
Originally Posted by
anaxarchos
Engels is right here but he emphasizes method differently from Marx. With the latter, that a thing can and indeed must exist in contradiction is a given. It is the integration of this fundamental with what Engels calls reality which is central. I don't think there is an issue between the two perspectives but it is ironic that Engels, who is universally hated by hot dogs and Frankfurters of all types, is the one who opens the door to this "New Science" which is positivist to the core.
The problem here is that science and scientific method are bourgeois to the core: they invented them, they demonstrated them, and they changed the world with them. They also applied steam power and electricity to modern production. It does not follow from this that a new era implies a proletarian science or proletarian method, anymore than it requires proletarian steam or proletarian electricity.
The criticism of the philosophical and logical muddle which is bound to exist in the bourgeois discoveries is not an open door for philosophical obscurantism or mystical musings. Hegel would never have claimed that he invented a new philosophy anymore than Marx claimed a new science. I don't really think Engels is claiming that either. Consider the context (LaSalle, Bebel, etc.).
BTW, anyone who claims that Capital is the false article and the Critique or the Grundrisse is the real one hasn't really read them all. Capital stands to the others "as railroads stand"... etc.