HEALTH AND SAFETY OF WORKERS
See also:
“DEATH CEILING” PROGRAM (In Capitalist
China)
HEALTH CARE DEBT
“100 Million — Estimated number of Americans with medical debt—including 41% of adults—according to an NPR and Kaiser Health News investigation released on June 16, 2022.” —Time magazine, July 4/7, 2022, p. 10.
HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS
See: UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE
HEALTH INSURANCE — In the U.S.
“According to a 2009 Harvard Medical School study, as many as 45,000 people die annually in the United States because they lack health insurance. As one of the study’s coauthors pointed out, this works out to about one death every twelve minutes. It’s unclear how President Obama’s stunted 2010 health care law will change those numbers....” —Naomi Klein, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate (2014), p. 105. [The study referred to is Andrew P. Wilper, et al., “Health Insurance and Mortality in U.S. Adults”, online at: http://www.pnhp.org/excessdeaths/health-insurance-and-mortality-in-US-adults.pdf]
“A new Gallup poll shows 34 million Americans reported having had a friend
or family member who died in the past five years because they could not afford needed
medical treatment or medications. Meanwhile, nearly 23 percent of American adults—about 58
million people—said they were unable to pay for a medication their doctor had deemed
necessary in the past year.” —Philadelphia Inquirer report as summarized in The
Week magazine, Nov. 29, 2019, p. 16.
[Sometimes when we discuss the vast
number of people killed by the capitalist-imperialist system we think mostly of those
killed directly in wars, or by reactionary governments shooting down their own people. But
capitalism has a myriad number of additional ways of killing people including by not
providing them with necessary health care, which in most years actually kill many more
than do those endless capitalist wars. Every year untold millions of people, at
home and abroad, die an early death because the capitalists refuse to provide an adequate
health care system. The capitalist system is indeed a system of endless mass murder. —Ed.]
[Despite the recent so-called “Affordable Care Act” (“Obamacare”), millions
of Americans still have no health insurance. And even those who do have health insurance,
have all sorts of problems receiving even basic care:]
“Nearly 6 in 10 Americans report
experiencing at least one problem with their health insurance in the past year, ranging from
denied claims to difficulties finding an in-network doctor. That’s according to a new poll out
this morning from KFF [Kaiser Family Foundation], a nonprofit that conducts health policy
research. The issues appear pervasive for both Americans with private plans and those with
Medicare and Medicaid coverage. And they’re most commonly reported among people with greater
health care needs, such as those who rate their health as ‘fair’ or ‘poor’ and those who
receive mental health treatment....
“Coverage and access issues have been
well documented by news outlets, such as a long-running KFF Health News series documenting
exorbitant and baffling medical bills. In conversations with The Health 202, several
experts said the new KFF poll gives weight to these anecdotal reports amassed throughout the
years.
“About 26 percent said that a doctor
covered by their insurance didn’t have any available appointments. One-third of Medicaid
enrollees reported having such an issue. Roughly 18 percent of those surveyed indicated their
insurance didn’t pay for care they thought was covered. That complaint was more common among
those with employer-sponsored health insurance and Obamacare plans. Nearly 3 in 4 insured adults
who have received mental health treatment in the past year report experiencing a problem with
their insurance.” —Rachel Roubein, Washington Post/“The Health 202” newsletter,
June 15, 2023.
“‘We waste hundreds of billions each year on health insurers’ profits and paperwork, while tens of millions can’t afford medical care, healthy food, or a decent place to live,’ notes City University of New York physician Steffie Woolhandler. ‘Americans die younger than their counterparts elsewhere because when corporate profits conflict with health, our politicians side with the corporations.’” —Tessa Koumoundouros, “More Than a Million Americans ‘Missing’ as US Endures a Crisis of Early Death”, Science Alert, July 20, 2023; reporting on a study posted on PNAS Nexus.
“HEARTLAND THEORY”
An imperialist geopolitical theory developed by the British
geographer and politician Halford Mackinder in the early
part of the 20th century. He conceptually divided the world into these different regions:
• The “World-Island”, consisting of
the three conjoined continents of Europe, Asia and Africa. This had the largest population and
the richest natural resources.
• The “Offshore Islands”, such as
Britain and Japan.
• The “Outlying Islands” which
included not only what we normally call islands, but also the continents of North and South
America and Australia.
• Within the “World-Island”, in its
center, is the “Heartland”, which stretched from the Volga River in Europe to Yangtze in China,
and from the ice-bound Arctic Sea in the north down to the Himalayas. Thus the “Heartland”
encompassed much of the old Russian Empire and the northwestern interior part of China.
Mackinder summarized the essence of his “Heartland
Theory” as follows:
“Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland;
who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island;
who rules the World-Island commands the world.”
—Halford Mackinder, Democratic Ideals and Reality
(1919), p. 150.
This realization (if we may call it that) greatly concerned Mackinder because as a small
island nation, and primarily a naval power, it obviously seemed to be an extremely difficult
thing for Britain to “command the Heartland” far away from the navigable oceans. This meant
that the continued domination of the world by British imperialism was at serious risk if it
could not find a way to rule Eastern Europe. (This sort of imperial thinking was part of what
was behind the British invasion of revolutionary Russia at the end of World War I. Mackinder
himself was appointed British High Commissioner in southern Russia during late 1919 and early
1920, at the time of the unified attempt by numerous imperialist powers to overthrow the
Bolsheviks.)
How much validity is there to the Heartland
Theory anyway? Actually, not much. Like most imperialist geopolitical notions, especially
those based too much on geography (“geographical determinism”) it is simply not very plausible.
The core of the “Heartland” specified by Mackinder is pretty bleak territory, part of Siberia
and part of Central Asia, neither of which are good agricultural regions, and there are not
huge populations of people there. Moreover, the history of the past century has shown that a
new dominant world imperialist power—the United States—grew up entirely outside of his
“World-Island”, in what he considered the far periphery of political power. Even as the power
of U.S. imperialism is now declining rapidly, the major new imperialist power developing is
China. And the economic and political core of China is also along its eastern coast, far away
from the “Heartland”.
Some writers have pointed out, however, that
the current Belt and Road expansion of Chinese
capitalist-imperialism is having the effect of considerably developing Central Asia and also
lending it much more importance as a connecting bridge between China and Europe. This suggests
to some that it is not Eastern Europe which is the key to dominating the Heartland, but rather
China. More generally, the new imperialist bloc led by China and Russia, which is now
developing in opposition to the existing World
Imperialist System long dominated by the U.S., is seen by some as at least a partial and
belated vindication of Mackinder’s “Heartland Theory”.
“During World War II, Mackinder’s ideas shaped the course of the war
beyond anything he could have imagined. Reflecting Mackinder’s influence on geopolitical
thinking in Germany, Adolf Hitler would risk his Reich in a misbegotten effort to capture
the Russian heartland as lebensraum, or living space, for his German ‘master race.’
“In the interwar years, Sir Halford’s
[Mackinder] work had influenced the ideas of German geographer Karl Haushofer, founder of
the journal Zeitschrift für Geopolitik and the leading proponent of lebensraum.
After retiring from the Bavarian Army as a major general in 1919, Haushofer studied geography
with an eye to preventing a recurrence of the strategic blunders that had contributed to
Germany’s defeat in World War I. Later, he would become a professor at Munich University,
an adviser to Adolf Hitler, and a ‘close collaborator’ with deputy führer Rudolf Hess,
his former student. Through his forty books, four hundred articles, countless lectures, and
frequent meetings with top Nazi officials including Hitler, Haushofer propagated his concept
of lebensraum, arguing that ‘space is not only the vehicle of power ... it is power.’ His
teaching inspired what an investigator for the Nuremburg war crimes tribunal called ‘visions
of Germany being transformed into an immense continental power and rendered impregnable
against the seapower of England.’ In sum, Haushofer argued that ‘any power which controlled
the Heartland (Russia plus Germany) could control the world.’” —Alfred W. McCoy, In the
Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of US Global Power (2017), p. 33.
HEAT — Excessive
See also:
GLOBAL WARMING,
CLIMATE CHANGE
“Exposure to extreme heat has tripled in the world’s population since 1983,
according to an analysis at Columbia University. The Associated Press analysis looked at the
period from 1983 to 2016 and found that the more extreme heat now affects about a quarter of
the world’s population.
“Instead of using the more common heat
index, the study looked at the wet-bulb globe temperature, which takes into account
temperature, humidity, wind speed, sun angle and cloud cover. This more accurately measures
the amount of stress created for those who must endure conditions outside. South Asia is
seeing the most added heat stress, with the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka suffering 50 more
dangerously hot days each year than in 1983. Nearly half of urban centers around the world
are also experiencing more heat exposure.” —Steve Newman, “Dangerously Hot”, Earthweek: A
Diary of the Planet, for the week ending Nov. 19, 2021; San Francisco Chronicle,
Nov. 21, 2021.
“Extreme heat waves could make parts of Asia and Africa uninhabitable by 2100, displacing up to 600 million people, says a new United Nations report. Projected deaths from these heat waves would be ‘staggeringly high,’ the report said.” —Washington Post article, summarized in The Week magazine, Oct. 28, 2022, p. 16.
HEAVEN
“Heaven” is an absurdly mythical realm to which many religious people have traditionally imagined the
“souls” of “good and pious people” go after they die. The souls of those who
“are bad” or of the “wrong” religious faith are similarly supposed to be sent to “Hell”.
Notions such as these now often seem rather quaint (if not totally silly) even to many people who still
have some religious ideas, such as some sort of vague belief in “God”. But at
one time, in the not so distant past, beliefs in heaven and hell were very widespread, and were taken
literally and very seriously.
Actually, even the belief that only these rarified and
abstract “soul” thingies go either to heaven or hell is already one step away from even more primitive
religion. In Church doctrine a few centuries ago it was commonly held that after one’s death, one’s
body would be magically reconstituted in physical form from the original materials, and it
was this physical body which would be sent either far up into the skies into “God’s Heaven”, or else deep
down into the Earth into a fiery Hell. This is the way my own fundamentalist Christian grandmother looked
at things even in the late 20th century. And in the early 1960s, at the time when the United States was
working on the project to send some astronauts to the Moon for the first time, she told me that “God will
never allow Man to enter His Heavens uninvited!” But it turned out that the “gods” really don’t much
give a damn if humans visit the Moon or not.
The supposition of the necessary “reconstitution” of
physical human bodies, in order to send them either to heaven or hell, led to some troublesome
theological problems in the Middle Ages. One such was the problem of a cannibal eating a Christian:
How could the one-in-the-same material be used to reconstitute both the bodies of the cannibal
and the Christian, so that each could be sent on their individual journeys? Alas, theology has so far
failed to provide a satisfactory answer to this puzzle. —S.H.
FOR A LADY I KNOW
She even thinks that up in Heaven
Her class lies late and snores,
While poor black cherubs rise at seven
To do celestial chores.
—Countee Cullen, an epitaph he wrote,
quoted in a letter to the New York
Times Book Review, Nov. 7, 2021.
HEDGE FUND [Capitalist Finance]
A private and aggressively speculative investment fund usually managed by Wall Street insiders
for the benefit of themselves and other very rich investors. The first hedge funds were
designed to try to preserve capital during economic and financial downturns, which is why they
have that name. (“Hedging” against market downturns.) But the nature of most hedge funds today
is that of highly speculative operations hoping to make profits far above those achievable
through ordinary investments in stocks and bonds. They often speculate in foreign currencies
and their exchange rates, the prices of bulk commodities, and in higher profit (but riskier)
foreign investments. This leads them to shift large amounts of “hot money” rapidly from one
investment to another, and from country to country. They frequently use sophisticated forms of
arbitrage, sometimes based on complicated mathematical models.
In addition they often rely on better financial information, on insider knowledge (though that
is supposedly illegal), high-speed computers to make rapid market trades, and other methods
which—in effect—allow them to cheat other investors. However, despite their supposed great
advantages over other investors, because of their highly speculative nature many hedge funds
have been known to lose substantial sums of money in some years. (See the quote from
The Economist below.)
In most countries hedge funds are only very
loosely regulated, if at all. They have grown rapidly in recent decades and are a major
indication of the financialization of the U.S. and world
capitalist economies. They are an additional destabilizing factor in contemporary capitalism.
As of early 2016, the roughly 10,000 U.S. hedge funds have assets under management estimated
to total more than $2.9 trillion dollars.
See also:
LONG-TERM CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
“Last year, the top 25 hedge fund managers took home, on average, almost $1 billion each, according to Forbes. Even run-of-the-mill portfolio managers at large hedge funds averaged $2.2 million each, according to the 2014 Glocap Hedge Fund Compensation report.” —Robert Reich, “Insider ‘coin of the realm’ gives rich an unfair edge”, San Francisco Chronicle, Dec. 21, 2014, p. E8.
“The hype about hedge funds ‘is getting harder and harder to believe,’ said The Economist. These elite investment firms justify their handsome fees by claiming to ‘employ the cleverest people in the world,’ who are capable of spotting investment opportunities that other managers miss. In reality, most hedge funds perform no better than the market overall, and sometimes far worse. For the first quarter of 2016, the average fund lost 0.8 percent after fees, according to Hedge Fund Research, following a 1.1 percent loss for 2015 and a measly 3 percent gain for 2014. ‘While clients have made do with the crumbs, the managers are still dining well,’ charging annual fees of 2 percent, regardless of how they perform.... [E]ven over the long run, hedge funds have been a losing bet. Over the past 10 years, the industry’s returns have underperformed the S&P 500 index, as well as a typical portfolio containing 60 percent stocks and 40 percent Treasury bonds.” —“The Great Hedge Fund Rip-Off”, summarized in The Week, May 20, 2016, p. 34, from an article in The Economist.
HEDONISM [In Ethics]
The view that ‘good’ means pleasure (or relief from suffering), or that everything is (or
should be) done for pleasure (or to relieve suffering).
Hedonism: Maximizing Pleasure and Minimizing Pain. Another
very common ethical theory is that pleasure is the greatest good, and pain the greatest
evil. Therefore, morality consists in striving to maximize the amount of pleasure for
everyone, and striving to minimize the amount of pain. Like most ethical theories, this
sounds fairly plausible at first, but cannot withstand even a cursory critical
examination.
