materialist moorings. Without the
starting ground in their anti-materialism. Hence (in Engelsian dimension, Marxism risks becoming
linguistics and elsewhere) individualising historic - either a mere methodology or falls into agnosticism
ism~ on the one hand, and abandonment of any and idealism. Polemicalty, and in full awareness of
attempt to incorporate the diachronic dimension into the heresy of his position from the standpoint of
science on the other - this abandonment being contemporary Marxism, Timpanaro goes on to
regarded by Timpanaro as Platonist-idealist in acknowledge, and to justify, the presence of a
tendency (i. e. as a dissociation of theory from Weltanschauul1g in Engels's conception. Those who
reality). would argue tnat Marx's great achievement was pre-
Despite his claim that the 'right to abstraction is cisely to have exposed the illegitimacy of any philo-
not at issue' there is a constant tendency (which sophy of 'nature in itself' and that hence Engels's
begins with this sort of 'privileging' of the epistemo- ~ttempt to patch up a 'philosophic odyssey of matter'
logy associated with the human sciences, and contin- was in its very essence misconceived, are mistaken
ues throughout the chapter) to identify the 'natural', both theoretically and historically. They fail to take
the 'accidental' and the 'empirical' with the 'mater- ~ccount of the changed philosophic-seientific setting
ial', and to relate to' the 'ideational' systems studied ip post-1850 Germany and Europe in comparison
by linguists or structuralists or semiologists con- with the era in which the young Marx formulated his
17
crititisms of Feuerbach. The materialism of argued that Marx without Engels goes no further
Moleschott or BUchner, though philosophically in- than to state the specificity of human as opposed to
ferior to that of Feuerbach, was actually closer to animal institutions, of the animal as opposed to
the natural sciences for they were concerned not human world; but having made the point he does not
only with stating the primacy of the sensuous over pursue the subject of the' relationship between the
the conceptual and with turning theology into anthro- two. Engels, on the other hand, 'was not satisfied
pology, but also with explaining the material nature with a mere recognition of the difference between
of sensuousness. In this perspective, Marx's in- the animal world and the human world. The prob-
sistence against Feuerbach on the 'active side' of lem which he regarded as uniquely his own - and
human history, though valid, remains too vague and which places him in the position at once of ally and
generic. The specific quest to which it was to lead critic of contemporary scientific culture - concerns
was the discovery of what, in scientific terms, con- the fusion of the two worlds and two diff erent kinds
stituted this active side. Even if the result was a of historicity'. Moreover, Timpanaro would argue
crude and over-mechanistic reduction of man's that Engels posed the problem of the fusion between
cultural, moral and pOlitical behaviour to biological the two historicities in the correct terms, neither
activities, the reply to such distortions should, says superimposing extraneous evolutionary models on
Timpanaro, "have been given within the framework either natural or human history, nor neglecting the
of materialism, and not with a mere revindication of persistence of the 'natural' within the 'human'.
the subjective element, still conceived in spiritual- But this is a very large claim to make on the
istic terms as an unconditioned praxis that finds its basis of what are only rather generalised and still
limit only in the 'objective (external) conditions' and embryonic statements in Engels's work. It is a big
not also in man's own physical and biological nature". leap from recognising the natural and biological
This became all the more necessary with the second context of all social production and of its specific
wave of materialism that followed on Darwin: granted determinants upon human history - from allOwing
again the risk of reducing human to natural history, that the world may well come to an end and that
it yet remained a danger to which one had to reply in 'for the history of mankind, too, there is not only
materialistic terms. Thus, Engels's intervention an ascending but also a descending branch (6) - to
must be placed in the context of a complex of re- giving a precise theoretical formulation of the two
actions to Darwinian evolutionism - reactions which 'histories', their particular rates of progress and
tended towards the extremes of crude materialism, the effects of their conjunction in giving us that"
on the one hand, and a degenerate empiricism of object whose study would provide the desired
agnostic and religious hue on the other. Engels's account of human development. It is not a leap
cosmological development of Marxism was not 'an that Engels can be said to have fully made, and if
impulsive direction' but an 'objective necessity' - at times Timpanaro is ready to admit the confu-
the one which fell to him given the division of labour sions, contradictions and incompleteness of
established between Marx and Engels. Engels's formulations in this respect (7), at other
Timpanaro therefore sees the fundamental value times he would seem implicitly to find in Engels
of Engels's writing as contained in its polemic all the alleged correctness of vision of the
against the negative sides of positivism. He was not hedonist-pessimist-materialist Marxism that he
simply rejecting modern science in the name of the n!mself embraces.
