HYDROGEN BOMB
A nuclear weapon which generates the largest portion of its enormous energy through fusion
reactions (the merger of forms of hydrogen atoms to produce helium atoms). The other form of
nuclear weapon is the fission bomb in which energy is released through a chain reaction
of splitting uranium or plutonium atoms. Fission bombs are used to trigger hydrogen bombs.
See also:
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
“A hydrogen bomb is a weapon which in practical effect is almost one of genocide.” —Enrico Fermi, Nobel Prize winning physicist, quoted in Scientific American, Nov. 2000, p. 109. [However, it should also be noted that Fermi himself was on other occasions guilty of promoting genocide, as with his 1943 proposal to use radiological weapons to poison food supplies in Germany and kill as many Germans as possible. —Ed.
HYNDMAN, Henry Mayers (1842-1921)
A founder and leader of the Social-Democratic
Federation in Britain and later one of the founders of the British Socialist Party.
Hyndman was always one of the leaders of the Right wing of the socialist movement in Britain
and a complete opportunist. In 1916 he was expelled from the
BSP for putting out propaganda in support of the imperialist war. He was also hostile to the
October Revolution in Russia and supported imperialist intervention by the West against Soviet
Russia.
“Although Hyndman was a talented writer and public speaker, many members
of the SDF questioned his leadership qualities. He was extremely authoritarian and tried
to restrict internal debate about party policy. At an SDF meeting on 27 December 1884,
the executive voted by a majority of two (10-8), that it had no confidence in Hyndman.
When he refused to resign, some members, including William Morris and Eleanor Marx, left
the party.
“In the 1885 General Election,
Hyndman and Henry Hyde Champion, without consulting their colleagues, accepted £340 from
the Tories to run parliamentary candidates in Hampstead and Kensington, the objective
being to split the Liberal vote and therefore enabling the Conservative candidate to win.
This ploy failed, and the two SDF’s candidates won only a total of 59 votes. The story
leaked out, and the political reputation of both men suffered from the idea that they
were willing to accept ‘Tory Gold’.” —From the Wikipedia article on Hyndman (as of
Feb. 28, 2010).
HYPERINFLATION
Very rapid and “uncontrollable” inflation. Of course
inflation is always really controllable; the government just needs to stop the printing
presses pouring out so much new currency. But this might in turn lead to the complete
collapse of the government because of its inability to pay its bills, which is why they are
reluctant to do so in these circumstances.
Three of the worst cases of hyperinflation
in world history were in Weimar Germany in 1922-23 (see chart at the right); in
Chiang Kai-shek’s corrupt regime in China during and
after World War II; and in recent decades in Zimbabwe.
See also:
CHINA—Hyperinflation In,
ZIMBABWE—Hyperinflation In
HYPOCRISY
Hypocrisy is the feigning to be what one is not, or to believe what one really does not,
especially with regard to morality and politics. Although there may be individual hypocrites
within any political trend, this is especially widespread within bourgeois ruling class
circles. The reason for this is simple: Those who oppose the interests of the people must
of necessity constantly pretend to promote those interests in order to maintain their
privileged position. In addition to this, the requirements of those publicly promoting
reactionary ideology often demand that they take positions which even they as individuals
do not really agree with. The bourgeoisie is hypocritical in their very essence.
“Affair sinks congressman: Republican congressman Tim Murphy
of Pennsylvania announced Wednesday that he would not run for a ninth term [and a day
later announced his resignation from Congress], amid tawdry revelations of an
extramarital affair in which the antiabortion lawmaker urged his mistress to get an
abortion when he thought she was pregnant. Murphy said in a brief statement through
his office that he will ‘take personal time to seek help as my family and I continue
to work through our personal difficulties.’ Murphy’s decision came a day after the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette published text messages between Murphy and Shannon
Edwards. A text message from Edwards told the congressman he had ‘zero issue posting
your pro-life stance all over the place when you had no issue asking me to abort our
unborn child just last week when we thought that was one of the options.’” —News of
the Day item, San Francisco Chronicle, Oct. 5, 2017, p. A5.