For one thing, human beings have
many other needs and interests besides pleasure and avoiding pain, and far more than
just those two things goes into making the good life.
Suppose some society could be
constructed where everyone (or at least most people) were both very happy and as free
of all pain as could reasonably be arranged. But suppose this society was also an
authoritarian dictatorship, where people had no political freedom, no control over their
own lives, were severely exploited, and so forth. Perhaps this might be some sort of
fascist society where the people were nevertheless psychologically “happy” because of
both extreme indoctrination and the liberal availability of hallucinatory drugs.
Obviously this would be a nightmare society, and not at all a moral society. Even a
somewhat milder version of this sort of thing, such as is pictured in Aldous Huxley’s
Brave New World (1932), is a horrible nightmare.
The roots of this ethical theory,
too, go way back. Epicurus (341-270 BCE) held that the practical goal of philosophy was
to secure happiness (or at least to avoid all discomfort), and that pleasure was the
sum total of happiness. The modern theory of “promote pleasure, minimize pain”, however,
derives primarily from the utilitarians (most of whom would be better called “hedonists”,
if that did not have such negative connotations). Jeremy
Bentham (1748-1832), in particular, is responsible for giving utilitarianism its
hedonistic twist. Utilitarianism, as its name suggests, was originally concerned more
with “utility” or “usefulness”, but critics raised the question of “useful for what?”,
and that led Bentham, John Stuart Mill, and other utilitarians into this very one-sided
hedonist perversion of what was originally a much more sensible ethical theory. [...]
Experiments have been done on lab
rats that clearly demonstrate that there is a whole lot more to “the good life” than
merely experiencing even the most intense feelings of pleasure. In the brains of all
higher animals (and perhaps many of the lower ones as well), there is a region known as
“the pleasure center”. Tiny wires have been inserted into this region of a rat’s brain,
and things set up so that when the rat pushes a lever, its pleasure center is stimulated.
The pleasure is so intense that the rat keeps pushing the lever over and over again,
until it is physically totally exhausted and unable to continue. It may not even eat,
drink, or do anything else. And eventually it dies. Human drug addicts are sometimes
perhaps in a similar situation, although they generally still have the sense to at least
pull away for some food, water, and sleep once in a while. Nevertheless, it should be
obvious from examples like this that the simple-minded theory that “happiness and the
avoidance of pain” are all that matters cannot reasonably be considered to be the sole
basis of either the good life or of any sort of morality. —S.H., An Introduction to
the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist Class Interest Theory of Ethics, Chapter 1, section 1.2C,
from the draft of 6/14/07 as posted at:
https://www.massline.org/Philosophy/ScottH/MLM-Ethics-Ch1-2.pdf
HEGEL, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich (1770-1831)
German idealist philosopher who conceived of the world as a single organism developing
through stages via its own internal dialectical logic, and gradually coming to embody
reason.
Hegel’s most important and positive
contribution to philosophy was his development of dialectics,
which was adopted by Marx and then reconstructed in a rational, materialist form.
In ethics, Hegel emphasized the collective
nature of morality and argued that it could not be understood except in terms of the social
relations within the family, among individuals, and within the state.
See also:
Philosophical doggerel about
Hegel.
“Hegel’s logic cannot be applied in its given form, it cannot be taken as given. One must separate out from it the logical (epistemological) nuances, after purifying them from the mysticism of ideas: that is still a big job.” —Lenin, “Conspectus of Hegel’s Book Lectures on the History of Philosophy” (1915), LCW 38:266.
“Although Hegel himself was an admirer of the autocratic Prussian state, in whose service he was as a professor at Berlin University, Hegel’s teachings were revolutionary. Hegel’s faith in human reason and its rights, and the fundamental thesis of Hegelian philosophy that the universe is undergoing a constant process of change and development, led some of the disciples of the Berlin philosopher—those who refused to accept the existing situation—to the idea that the struggle against this situation, the struggle against existing wrong and prevalent evil, is also rooted in the universal law of eternal development. If all things develop, if institutions of one kind give place to others, why should the autocracy of the Prussian king or of the Russian tsar, the enrichment of an insignificant minority at the expense of the vast majority, or the domination of the bourgeoisie over the people, continue for ever? Hegel’s philosophy spoke of the development of the mind and of ideas; it was idealistic. From the development of the mind it deduced the development of nature, of man, and of human, social relations. While retaining Hegel’s idea of the eternal process of development, Marx and Engels rejected the preconceived idealist view; turning to life, they saw that it is not the development of mind that explains the development of nature but that, on the contrary, the explanation of mind must be derived from nature, from matter.” —Lenin, “Frederick Engels” (1896), LCW 2:21.