Hegelian dialectic, but attempting to expose the Despite these critiCisms, I find the essay on
dangers inherent in that science's rejection of philO- Engels possibly the most illuminating and interest-
sophy. Timpanaro would thus seem to regard Engels ing section of the book. From the specific discus-
as a defender of a conception of philosophy whereby sion of Engels' s work it develops into an intricate
the latter takes on the role of 'reminder' to science and wide-ranging assessment of the various cur-
of its epistemological and social responsibilities. rents of reaction to science that have perm'eated
'This is a conception that one not infrequently hears 20th century thought and find their reflection in the
voiced today - philosophy as the exposure of ideology theoretical alignment and politics adopted within
within 'scientific' activity itself. In Engels's day, Marxism. The chapter also includes a useful dis-
the particular object for exposure was social cussion of the ambiguity of the concept of 'dialec-
Darwinism, and Timpanaro would argue that the tic', and, to my mind, a not so useful discussion of
importance of Engels's philosophy must be related the old chestnut, 'The role of the individual in hist-
to his sustained critique of this - which, he claims, ory'. Indeed, it is an essay which at least touches
was, if anything, more sophisticated than that of on almost all of the traditional (and hitherto un-
Marx himself. For whereas the latter only argued resolved) problems of Marxist studies, and it, to-
against the movement from the biological world to gether with the chapter on materialism, provide an
human society in general, while accepting - if only excellent example of the range of Timpanaro's int-
because the irony pleased him - the analogy between erests and scholarship, of his remarkable dexterity
the war ot all against all of Darwinian theory and in deploying these and of his ability to make his
the feral state of bourgeois society, Engels warns arguments directly accessible to the reader.
against the dangers of such an analogy, however Structuralism
appealing it might be: in the Dialectics of Nature he It will be felt by many, I think, that Timpanaro
argues that once Darwinian theory has achieved the fails to display the same scrupulousness and fair-
transference of Hobbesian theory from the social to ness in his exposition of the various currents of
the organic world, it is all too easy to transfer the 20th century structuralism and structuralist orien-
theory back again from natural to social history, ted thought (the two should be distinguished - it has
and to see it proved in the latter as the eternal
6 See Engels, Ludwig Feuerbach and the End of Classical German Philosophy
natural laws of society. Although Marx recognized in Marx·Engels, Selected ~,Vorks. pp588.9
the illegitimacy of confUSing the struggle for life in 7 He acknowledges, for example, that Engels is torn between a tendency to
capitalist society with the struggle for life in the develop physical-biological materialism and a tendency to oppose the last
great 'classical' philosophy of Hegelianism to the eclectic soup of pOSitivist
natural world, it was left to Engels to develop the professors; that opposed to the 'realism' of Engels' cosmological perspective,
theme. there is a continued celebration of socialism as the passage from necessity
This is a point which Timpanaro clearly thinks to freedom, and an insistence that human unhappiness derives from
economic and social causes.
can be given more general application: it could be
18
been ajalmed with as much truth as irony that there respect. In other words, better to retain the rela-
are as many structuralisms as there are structural- tions between synchrony and diachrony, between ab-
;ists) as he brings to his decipherment of the involu- stract and concrete in precarious equilibrium than
1

tions of 19th century science and philosophy. It is to magic the problem of their connexion out of exist-
difficult, for example, to accept his immediate ence with a straightforward rejection of the dia-
:' identification of Althusserianism and/or psycho- chronic and concrete aspect - which is what has
'analysis with structuralism, and his direct associa- happened with much of post-Saussurian linguistics,
:tion of these three bodies of thought as if there was in semiological studies and most of all with the
some school of Marxism within whose problematic ultra-formalistic applications of structuralism to
they had been harmoniously amalgamated. And is it Marxism, psychoanalysis, anthropology, literature
. mere pedantry to want to quarrel with his constant etc. Best of all, however, according to Timpanaro,
references to Levi-Strauss, Foucault and Lacan as is to realise that the problem resolves itself if we
to an indissociable trinity of thought representative are only prepared to recognize the materialist/nat-
of everything most unwholesome in 20th century uralist basis to all science and its essentially histor-
, epistemology? They are repeatedly lumped together ical nature - for then we shall give up the futile and
and tarred with the brush of 'charlatanism', but misguided search for a-temporal systems and our
only in the case of Levi-Strauss does Timpanaro excavations of 'Other Realities' concealed beneath
attempt to justify his polemic; Foucault is dismissed empirical data.
in a few phrases, and the only separate treatment
accorded Lacan is in a fodtnote deploring his ignor-
ance of linguistics.
