Achieving an ecological civilization is the challenge before us. A knowledge of applicable empirically validated natural and social science laws is the key that opens the door.

Charles Posa McFadden, 2023-11-08

Through prodigious intellectual work during the height of the industrial revolution in England, building on prior and concurrent achievements by humanity in science and philosophy, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels gave humanity the intellectual scaffolding for understanding and ultimately overcoming the death spiral that accompanies capitalism. That scaffolding includes dialectical and historical materialist theory and the identification of the three laws that govern the behavior of the capitalist class.

It was that intellectual scaffolding that enabled Lenin and his comrades to respond to the conjuncture of capitalism’s first world war by leading the Russian working class and its allies to create the world’s first country-wide socialist society. That achievement in turn created the material foundation for a second wave of global revolutionary advance in the wake of capitalism’s second world war, notably including the success of the revolutionary worker-peasant alliance in China, which continues as a globally influential model today.

In the three-quarters of a century since the first global defeat of the fascist alliance, capitalism took the opportunity to complete its historical mission by extending socialized production to every corner of the Earth, but within the shell of private appropriation of the surpluses human creativity has produced. This contradiction between social production and private appropriation has reached its ultimate spatial limits, creating an existential crisis for humanity in both social and ecological dimensions.

During this post World War II era, the most economically and politically powerful representatives of the capitalist class have utilized the remaining time given them to support the continuity, expansion, and development of a global fascist alliance as its ultimate defense. The intellectual foundation for fascism includes the negation of (1) science and its foundation in dialectical and historical materialism, and (2) the socialist project, and its foundation in communal morality (human rights). It follows that the struggle for a future for humanity requires the intellectual struggle for science, including its dialectical and historical materialist foundation, and the organizational struggle for institutionalizing communal morality (human rights). In what follows, we briefly argue for key aspects of the struggle for empirically validated science and its methodology.

The ecological crisis facing humanity can best be understood through application of the relevant scientific laws, natural and social scientific. Scientific analysis of the ecological crisis begins with recognition that the Earth’s biosphere is the region where two natural systems intersect, namely the solar system and the ecological system (Ecology Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster).

Most influential on the dynamics of the biosphere today are the natural laws of motion of the globally dominant capitalist economic and political system, those identified by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, and addressed in their collaborative work, primarily Capital, Volumes 1-3, and identified briefly below taken together with the thermodynamic laws applicable to the biosphere.

Contrary to the dominant capitalist ruling class perspective, the biosphere is not a thermodynamically closed system. It is not threatened primarily by laws that act outside and independent of human agency. The biosphere’s role as a necessary supporting system for human existence is threatened primarily by the behavior of the globally governing capitalist ruling class, acting in conformity with the requirements of the capitalist economic and political system.

The biosphere receives energy from the Sun, which among other things drives the process of photosynthesis, creating higher order in the form of life from relative disorder in the form of non-living matter. Managed sustainably, there is no natural scientific law that precludes many future generations of human life on Earth, generations who have a qualitatively improved social system and relationship with nature to look forward to. Our Sun is expected to be around for at least another four or five billion years.

The biosphere also receives energy from the decay within the Earth of radioactive elements. This geothermal energy is the driving force behind tectonic activity and together with solar energy represents a vast potential source of energy for supporting a much higher quality of life than most of humanity experiences today and for a greatly extended history on Earth, providing, of course, that humanity follows the path of conservative use of energy and natural resources.

The biosphere is therefore clearly not a system that can be exclusively addressed through application of the concept of entropy (the second law of thermodynamics). Life on Earth is itself the proof that entropic processes (disorder) are countered, at least in part, by negative entropy, or more specifically Gibbs Free Energy (Entropy and life - Wikipedia).

Those prominent in the development of this scientific conceptualization were guided by dialectical materialist conceptions, including:

(1) every system needs to be studied in its relationship to those other systems that have a significant effect on its behavior, and

(2) all objects of human contemplation and analysis need to be viewed in relation to their opposites.