HEGELIAN DIALECTICS VS. MATERIALIST DIALECTICS
“By the way, half intentionally and half from lack of insight, he [Dühring] practices deception [in his review of volume I of Marx’s Capital]. He knows very well that my method of presentation is not Hegelian, since I am a materialist and Hegel is an idealist. Hegel’s dialectics is the basic form of all dialectics, but only after it has been stripped of its mystical form, and it is precisely this which distinguishes my method.” —Marx, Letter to Ludwig Kugelmann, March 6, 1868, in Marx-Engels Selected Correspondence (Moscow: 1975), p. 187; in a slightly different translation in MECW 42:544.
“My dialectic method is not only different from the Hegelian, but
is its direct opposite. To Hegel, the life-process of the human brain, i.e.,
the process of thinking, which, under the name of ‘the Idea,’ he even transforms
into an independent subject, is the demiurgos of the
real world, and the real world is only the external, phenomenal form of ‘the Idea.’
With me, on the contrary, the ideal is nothing else than the material world reflected
by the human mind, and translated into forms of thought.
“The mystifying side of
Hegelian dialectic I criticized nearly thirty years ago, at a time when it was still
the fashion. But just as I was working at the first volume of ‘Das Kapital,’ it was
the good pleasure of the peevish, arrogant, mediocre, epigones [inferior imitators]
who now talk large in cultured Germany, to treat Hegel ... as a ‘dead dog.’ I
therefore openly avowed myself the pupil of that mighty thinker, and even here and
there, in the chapter on the theory of value, coquetted with the modes of expression
peculiar to him. The mystification which dialectic suffers in Hegel’s hands, by no
means prevents him from being the first to present its general form of working in a
comprehensive and conscious manner. With him it is standing on its head. It must be
turned right side up again, if you would discover the rational kernel within the
mystical shell.
“In its mystified form,
dialectic became the fashion in Germany, because it seemed to transfigure and to
glorify the existing state of things. In its rational form it is a scandal and
abomination to bourgeoisdom and its doctrinaire professors, because it includes in
its comprehension and affirmation recognition of the existing state of things, at
the same time also, the recognition of the negation of that state, of its inevitable
breaking up; because it regards every historically developed social form as in fluid
movement, and therefore takes into account its transient nature not less than its
momentary existence; because it lets nothing impose upon it, and is in its essence
critical and revolutionary.
“The contradictions inherent
in the movement of capitalist society impress themselves upon the practical bourgeois
most strikingly in the changes of the periodic cycle, through which modern industry
runs, and whose crowning point is the universal crisis. That crisis is once again
approaching, although as yet but in its preliminary stage; and by the universality
of its theatre and the intensity of its action it will drum dialectics even into the
heads of the mushroom-upstarts of the new, holy Prusso-German empire.” —Marx,
Capital, Vol. I, Afterward to the Second German Edition (Jan. 24, 1873),
(International ed., pp. 19-20; Penguin ed., p. 102-3).
HEGELIAN TRIADS
A conception of dialectics in which an initial state or
situation (the “thesis”) is transformed via its opposite (the “antithesis”) into a new
state (the “synthesis”). Although this is sometimes a helpful way of looking at particular
cases of dialectical development, it is also rather simplistic or misleading in other
cases.
It is often stated that Hegel himself
did not use this terminology, but at the very least the idea is frequently implicit in
his writings. Similarly some Marxists have looked down on this terminology, though the
creators of revolutionary Marxism have sometimes used these terms themselves.
See also:
NEGATION (In Dialectics) (and especially the
quote from Mao there),
NEGATION OF THE NEGATION,
SUBLATION
“Triad (Greek, trias)—in philosophy it is the formula of three-stage development. The idea of three-stage development was first formulated by the Greek Neo-Platonic philosophers, particularly by Proclus, and was expressed in the works of the German idealist philosophers Fichte and Schelling. The triad was, however, developed most fully in the idealist philosophy of Hegel, who considered that every process of development traverses three stages—thesis, antithesis, and synthesis. The second stage is the negation of the first, which transformed into its opposite by transition to the second stage. The third stage is the negation of the second, i.e., the negation of the negation, which means a return to the form existing at the outset that is now enriched by a new content and is on a higher level.” —Note 47, LCW 1. [The note goes on to state that (in some cases at least) this triad notion is a scheme into which reality has been forced quite artificially.]
