Font Size: a A A

Marxism and the critique of moral ideology

Posted on:1999-06-21Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:University of PittsburghCandidate:Shelby, TommieFull Text:PDF
GTID:2466390014968969Subject:Philosophy
Abstract/Summary:
Marxists often make claims about the content, causes, and social functions of ideologies. Perhaps the most iconoclastic of these is the thesis that mortality is ideological (what I call "the moral ideology thesis"). But given certain other commitments of Marxism, it is difficult to make sense of this thesis, let alone assess its truth. For while clearly the moral ideology thesis is meant as a severe criticism of morality, one that seems to preclude Marxism from consistently offering a moral critique of class societies, Marxists seem to be employing a form of moral critique when they claim that class societies are exploitative. This is, of course, one version of the familiar "paradox" of Marxism's attitude toward morality.; There are roughly three ways to dissolve this "paradox" within Marxism: (i) Reject, or weaken, the moral ideology thesis so that Marxism can consistently offer a moral critique of class-structured societies; (ii) accept the moral ideology thesis and treat Marxism as a non-evaluative "science," rejecting the critical enterprise of Marxism altogether; or (iii) accept the moral ideology thesis, along with its implication that the moral critique of class societies is incompatible with certain basic commitments of Marxism, but show that this does not undermine the Marxist critical project. In this dissertation, I defend the moral ideology thesis in accordance with strategy (iii).; I argue that ideologies are illusory forms of social consciousness that function to stabilized relations of domination and exploitation and that tend to be accepted by agents because of the unconscious influence of their class interests or class position on their beliefs. I defend the moral ideology thesis by showing that morality exhibits these ideological characteristics. To resolve the tension between the moral ideology thesis, the thesis that class societies are exploitative, and the Marxist critique of class society, I explain how the Marxist theory of exploitation forms the basis of a nonmoral critique of class societies. And I argue that the critique of moral ideology in fact supports, rather than undermines, the thesis that class societies are exploitative.
Keywords/Search Tags:Moral ideology, Critique, Class societies are exploitative, Marxism
Related items