Hence, (1) the study of the biosphere needs to include the influence on it of both the Earth and the Sun, and (2) the consideration of decay (entropy) within the biosphere should be undertaken together with consideration of its opposite (negentropy). This is the essential journey needed to achieve a sustainable relationship between humanity and a human life sustaining biosphere. This consideration needs to be central to the socialist project.

Capitalism, by its nature, has both created the existential crisis humanity now faces and is the principal barrier to achieving an ecologically sustainable future. This is a consequence of the three laws that govern the behavior of the capitalist class, laws which act outside the volition of individual capitalists and their supporters.

The first law of capitalism is the exploitation of labor by capital, a consequence of social production for private profit.

The second law of capitalism is competition between the private owners of capital to expand their ownership at the expense of labor and each other, making increasing private accumulation of capital, with all its associated inequities and cultural and environmental consequences, a defining characteristic of capitalism.

The third law of capitalism is the tendency of the rate of private profit to fall as the productivity of labor increases, resulting in non-equilibrium (that is, chaotic) behavior, including the short term boom-bust business cycle (averaging a decade approximately) and in the longer term cycle of global depressions, the first in the last quarter of the 19th century, the second in the second quarter of the 20th century, and the current one, in this quarter of the 21st century, each followed by partial resolution in the form of increasingly violent global dislocations (the first and second world wars, followed by the first and now second “cold” wars.)

In contrast to the many shortcuts attempted by petit bourgeois theorists (who thereby, perhaps unwittingly, serve to extend the life of capitalism), all three of these laws need to be considered together if the exploitative heart of capitalism is to be recognized and the capitalist system overcome.

Characteristic of revolutionary Marxism, therefore, is the recognition that freedom begins with the recognition of empirically validated (scientific) laws. Characteristic of fascism, on the other hand, is the rejection of any scientific law that would constrain human behavior.

Given the global extension and connectivity of capitalism and the global dimension of the biosphere which supports humanity, the resolution of the current crisis (with its profound concomitant economic and ecological dimensions) is the challenge now facing humanity. A favorable resolution depends on the emergence of increasing cooperation and collaboration among the progressive social forces world-wide, sufficient to turn the tide in favor of the working and oppressed classes, based on scientific socialism, as defined by the examples above.

The struggle for a multipolar world, including common prosperity and qualitative development, is likely the path to the necessary unification of the progressive forces into a decisive political force, one capable of placing capitalism in the dustbin of history and achieving a global ecological civilization, undoubtedly a long-term project that should keep problem-solving humanity constructively busy for many generations ahead.

Those interested in related articles from Charles Posa McFadden and Karen Howell McFadden can find them on our website: https://www.greensocialdemocracy.org

Brief bio: Charles Posa McFadden (M.Sc. 1966, Ph.D. 1969, in Geophysics) has studied and worked as a mathematical physicist and geophysicist (1960-1972), and science educator (1965-2009), combining teaching, developmental projects, and published research in these and related fields. From 2010 to the present, he has worked in collaboration with Karen Howell McFadden (M.A.,1966 and Ph.D., 1976 in English Literature) in addressing questions related to the challenge of the conjuncture between ecological and socio-economic crises, creating an existential crisis for humanity. Their published work includes an 11- chapter argument for Achieving an Ecological Civilization, available on their website and, also, published as 11 articles by Green Social Thought, http://GreenSocialThought.org. Charles and Karen have been active in the student, peace, labor, environmental, and social justice movements throughout their adult lifetimes, including associated published research linking theory and practice. Throughout they have been guided by dialectical and historical materialist theory (sometimes referred to as “scientific socialism”).

Welcome!