“And so [according to the Narodnik Mikhailovsky], the materialists
rest their case on the ‘incontrovertibility’ of the dialectical process! In other words,
they base their sociological theories on Hegelian triads. Here we have the stock method
of accusing Marxism of Hegelian dialectics, an accusation that might be thought to
have been worn threadbare enough by Marx’s bourgeois critics. Unable to advance any
fundamental argument against the doctrine, these gentlemen fastened on Marx’s manner
of expression and attacked the origin of the theory, thinking thereby to undermine its
essence. And Mr. Mikhailovsky makes no bones about resorting to such methods. He uses
a chapter from Engels’s Anti-Dühring as a pretext. Replying to Dühring,
who had attacked Marx’s dialectics, Engels says that Marx never dreamed of ‘proving’
anything by means of Hegelian triads, that Marx only studied and investigated the real
process, and that the sole criterion of theory recognized by him was its conformity to
reality. If, however, it sometimes happened that the development of some particular
social phenomenon fitted in with the Hegelian scheme, namely, thesis—negation—negation
of the negation, there is nothing surprising about that, for it is no rare thing in
nature at all. And Engels proceeds to cite examples from natural history (the
development of a seed) and the social sphere—as, for instance, that first there was
primitive communism, then private property, and then the capitalist socialization of
labor; or that first there was primitive materialism, then idealism, and then scientific
materialism, and so forth. It is clear to everybody that the main weight of Engels’s
argument is that materialists must correctly and accurately depict the actual historical
process, and that insistence on dialectics, the selection of examples to demonstrate
the correctness of the triad, is nothing but a relic of the Hegelianism out of which
scientific socialism has grown, a relic of the manner of expression. And, indeed, once
it has been categorically declared that to ‘prove’ anything by triads is absurd, and
that nobody even thought of doing so, what significance can attach to examples of
‘dialectical’ processes? Is it not obvious that this merely points to the origin of the
doctrine and nothing more?” —Lenin, “What the ‘Friends of the People’ Are” (1894), LCW
1:163-164.
[It should be noted that years
later Lenin made a deeper investigation of Hegel’s dialectics, and at that time
developed a further appreciation for the concepts of dialectical
contradiction and
negation, though of course he never adopted
the simplistic notion that all phenomena must necessarily conform to the Hegelian triad
scheme. —S.H.]
HEGEMONY [Pronounced: huh-JEM-mah-nee]
Domination, or predominent influence over others, or over other countries. When Alexander
the Great became Hegemon over the Greek world, that meant he was the big boss. In the
modern capitalist-imperialist world, hegemony is a word often used to describe the
domination by imperialist countries like the U.S. over “Third World” countries.
Hegemony is also a matter of concern in the
ideological sphere, where preparing the ground for revolution means in considerable part
undermining the current bourgeois ideological hegemony in the working class.
(Antonio Gramsci is one person who talks a lot about this,
though often in rather obscure ways.)
See also:
NEO-COLONIALISM
HEIDEGGER, Martin (1889-1976)
German existentialist philosopher who was influenced by
(and sympathetic to) Naziism. Many of the roots of his worldview go back to German
Romanticism and to a focus on people’s conception of their
place in the world. His book Sein und Zeit (1927) [Being and Time] attempts to
discuss the very abstract concept of “Being” (or existence—but note the mystical capital “B”!)
in the usual absurdly obscure and incoherent metaphysical
way. According to Heidegger, modern humanity has lost the “nearness and shelter” of Being
(whatever that means exactly!) and we are no longer at home in the world as primitive human
beings were. This actually seems to be a reflection of bourgeois angst in the midst of their
own decaying social world order.
Heidegger’s notorious 1933 speech, “The Role
of the University in the New Reich”, called upon Germany to move itself upward into the
primordial realm of the powers of Being (whatever that means!) under the leadership of the
Nazi party. His seminars of 1933-35 likewise bring out the major Nazi influence on Heidegger.
[See: Emmanuel Faye, Heidegger: The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy
in Light of the Unpublished Seminars of 1933-35, Yale, 2009.] Many adherents of
Continental Philosophy, including some on the
self-proclaimed “Left”, have tried to excuse Heidegger as having had only a minor flirtation
with Naziism, but the evidence shows it was much more than that. (He was a member of the Nazi
party from 1933 until 1945.) It is hard to understand what anyone can see of value in
Heidegger, let alone what those into contemporary academic “Marxism” imagine that they see
there!
HEISENBERG UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE
A principle within quantum mechanics that states that
certain complementary pairs of physical properties of particles—such as position and
momentum—cannot both be precisely known at the same time. In other words, the more accurately
one of the two complementary properties is known, the less accurately the other can be known
at that time. According to Werner Heisenberg, the reactionary and idealist German physicist
who first formulated this principle, this is due to the supposed fact that below very tiny
thresholds the combination of these pairs of complementary properties actually have no
well-defined values at all! A much more sensible (and more materialist) interpretation of
this principle is just that it is not a statement about reality itself being “undefined”
below tiny thresholds, but rather a statement about the limitation of the theory and equations
of quantum wave mechanics itself to determine what that reality is below those tiny
thresholds.