Still, it might be argued that such wholesale
assimilations of thinkers \ID 0 do share much in
philosophical perspective and in style is not really
the pOint at issue: we can intuit well enqugh why any-
one who regards Levi-Strauss as a poseur, will feel
.the same about Foucault, Lacan and all the other
currently modish figures of contemporary French
·culture. Moreover, in that Timpanaro's attack is
directed not just at structuralism but at all struct-
uralist tainted thinking, quibbles as to whether it is
.fair to regard Althusser and Freud as structuralists
might be said to be irrelevant. So let us accept
Timpanaro's categorisation of the situation at face
value and confront it as such. The main point, after
all, is to assess Timpanaro's overall relationship
to structuralism and the adequacy of his resolution.
of the problems to which he finds the structuralist
solution so deficient.
'Structuralism and its Successors' is an attempt Now I would not dispute Timpanaro's claims that
to clarify'in what sense and what limits' his earlier there have been 'structuralist parodies of Marxism
remarks to the effect that structuralism 'represents that approach the grotesque', that too little caution
a relatively unitary movement' and 'relates to its has been exercised in the extension of structuralist
systems as to Cuvierian closed systems' still seem methodology to all possible objects and that many
to him to be valid. It is a wide-ranging and at times stF~cturalist studies involve a non-materialist isola-
extremely penetrating and witty exposure of what he tion of systems from their socio-economic context.
regards as the basic tendential flaw of structuralist His indictment of the more bizarre excesses of
thinking: its anti-materialism. He traces the genesis structuralist zeal to be found, for example, in the
of this tendency, which he considers reaches its work of Levi-Strauss, is also compelling - even if
apotheosis in the 'platonic-idealism' of Althusser, the self-.indulgence of the Ciceronian invective is at
Levi-Strauss, Foucault et alii, to Saussure's inter- times offensive and the compliments on the serious
vention in the crisis of late 19th- century linguistiCS. and genial aspects of Levi-Strauss's work are de-
Saussure's resolution of the conflicting claims to livered too backhandedly for one to regard them as
attention of the individual, innovatory, 'creative' 'honest acknowledgements of worth rather than as
aspect of language (and, relatedly, its diachronic placatory gestures. But for all that, Timpaaaro's
study) on the one hand, and of its collective, univer- critique of structuralist idealism is well-founded.
sal-necessary character (and synchronic study) on More problematic is the epistemology and attitude
the other, was an uncompromising separation of the to science from which it is conducted - particularly
two and a privileging of the latter (the study of where it is a question of his treatment of Marxism
langue as synchronic system) as the only proper and assessment of Althusser.
object of science over the study of parole (the dia- It is, in fact, extremely difficult to pinpoint what
chronic, empirical fortuitous element), which he exactly is Timpanaro's stance in this respect. This
refused to acknowledge was amenable to scientific stems from his implicit tendency (discussed above)
study. to identify science with empirical study, the latter
In Saussure, the Platonism Temains embryonic, with materialism, and this last with natural, physio-
since it is counterposed to a realist insistence on logical 'matter'. Or, more pre'cisely, it stems from
the' concreteness' of langue, a refusal to grant any his refusal to submit this tendency to examination in
spiritual status to its psychological character, and a the light of his endorsement of certain epistemologi-
recognition of the communicative function of langu- cal prtnciples which would appear to conflict with it.
age and its distinctness from other human institu- He acknowledges, for example, that although langu-
tions and activities. Thus, Timpanaro would regard age e-volves diachronically it functions synchronic-
Saussure as remaining at least alive to the dangers ally, that scientific study cannot consist in a wholly
of the lapse into formalistic study of closed systems: individualising study of discrete, particular and
and of maintaining a self-critical stance in this 'accidental' elements, but must address itself to
19
syste.maticity, universality and regularity. He is they 'appropriate'; and (b) that the object of thought
prepared to cede, too, that science depends on ab- is not the real object: HThe method of rising from
straction and that Marxism is directed against the the abstract to the concrete is the only way in which
empiricism which stops at the level of appearances. thought appropriates the concrete, reproduces it as
Thus, when he is not offering us a straightforward ,the concrete in the mind. But this is by no means
genetic, evolutionary account of science whose task the process by which the concrete itself comes into
would be to unpeel the layers of accreted ,sOdaliza- being." Such a statement immediately forbids any
tion and historicization in order to reveal the natur- identification of Marx's method either with an
alistic kernel of any object it studies (matter at last fdealist-Heg'elian resolution of the relation between
- and our guarantee of sCientificity! - separated real object and thought object within thought, or an
from its mediations), he is offering us a compro- empiricist approach to the relationship as inhering
mise: some abstraction, but don't overdo it, some in the real itself. It also makes it clear that scienti-
delving beneath the surface, but not too far, syn- fic knowledge, as far as Marx is concerned, is non
chronic study, yes, provided we recognize that the evolutionary - its categories have a mobility and
systems studied are themselves transient even if temporality quite other than that of the historical
very long-lasting. sequence of events that they analyse.