[If Murphy had had a more
reasonable public position on the right of women to obtain an abortion, he would not
have been “forced” to be hypocritical about it. But in that case he would never have
been selected as the Republican candidate for office. The irrational, anti-women, and
other reactionary stances of people like this, in effect require them to become
hypocrites. Although this particular hypocrite has now resigned, Congress is still full
of hundreds of other hypocrites whose hypocrisy has not yet been exposed. —Ed.]
HYPONYM
A word of more specific meaning than a more general term with a meaning related to it (its
hypernym). For example, since wrens are a kind of bird, the word ‘wren’ is a hyponym of
‘bird’, while ‘bird’ is a hypernym of the word ‘wren’. (This is sort of a set-theoretic
relationship.)
Note that this is not quite the same thing as
the linguistic concept of semantic marking. A hyponym is a
different word than its hypernym, while a semantically marked word is the same
word as its unmarked form, but used in a more specific way (as indicated by the context).
Thus in the unmarked use of the word ‘men’ in the sentence “All men are mortal”, the
word ‘men’ includes both male and female human beings (and presumably also any intermediate
or other categories of human beings!), while on a bathroom door “Men” usually (still!) refers
just to males. Thus semantic marking is a more subtle (and linguistically more profound) thing
than hyponymy (hyponyms/hypernyms).
HYPOTHESIS
[As used in science:] A tentative assumption made in order to draw out and test its logical
or empirical consequences. [Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary,
10th ed.] Quite often competing hypotheses are developed, only one of which will
eventually be proven correct or at least become the generally accepted theory
explaining the phenomena in question.
“HYPOTHESIS, THEORY, LAW mean a formula derived by inference from
scientific data that explains a principle operating in nature. HYPOTHESIS implies
insufficient evidence to provide more than a tentative explanation [a hypothesis
explaining the extinction of the dinosaurs]. THEORY implies a greater range of
evidence and greater likelihood of truth [the theory of evolution]. LAW implies
a statement of order and relation in nature that has been found to be invariable under
the same conditions [the law of gravitation].” —From the entry for HYPOTHESIS
in Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 10th ed.
[The use of these terms in Marxist
discourse is generally the same or very similar to this. However, on a few occasions
Marx referred to tendencies as “laws”, as in Part 3 of Volume III of
Capital, “The Law of the Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall”. A few modern
Marxists, under the influence of postmodernist
ideology, have gone so far as to claim that most or even all laws in social
science are “only tendencies”! See: SCIENTIFIC
LAWS—As Mere Tendencies. Nearly all Marxists, however, use the words HYPOTHESIS
and THEORY pretty much the same as they are generally used in modern science. —S.H.]
“Individual facts are selected and grouped together such that their lawful connection becomes clearly apparent. By grouping these laws together, one can achieve other more general laws.... However ... the big advances in scientific knowledge originated [by an inductive method] only to a small degree. For, if a researcher were to approach things without a preconceived opinion, how would he be able to pick the facts from the tremendous richness of the most complicated experiences that are simple enough to reveal their connections through laws?” —Albert Einstein, “Induction and Deduction in Physics”, Berliner Tageblatt. Quoted in Clifford Pickover, Archimedes to Hawking (2008), p. 163. [Einstein is explaining here why hypotheses are needed in science. In the much earlier quote below Engels makes the same point. —Ed.]
“The form of development of natural science, in so far as it thinks,
is the hypothesis. A new fact is observed which makes impossible the previous
method of explaining the facts belonging to the same group. From this moment onwards
new methods of explanation are required – at first based on only a limited number of
facts and observations. Further observational material weeds out these hypotheses,
doing away with some and correcting others, until finally the law is established in
a pure form. If one should wait until the material for a law was in a pure form,
it would mean suspending the process of thought in investigation until then and, if
only for this, reason, the law would never come into being.
