To what extent is Marxism still relevant today for the theory and the practice of liberal democracy?

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To what extent is Marxism still relevant today for the theory and the practice of liberal democracy?

1. Marxism as a social utopia1 

"In communist society, where nobody has one exclusive sphere of activity...society regulates production and thus makes it possible for me to do one thing today and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in evening, criticise after dinner, just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, shepherd or critic." (Marx/Engels - The German Ideology)

I love talking and thinking about politics and to imagine a better society, where I can reflect on what to write in my essays, but the quality of these activities would change very much, if one was not forced to do it, to pass exams, to get a degree, and eventually to find a job to survive in the capitalist society. Everyone knows the difference between self-fulfilling activity and the obligation of wage labour, what we normally call work.

When we are looking at the quotation above, we see that Marxism is rather a social utopia than a political program. The utopia of a society without exploitation of people by people, a society where concurrence is abolished and the voluntary cooperation of men and women is the motor of production.

The precondition for this view is the idea, that the individual is a social being and for that reason must be analysed in its social and historical context and that is continually in development.

The fundamental difference in the history of political thought between the "left wing" and the "right wing" is based on the view of the human being. Hobbes for example describes the condition of archaic societies as a "bellum omnium contra omnes"2, that is why the main fear of men comes from its similars so to protect people from people, there is the need of a strong state and law and order. You ca not change mankind, there is no development...

There were always these two views of humans that built the basics of ideologies and it seems to be more a matter of belief than a fact that you can prove.

In the last decades we experienced a dominance of what I call "new liberal" thinking, conservative think tanks began to describe human behaviour with the rules of the "neo classical" school of economics, that sees the person as a advantage maximising individual, all aspects of life are tried to explain as economic behaviour.

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In 1989 the concurrent system to capitalism lost its last battle of the cold war; the right celebrated the victory of capitalism and liberal democracy and the left was paralysed. The well-known Francis Fukuyama described the "End of history" as "the end point of mankind′s ideological evolution and the universalisation of Western liberal democracy." (National Interest, 1989, 16) In the same article Fukuyama says that it will be a sad time, because there is not going to be any ideological struggle any more, "idealism would be replaced by economic calculations, the endless solving of technical problems environmental concerns and the ...

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