Actually, the “uncertainty principle” is not
even really specific to quantum mechanics; it is a characteristic of any wave theory in
any area of physics, including water waves and sound waves, where it obviously does not “prove”
that further knowledge at a deeper level is impossible. (For example, we can investigate the
positions and motions of individual water molecules in the ocean wave, even if the wave
equations themselves say nothing about those specific molecular motions.) As the prominent
bourgeois physicist Richard Muller wrote, “Many people think this [uncertainty] principle is
original to quantum physics, but it is not; it was well known in the theory of waves and optics,
developed in the 1800s long before it was proposed to apply to quantum physics.... The math of
the Heisenberg uncertainty principle follows exactly the math of classical waves.”
[Now: The Physics of Time (2016), pp. 208-9.]
In much popular usage the term “uncertainty
principle” is misused or abused, or at least is quite misleading. One example of this is
the common confusion between the uncertainty principle and the related, but somewhat different,
“observer effect”—that an act of observation or measurement itself has an effect on the
properties of the thing being observed, or in other words changes it. Of course this is
certainly not always the case in the macroworld, and recent research indicates that it may not
always be the case in the microworld either.
“HELICOPTER MONEY”
Money distributed indiscriminately, or even to certain sections of the working class
specifically (!), by a capitalist government in order to promote increased consumer spending
during a severe economic crisis. Why in the world would a capitalist regime ever give
any money to those who its ruling class lives off by exploiting?! It is sort of a last,
desperate measure to try to restart a chronically stagnating or sinking economy, and has so
far only been employed on an extremely limited scale.
While bourgeois economists often worry about
deflation and its supposed negative effects on a capitalist
economy, the bourgeois monetarist economist Milton Friedman
famously pointed out in 1969 that there are always ways to insert more money into the economy,
even possibly by just dropping it out of the skies from a helicopter. This is how “helicopter
money” got its name.
When the long developing present U.S. and
world capitalist overproduction crisis took a
major turn for the worse in the Great Recession of 2008-9
and the years since then, goverments began to struggle to find ways to end this period of
serious recession and stagnation. One initial method was through what they call
“quantitative easing”, i.e. by flooding the banks and
the rest of the financial industry with trillions of dollars of new money hoping that the
banks will then lend it out to corporations to invest in new production. This has been a
dismal failure; the banks could not find credit-worthy corporations interested in borrowing
the money because these corporations can, with their existing factories, already produce more
goods than they can sell. So all those trillions just sit unused in bank vaults (or, actually,
in unused accounts that banks have with the Federal Reserve). The problem with quantitative
easing is that it does not really put money into the hands of people who will actually spend
it.
So in their desperation to find some means
to get the U.S. and world economy out of its present doldrums (which threaten to sink even
further into much worse crisis) the frantic managers of the capitalist economy are casting
about for other methods. One such is by trying to bring about
negative interest rates, in order to force
anybody who has money in the banks to start spending it. But by far the best and most direct
method is to simply give money to the masses of ordinary people who would actually use
that money to buy things they truly need and want. This is the helicopter money idea
that is now being more and more talked about within the ruling classes in the U.S. and Europe.
Of course it pains the bourgeoisie to even think about handing out money to the working
class and poor! And their own economic theory says this should never be necessary. But they
are more and more worried about the very viability of their capitalist system, so they are
starting to entertain what once seemed to them to be wild and extreme ideas.
“Helicopter money” distributions by the
government have on occasion already been used, but so far only on a tiny scale and usually
through the method of tax breaks (which means that no money has gotten into the hands of the
very poorest people). In February 2008, for example, the George W. Bush administration passed
emergency legislation giving ordinary U.S. taxpayers each a one-time $300 break on their
income taxes. [See:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_Stimulus_Act_of_2008]
That probably mitigated the then fast developing Great Recession just a little bit, but was
way too small to stop that recession from developing into the worse one since the 1930s.
More recently, in the spring of 2020 during the (first?) lockdown of the Covid-19 pandemic,
the panicked U.S. government supposedly gave $1200 outright to every adult in the country, plus
$500 for each child, as part of its desperate program to keep the economy functioning. It is
possible that before the pandemic is over there may be some additional handouts. But these
amounts are still much too small to prevent an extremely serious recession (at least!) from
developing.
But could the “helicopter money” idea
actually get the bourgeoisie out of their worsening overproduction crisis if—contrary
to all expectations—it were used on a really massive scale? Actually, no. First, helicopter
money only has an effect while it is being distributed; it has no
“pump priming” capability of the sort that Keynesians
imagine that all government deficits have. Second, helicopter money, as a form of government
deficit financing through simply printing money, inherently promotes inflation. If it is used
on a tiny scale the inflation danger is negligible. But in that case it is ineffective. If it
is used on a truly massive scale, it might conceivably be partially effective, but it would
then also lead to huge inflation (and the likely collapse of the U.S. dollar and a horrendous
financial crisis). There is no way to escape capitalist overproduction crises without ending
the capitalist system entirely. Even dumping hundreds of billions of dollars out of helicopters
onto the streets of the cities below won’t do the job!
