Social and Physical Form: Ilyenkov on the Ideal and Marx on the Value-Form
Andrew Chitty,
University of Sussex
in Evald Ilyenkov’s Philosophy Revisited, ed. V. Oittinen, Kikimora Publications, Helsinki, 2000, pp. 229-263
E.V. Ilyenkov’s philosophy represents an extraordinarily ambitious attempt to use the idea that human
social activity has determinate ‘forms’ to achieve three different goals: an account of the categories of
thought, an account of our knowledge of the natural world, and an account of human consciousness.1
Overarching these goals, and incorporating them, is another: that of giving an account of mind based
on social activity.
Ilyenkov’s conception of the ideal, or of ideality, plays a central role in this project. We could go as far
as to say that for Ilyenkov ‘ideality’ is the most fundamental feature of human mindedness. By
demonstrating that ideality is an objective yet non-physical feature of social activities, and of the
things used and produced by social activities, Ilyenkov aims to show that an elementary human
mindedness inheres in these activities and things, which makes possible the fully-fledged human
mindedness that characterises individual reflective human beings.
Understanding Ilyenkov’s account of mind, therefore, depends on gaining a clear grasp of his
conception of the ideal. Yet, notoriously, that conception has proved an elusive one to pin down. In
this article, I shall attempt to elucidate some aspects of Ilyenkov’s conception of the ideal by taking as
a cue his statement, in his article ‘The Problem of the Ideal’, that ‘the ideality of the value-form is an
extremely typical and characteristic case of ideality in general’ (DI 207, CI 90-91).2
This suggests that
Ilyenkov develops his account of the ideality of human activities and the things involved in those
activities by generalising from Marx’s account of the value-form of commodities.3
And in fact in this
article, which is his fullest exposition of the concept of the ideal, Ilyenkov – after attacking his
opponents and commenting on the notion of the ideal in Plato, Kant and Hegel – presents his own
Of course this is not to deny the influence of other antecedents, most obviously of Hegel’s account of
‘objective spirit’, in the formation of Ilyenkov’s concept of the ideal.
account of the ideal precisely through a discussion of Marx’s account of the value-form. My procedure
here will be to comment in detail on this presentation, adopting the working assumption that in it
Ilyenkov is in fact generalising from Marx’s value-form to arrive at his concept of the ideal. This will
lead to some conclusions about the nature of Ilyenkov’s generalisation from Marx, and about the
conception of the ideal that results from it
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