The Human Species and The Earth's Crust
The Human Species and The Earth's Crust
The Human Species and The Earth's Crust
This thesis ruled out one of the opposing theses, that proposed
by the Physiocratic school, which states that wealth and value
can come out of the ground, before it even receives the
contribution of human labour.
Quote:
"Nothing could be more comical than Hegel's development of
private landed property. According to this, man as an individual
must endow his will with reality as the soul of external nature,
and must therefore take possession of this nature and make it
his private property. If this were the destiny of the "individual",
of man as an individual, it would follow that every human being
must be a landowner, in order to become a real individual. Free
private ownership of land, a very recent product, is according
to Hegel, not a definite social relation, but a relation of man as
an individual to "nature", an "absolute right of man to
appropriate all things" (Hegel, Philosophie des Rechts, Berlin,
1840, p 79) This much at least is evident the individual cannot
maintain himself as a landowner by his mere "will" against the
will of another individual, who likewise wants to become a real
individual by virtue of the same strip of land. It definitely
requires some thing other than goodwill [here Marx, employing
with a fine irony the Hegelian jargon which he had been a
master of since 1840, wants to say: for that, you need the good
will of truncheon blows]. Furthermore, it is absolutely
impossible to determine where the "individual" draws the line
for realising his will, whether this will requires for its realisation
a whole country, or whether it requires a whole group of
countries by whose appropriation "the supremacy of my will
over the thing can be manifested." Here Hegel comes to a
complete impasse. "The appropriation is of a very particular
kind; I do not take possession of more than I touch with my
body; but it is clear, on the other hand, that external things are
more extensive than I can grasp. By thus having possession of
such a thing, some other is thereby connected to it. I carry out
the act of appropriation by means of my hand, but its scope can
be extended" (p.90). But this other thing is again linked with still
another and so the boundary within which my will, as the soul,
can pour into the soil, disappears. "When I possess something,
my mind at once passes over to the idea that not only this
property in my immediate possession, but what is associated
with it is also mine. Here positive right must decide, for nothing
more can be deduced from the concept" (p. 91). This is an
extraordinarily naive admission "of the concept", and proves
that this concept, which makes the blunder at the very outset
of regarding as absolute a very definite legal view of landed
property belonging to bourgeois society, understands "nothing"
of the actual nature of this landed property. This contains at
the same time the admission that "positive right" can, and
must, alter its determinations as the requirements of social,
i.e., economic, development change."11
Here ends the very important note by Marx. Idealist
speculation searches in vain for the relation between the
Person and the land-thing, and describes it as a projection,
from the beginning, of mysterious magnetic fluid emanating
from will. Marxism straightaway eliminates the fetish of the
person. It sets out to study the extremely variable historical
process of relations between people, as a species and as a
society , and agricultural production. Finally it establishes
positively the process in the reality of the relation between
classes, that is to say between people who, in rural production,
have different tasks and share differently in the product and
the benefits. Philosophy and all the bourgeois philosophers are
completely helpless here!
The passages from Hegel, and the rough mise au point of the
pupil Karl, bring into clear relief to what extent the tiresome
grumbling of the Stalino-Turinian marxists12 stinks of
Hegelianism. When a self-described Marxist has made sacrifices
to those two tragic theses: the dignity of the human Person on
the one side, and the division of the land amongst the peasants
on the other, there is no need to wait for a third piece of
stupidity: he's already renounced everything.
Marx showed that the law of the falling rate of profit of capital,
more than any other factor, raises to the maximum the value of
the land monopoly, and that the maximum increase is
produced for the forms which are not purely agrarian, such as
mines and building land, particularly in the area around large
towns.
Man is not the only animal who leaves a trace on the earth's
crust, and is not content to travel around on light feet brushing
gently on the surface and leaving hardly a trace, like the fish
who swims in the sea or the bird who flies in the air. In one
sense man is inferior and the dream of Leonardo da Vinci has
still not succeeded in detaching him from the ground with only
the power of his muscles and without the help of vehicles -
which, besides, were inaugurated by a sheep. In the water,
despite his bathyscaphe made from the finest steel, Piccard13
can only manage a descent of a few hundred metres, while life
pulses in the submarine depths and was perhaps born there.
On the solid crust, man perhaps has primacy over the other
zoological species, but he was not the first to leave footprints
or construct buildings. Numerous animals prowl about in the
subsoil boring out galleries, and the mysterious animal plant-
colony, the coral, has constructed from its chalky corpses
something greater than our edifices: veritable islands which we
consider as an integral part of the geophysical landscape.
The first humans were nomadic just like the beasts, and
consequently had no interest in creating "fixed installations",
such that the first acts of will, like Hegel said, did not give a soul
to the soil, to the turf or the rock, but only to a branch torn
down to serve as a club or a stone carved into an axe. On the
other hand, they were already preceded by other "colonising"
creatures of the earth's crust and authors of "stable
structures", and not only fixed things, but in certain cases
things endowed with movement, if it is true that the beaver has
a house and the elephant has a graveyard.
Let's leave aside the nomad who only left fleeting and often
dispersed traces on the earth's surface, and approach the first
sedentary societies. We won't try to retrace history. It took
millennia before, under the pressure of demographic growth
and thanks to the first technical resources of labour, there
appeared real constructions going beyond the tent of the
Bedouin or the ice cabin of the Lapp. Man set out to dig the
earth first of all to extract the rocks and the cement which
would enable him to construct the first houses and buildings
under the ground, and he imprinted on the wild crust the first
paths, channels, numerous camps and trails which have
resisted being uprooted and swept away over the centuries.
Quote:
"The abolition of the antithesis between town and country is no
more and no less utopian than the abolition of the antithesis
between capitalists and wage workers. From day to day it is
becoming more and more a practical demand of both industrial
and agricultural production. No one has demanded this more
energetically then Liebig16 in his writings on the chemistry of
agriculture, in which his first demand has always been that man
shall give back to the land what he takes from it, and in which
he proves that only the existence of the towns, and in particular
the big towns, prevents this."17
Liebig! Our youngster will say, what an old idea! He lacked all
the data that we have today, after almost a century of research
in all areas, chemical, biological and agronomic! Liebig is also
cited by Marx, and if today we still have more confidence in him
than in the modern universities, it is because more than all the
present experimental data he lacked something particularly
notable: the grants and salaries distributed by Montecatini18 or
Agfa.
Quote:
"When one observes how here in London alone a greater
quantity of manure than is produced by the whole kingdom of
Saxony is poured away every day into the sea with an
expenditure of enormous sums, and when one observes what
colossal works are necessary in order to prevent this manure
from poisoning the whole of London, then the utopian proposal
to abolish the antithesis between town and country is given a
peculiarly practical basis. And even comparatively insignificant
Berlin [but certainly not today, in 1952] has been wallowing in
its own filth for at least thirty years.
On the other hand, it is completely utopian to want, like
Proudhon, to transform present-day bourgeois society while
maintaining the peasant as such. Only as uniform a distribution
as possible of the population over the whole country, only an
integral connection between industrial and agricultural
production together with the thereby necessary extension of
the means of communication — presupposing the abolition of
the capitalist mode of production — would be able to save the
rural population from the isolation and stupor in which it has
vegetated almost unchanged for thousands of years"19.
We should not consider as outmoded the thesis of Liebig which
says that the rotating cycle of organic matter necessary to life
will become deficient if we relinquish the waste of humans, and
part of that of animals. Yet today this abandonment is an
accomplished fact, justified in the name of a deceitful urban
hygiene, which would be opposed to the precepts of
speculative profit if it put in doubt the necessity of cramming
huge masses of humans into zones where the subsoil is
equipped with the network of urban services, and limiting them
to breathing by "iron lung". All the modern research on the
perspectives for food production, taking account of the growth
of population, from the extent of cultivable land and energy
calculations of heat and available chemical methods, conclude
that a food shortage is approaching. The only possible
compensation may be constituted by "plankton" from the
waters of the sea, that is to say by the miniscule bodies of tiny
animals which populate the seas, which can be extracted with
appropriate means into a kind of tinned food. We can also
foresee that, thanks to the atomic manipulations of chemistry,
it will be possible to synthesise nutrient pills (we know the
response of the lady who was told that in future children will be
produced in a laboratory: it is truly admirable, but I think that
we'll always return with pleasure to the old system!). But the
fact is that, setting aside these futuristic visions, the cycle of the
land, agriculture-animals-humans, today is deficient,
particularly in substances containing nitrogen. Why then
neglect the enormous losses due to the present systems of
sterilisation of waste (for sterilisation all that's needed is a
strong dilution and a few hours) while the mineral reserves of
some types of fertiliser are close to exhaustion?20 The human
species thus destroys innumerable masses of calories in this
vital sector, as it does with the preservation of dead bodies.
Don't worry: we don't want to industrialise corpses like the
Nazis did. Anyway, the sum of waste excreted by a man in the
course of an average life represents around 300 times the
weight of his body. But by replacing the cemeteries by some
other system, even mineralising corpses, we can gain cultivable
land. Today this would be for the promoters of tempting
building land — but let's have no confusion about this, it's not
on their behalf that we're taking up the cudgels.