HELIX
A coiled shape, such as that of a telephone cord; i.e., a spiral in three dimensions.
See
NEGATION OF THE NEGATION for a pictorial
illustration and further discussion in relation to DIALECTICS
“Human knowledge is not (or does not follow) a straight line, but a curve, which endlessly approximates a series of circles, a spiral. Any fragment, segment, section of this curve can be transformed (transformed one-sidedly) into an independent, complete, straight line, which then (if one does not see the wood for the trees) leads into the quagmire, into clerical obscurantism (where it is anchored by the class interests of the ruling classes).” —Lenin, “On the Question of Dialectics” (1915), LCW 38:363. [A fuller version of this quotation is included in the entry for HUMAN KNOWLEDGE .]
HELL
A mythical “place” in various religious cosmologies, where our loving God sends “bad people” and
those with “wrong religious ideas” to suffer in absolute agony for all eternity.
See also:
HEAVEN
HELOC
See:
HOME EQUITY LINE OF CREDIT
HELVÉTIUS, Claude Adrien (1715-1771)
French materialist philosopher of the Enlightenment. Marx points out that Helvétius based
his views on Locke, and summarized his philosophy as follows: “The
sensory qualities and self-love, enjoyment and correctly understood personal interest are
the basis of all morality. The natural equality of human intelligences, the unity of
progress of reason and progress of industry, the natural goodness of man, and the omnipotence
of education, are the main features of his system.” [MECW 4:130]
HEMOSTASIS [Physiology]
The cessation of bleeding; or the process through which bleeding normally stops. This includes
the constriction of blood vessels, the aggregation of blood platelets in the wound, and the
coagulation of plasma filaments of fibrin to block the flow of blood.
HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS (c. 535-c. 475 BCE)
Early Greek philosopher who emphasized many important dialectical themes such as the constancy
of change. While Heraclitus himself seems to have understood the underlying unity of the world
despite its pervasive and inherent dialectical contradictions, his later follower
Cratylus put forward many idealistic views such as that there is
no single ultimate reality.
“It is not possible to step into the same river twice.” —Heraclitus, quoted by Plato in his dialog, Cratylus.
“Conflict is the mother of all happenings.” —Heraclitus, illustrating his deep appreciation of dialectics.
“Nature loves to hide.” —Heraclitus. [The profound idea here seems to be that the true and correct understanding of the world can only come over time through very extensive and careful investigations. —S.H.]
“The hidden harmony is better than the obvious one.” —Heraclitus. [This
also may be a profound thought which suggests that there are different levels of knowledge
and understanding of the world, and that the deeper levels of understanding are the best
of all. And even if Heraclitus himself did not exactly mean this, there is
something about his words that often provoke the most profound thoughts! —S.H.]
HERD IMMUNITY [Epidemiology] HERITAGE FOUNDATION HERMAD or HARMAD HERZEN, Alexander [Aleksandr Ivanovich] (1812-1870) Dictionary Home Page and Letter Index
A situation where a population in some country or region is protected from the further spread of
an epidemic because so many people have already had the disease, and acquired immunity from it,
that those few still with active cases are unlikely to come into contact with vulnerable people.
Where vaccines are available, herd immunity can also be achieved through extensive vaccination
campaigns.
The fraction of the population which must already
be immune in order to achieve herd immunity depends on how infectious the specific disease is. In
the case of measles, which is extremely infectious, herd immunity does not come about until as
much as 95% of the population is immune. For very weakly infectious diseases, the level may be as
low as around 40%.
With Covid-19 the
precise level of the population which needs to be immune in order to achieve herd immunity is not
yet known for certain, but is thought to be at least 60%. As of May 2, 2020, in one of the most
impacted places, New York City, antibodies to Covid-19 existed in 19.9% of population, which was
still far below the level of herd immunity.
See: THINK TANK
A term used in India for an armed goon or thug, often of
lumpenproletarian origin. The
revisionist and social-fascist
so-called Communist Party of India (Marxist) [or CPM] has organized hermad gangs in
the state of West Bengal to attack the masses and mass movements (such as those of the
Adivasis in the Lalgarh area), and to serve as an auxiliary force
to the police in working to suppress the rebellions of the people against their exploitive and
oppressive rule on behalf of the capitalists and landlords.
Prominent Russian revolutionary democrat, materialist philosopher and author. He is
sometimes called the “father of Russian socialism”, but was more clearly one of the fathers
of Russian radical populism (the Narodniks and later the Socialist-Revolutionaries). He
is credited with creating the political climate that led to the formal emancipation of the
Russian serfs in 1861.