“The number and succession of
hypotheses supplanting one another – given the lack of logical and dialectical
education among natural scientists – easily gives rise to the idea that we cannot know
the essence of things (Haller and Goethe). This is not peculiar to natural
science since all human knowledge develops in a much twisted curve; and in the
historical sciences also, including philosophy, theories displace one another, from
which, however, nobody concludes that formal logic, for instance, is nonsense.”
—Engels, Dialectics of Nature (1883), “Notes and Fragments”, MECW 25:520, online
at:
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1883/don/ch07c.htm
HYSTERESIS
1. [In general, and in biology, derived from
ancient Greek meaning deficiency, or lagging behind:] A continuing effect on a
living or physical system resulting from what previously happened to it.
2. [As used in recent bourgeois economics:]
The lingering effects of a recession which continue to retard
economic growth years after the recession is officially deemed to be over.
As bourgeois economists define recessions,
they are “over” when production (GDP) starts to increase again,
even if the rate of increase is very slow, and even if production still has not reached the
level that existed before the recession began! However, this is being called “hysteresis”
only when over a longer multi-year period the rate of GDP growth still does not fully
recover and remains significantly lower than the rate of growth before the recession began.
In particular, the term is being used in the aftermath of the
Great Recession which is officially dated from December
2007 to the summer of 2009. For bourgeois economists, economic growth since then has been
puzzlingly sluggish and they are struggling to understand why that is. They invoke the
unscientific concept of “potential output” under
capitalism, comparing what rates of growth actually are to what they imagine they “should
be” or “would be” if the crisis had not arisen.
Standard bourgeois theory has no good
explanation for this hysteresis or lingering retardation of the capitalist economy, hence
all the scratching of heads that is now going on. However, the answer is actually rather
obvious from the Marxist standpoint: the overproduction
crisis is simply not truly over. According to Marx, capitalist economic crises are
resolved by the development of new markets (where that is possible) or else through the
destruction of the great excess of productive capital which has accumulated since the
previous crisis. If those things cannot be done, or at least not fully done, then the crisis
will continue indefinitely, at one level or another.
“Many macroeconomics textbooks describe recessions as temporary
declines in aggregate demand, when actual output drops below potential output, followed
by a recovery period when output returns to potential. However, a number of studies of
deep recessions around the world find that recessions have highly persistent effects on
output. These effects, sometimes labeled ‘hysteresis,’ could arise because a recession
reduces capital accumulation, scars workers who lose their jobs, and disrupts the
economic activities that produce technological progress.
“Experience since the global
financial crisis and Great Recession of 2008-09 has strengthened the evidence for
long-term effects of recessions, since output in many countries is still highly
depressed in 2014, with many forecasters predicting little recovery in the next five
years....
“In Long-Term Damage from the
Great Recession in OECD Countries (NBER Working Paper No. 20185), Laurence M. Ball
uses OECD estimates of potential output in 23 countries to quantify the long-term
damage from the Great Recession.... Ball finds that the recent recessions have had
dire effects on economies’ productive capacity, as measured by OECD and IMF estimates
of potential output. In most countries, the fall in potential relative to its
pre-crisis trend has been almost as large as the fall in actual output. Consequently,
the countries with the deepest recessions have also experienced the greatest long-term
damage. By aggregating the 23 countries in his sample, the author finds that the loss
of potential output relative to the pre-crisis path is 8.4 percent in 2015. To
appreciate the size of this loss, note that Germany accounts for 8.2 percent of the
aggregate economy. The total damage from the Great Recession is slightly larger than
the loss if Germany’s entire economy disappeared.” —Les Picker, NBER Digest,
November 2014. [NBER is an important association of U.S.
bourgeois economists.]
Dictionary Home Page and Letter Index