Now in our fourteenth year, this website was launched September 1, 2010 in response to the convergence of growing inequality within and between countries and a rapidly developing ecological catastrophe. After several years of further participation in the social justice, democratic and environmental movements of the people and discussions with many of our friends in these movements about draft essays we have posted to this website, we believe we now have a relatively brief, coherent set of eleven arguments that can serve as a basis for further discussion and development by those committed to taking action to reverse the neoliberal tidal wave and move forward to the achievement of an ecologically sustainable global civilization. These were completed by spring 2021. Our further arguments, including updates on our prior posted ones, can be found in the What's New Section which accompanies each page. - C&K McFadden

What's New

Winter 2024

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden and Scott Cameron McFadden

The Path to an Ecologically Sustainable Future is that of Class Struggle

Summer - Fall 2023

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden and Scott Cameron McFadden

Achieving an ecological civilization is the challenge before us. A knowledge of applicable empirically validated natural and social science laws is the key that opens the door.

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden

An alternative to destruction by capitalism: The case for communism

Winter - Spring 2023

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden and Scott Cameron McFadden

For a future beyond capitalism

1. A contemporary lens for addressing the existential crises we now face

2. For a future, we must end the systemic causes of destruction and waste

3. Meeting the urgent need for revolutionary political renewal

Fall 2022

C & K McFadden (Sept. 2022): Capitalism is genocide and ecocide

Winter 2022

C McFadden (Feb. 2022) For Canada: On Freedom - A response to the “Freedom” Convoy

C & K McFadden (Feb. 2022) For Canada: A House Divided

C & K McFadden (Jan. 2022): The Need for an Ecosocialist Revolutionary Movement

Fall 2021

C & K McFadden (Sept. 2021) For Canada:  For a future: Organize!

Winter 2020-21

C McFadden (Feb. 2021) How scarcity necessitates a more ecologically sustainable global community and digital technology makes that feasible

C&K McFadden (Dec. 2020) Can Greens avoid the pitfalls of capitalist electoral politics?

Spring 2020

C&K McFadden Canadian electoral politics and the global loss of legitimacy of the neoliberal project

Fall 2019

C&K McFadden Beyond Marx for a 21st Century Revolutionary Perspective

Spring 2019

C&K McFadden To Change the System, We Must Know the System!

Fall 2018 

C&K McFadden, we either escape the internal logic of capitalism or descend with it into barbarism

C&K McFadden, We Need an Updated Manifesto 

Don Fitz, Revolving Doors

C McFadden, The Greens Have It Right

Don Fitz, Is Nuclear Power a Solution to the Climate Crisis  

CANADA

C&K McFadden (February 2022) A House Divided

C McFadden (February 2022) On Freedom - A response to the “Freedom” Convoy

C&K McFadden (September 2021) For a future: Organize!

David Gehl (2018), Fight Climate Change Not War

C&K McFadden (2018), It is time for Canada to do the right thing by its First Nations

George Hewison (2018)WINNIPEG 1919 & THE COLD WAR

George Hewison (2018)Art Manuel - "Unsettling Canada

NEW BRUNSWICK 

Charles & Karen McFadden, An Historic Turning Point on the Journey to Recovery from Capitalism and its History of Colonialism: Reclaiming Wolastoq Ceremony

Charles McFadden, Decolonizing the U.S. & Canada: The People United for a More Just Sustainable Future


REVIEWS 

Charles McFadden Is Canada a force for good in the world, as many imagine? Review of Tyler Shipley (2020) Canada in the World: Settler capitalism and the colonial imagination

Karen and Charles McFaddenCan emergent early 21st century neo-fascism be defeated without coming to grips with late 20th century restructuring of capitalism into a global system Review of William I Robinson (2014) Global Capitalism and the Crisis of Humanity

Karen and Charles McFaddenA Dominant Capitalism or a Sustainable Environment? Why we can't have both. Review of Fred Magdoff and John Bellamy Foster (2011) What Every Environmentalist Needs to Know About Capitalism

 

 

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) applies to all work posted on this website except that which appears with authors whose last name is other than McFadden, in which case standard copyright should be assumed to apply.