The compromise solution is certainly an improve- It is true that the problem of the relationship be-
ment on the genetic version but in that it is allowed tween the real object and the thought object remains.
to co-exist with the materialism-empiricism identi- I do not believe this is solved simply by stating the
fication it begs the issue of what criteria are being radical separation of the two. Nor am I ready to
us~d to delimit the degree to which we can abstract. accept that those passages (eg in the 1857 Introduc-
the degree to which we eschew appearances, the tion) where Marx suggests that there is a correla-
degree to which we can isolate specific objects, tion between the development of the concrete and the
levels and ideational systems (eg the psyche, myth, elaboration of categories to their full complexity -
the socio-economic etc) and relate to their study as such as the connexion between the category of labour
scientific precisely because conducted with a regard in general and the dissolution in fact of particular
for that specificity - to which the issue of the ulti- labours - can be dismissed as 'historicist' devia-
mate neuro-physiological anchorage or explanation tions in the way that Althusser suggests. Nor do I
of the data studied is' wholly irrelevant. What this think it possible to dissociate completely the study
means, in effect, is that if we spell out the tensions of the historical evolution of modes of production
and ambivalences of the 'compromise solution" we , ,from their study as a 'system of "synchronic" con-
are referred again to the' classic aporia of the ab- nexions obtained by variation', to use Balibar's
stract-concrete, synchrony-diachrony, genesis- phrase, even if it is stressed that this is not a
structure antitheses which it was designed to over- 'combinatory', in which only the places oftlle fact-
come. ors and their relationships change and not their
The unsatisfactory nature of the pOSition adopted ?ature - at least not if one is interested in politics,
by Timpanaro to the question of abstraction etc In the effectivity of class struggle, in ideology, in
relates in part to the fact that he regards the prob- the fact that it is not irrelevant to the forms of the
lems as dissolving provided we historicize science, structure that it concerns the social relations of
but never questions the concept of history itself. As human beings and not relations of some other enti-
far as his approach to Marx's epistemology is con- ties. The level of abstraction employed by the
cerned, this failure must be related to his summary structuralist reading of Marx is clearly inadequate
treatment of the 1857 Introduction and of the method- to deal with the study of the social formation as a
ology of Capital. It also relates to his failure to whole, but it is nonetheless, within its limits, a
come to terms with Althusser's 'pseudo-structural- justifiable attempt t6 redress the balance against
ism' (8) and the latter's attempt to elaborate upon evolutionist and historicist interpretations of Marx.
the epistemological principles formulated in. the Though the main burden of this review has been
1857 Introduction and applied in Capital and to critical, I hope I have also said enough to indicate
elicit their implications for the concept of historical the importance of Timpanaro's work. I regard it as
time and for historiography. one of the most interesting, . articulate and readable
This is not the place to expound on these themes books about Marxism of recent years, and I hope
in any detail, but it must be recognized that Marx that it is widely read and discussed. As I have said,
explicitly stated (a) that the order of the exposition it is extremely wide-ranging and raises almost
of knowledge (eg the 'logic' of Capital) is not the every vexed issue in Marxist philosophy and politi-
order of its real historical development - the cate- cal theory. There is scarcely a topic discussed in
gories of thought in scientuic analysis do not exist the book on \\h ich I do not find myself in some agree
in the SaPlS 'time' as the r.hronology of the events ment or at least further enlightened as to the nature
9 See Reading Capital (NLB 1970) ppB-9 of my disagreement.

CRITIQUE OF ANTHFi OPOLOGY


Contents of no. 6 include:
'The Relation between Archaeology and Anthropology'
by M. Rowlands and J. Gledhill
'Dialectical Critique of the Nature of Human Nature' by L. Krader
'Anthropology, History and Ideology'
- a discussion between C. Levi-Strauss, M. Godelier and M. Auge
Part 2 of J. Taylor's revi~w of Precapitalist Modes of Production
Subscription for nos. 6-8 inclusive
for individuals: £1. 80 (UK) or US$7. 00 (overseas)
for institutions: £3.50 (UK) or US$14. 00 (overseas)
Further details etc from
Critique of Anthropology, P 0 Box 178, London WC1E 6BU

20

You might also like