Russian Machism (/ˈmɑxɪzm,ˈmɑkɪzm/) was a term applied to a variety of political/philosophical viewpoints which emerged inImperial Russia in the beginning of the twentieth century before theRussian Revolution. They shared an interest in the scientific and philosophical insights ofErnst Mach. Many, but not all, of the Russian Machists were Marxists, and some viewed Machism as an essential ingredient of a materialist outlook on the world. The term came into use around 1905, primarily as a polemical expression used byLenin andGeorgi Plekhanov. With a shared desire to defend an "orthodox" account of Marxism, from their own differing perspective they both divided the opponents of this putative orthodoxy into the "idealists" and the "Machists".[1] The term remained a signifier ofMarxist-Leninist opprobrium from the 1920s through into the 1970s. This was shown byAlexander Maximov [ru]'s use of the term to criticizeBoris Hessen in 1928.[2] It can also be seen inEvald Ilyenkov's chapter on "Marxism against Machism as the Philosophy of Lifeless Reaction" inLeninist Dialectics and the Metaphysics of Positivism (1979).[3]
In 1902Pavel Ivanovich Novgorodtsev edited the bookProblems of Idealism (Problemy Idealizma) which included contributions fromSergei Bulgakov,Evgenii Nikolaevitch Troubetzkoy,Sergei Nikolaevich Trubetskoy,Peter Berngardovich Struve,Nikolai Berdyaev,Semyon Frank,Sergei Askol'dov [ru],Bogdan Kistyakovski,Alexander Sergeyevich Lappo-Danilevsky,Sergey Oldenburg, and Zhukovsky.[4] In proclaiming the advent of a new idealist movement he also deridedpositivism as being narrow and dogmatic.[5]
Lenin, who was amaterialist, explains the difference between philosophical idealism and philosophical materialism as follows: "Materialism is the recognition of 'objects in themselves' or objects outside the mind; the ideas and sensations are copies or images of these objects. The opposite doctrine (idealism) says: the objects do not exist, outside the mind…”[6]
The publication ofStudies in the Philosophy of Marxism (Russian: Очерки по философии Марксизма) in 1908 marked a key moment in the emergence of this Russian Machism. However whilst many of the proponents of Russian Machism saw it as adding important insights to what a materialist view of the world would look like,Vladimir Lenin was a consistent opponent, writingMaterialism and Empirio-criticism to refute their ideas. Lenin cited as supporters of Machism: Bazarov, Bogdanov, Lunacharski, Berman, Gelfond, Yushkevich, Sergei Suvorov andNikolai Valentinov.
This list includes people who at one time or other have been described as Russian Machists: