Rephrasing René Descartes, Aleksandr Bogdanov once said of himself: ‘I am organized therefore I exist.’ He viewed the phenomenon of ‘organization’ as a focal and creative point of the universe and
There is some disagreement regarding the date of publication of the first part of The term ‘cognitive model’ was introduced by the Russian philosopher Alexander Ogurtsov in 1980 and developed by the Russian historian of science Yuriy Chaikovskiy. See Chaikovskiy 2008: 225–227. Bertalanffy had arrived at his basic concept by the end of the 1930s, but published it only after the end of the war, having earlier believed that the scientific community was not ready to accept it. Tektology was a unique conception of the general science of organization which brought into focus the systems notions of all main macroparadigms which appeared at different stages in the development of the systems movement of the twentieth century. See Poustilnik 1998.
This apparently purely scientific and innocent scientific doctrine gave rise to a great outburst of ‘proletarian’ debates and influenced the development, shaping and interpretation of proletarian ideology and culture in early Soviet Russia. This is not surprising since
Bogdanov was deeply influenced by classical science and by the monistic tradition in philosophy. The idea of the unity of nature and of its simplicity was one of the first scientific and philosophical notions. It held that the diversity of nature was full of amazing and numerous analogies and repetitions – therefore, there should be simple and universal laws of nature to explain all phenomena. The epoch of classical science was an era of aspiration for the creation of ‘global formulae’ – universal and simple monistic models and concepts of the world. For pre-twentieth-century science, the unity of knowledge was equal to monism of knowledge – by ascending to more and more abstract levels of existence, it would be possible eventually to arrive at unified all-embracing laws of existence (as in the This idea was expressed in many ways in relation to both the simplicity of nature and the simplicity of its explanation (Ockham’s Razor, Fermat’s principle of the reflection and refraction of light, Maupertuis’s general principle of least action, Goethe’s protophenomena, etc.).
This old monistic tradition was still very powerful during Bogdanov’s lifetime. At this time, scientists were still preoccupied with analogies between the simple and the complex, and with the construction of numerous simple models of nature. For example, the analogy of the cell with the crystal was highly popular. See a Russian translation by Przhibram, G. 1913. ‘Obzor mnenii avtorov o znachenii analogii mezdu kristallom i organizmom’, in What Is Life. New in Biology. St Petersburg: Collection 1, 19–47. We find this analogy in the first pages of Bogdanov took the term ‘tektology’ from Ernst Haeckel’s ‘Generalle Tektologie oder Allgemeine Structurlehre der Organismen’ (1866), expanding that term. In Greek, ‘tekton’ means ‘theory of construction’ and, for Bogdanov, ‘construction’ was ‘the most general and suitable synonym for the modern notion of organization’. See Bogdanov 1989: Book 1, 112.
Bogdanov designed his new science of organization in accordance with the monistic assumptions of his era – The German chemist Wilhelm Ostwald, Haeckel’s most important successor as a monist, attempted to develop the concept of ‘energetic monism’, based on the universal principle of energy. This gave Bogdanov the idea of applying the notion of ‘organization’ in a similar way. Bogdanov identified three types of monistic worldview in the history of society – religious, philosophical-abstract and scientific – and considered tektology to be the ultimate ‘scientific-monistic’ worldview.
As a Marxist, Aleksandr Bogdanov was committed to the scientific reconstruction of society, which appeared to him to be the highest form of organization. Implementing Marxist-positivistic practical aspirations, tektology was to be not merely a monistic organizational science but a science of monistic organizational experience. Tektology was meant to be a practical science; its formulae – ‘practical global formulae’ – were intended for the ‘practical mastery’ of nature, and to be ‘a powerful instrument of the real organization of humankind into a single collective’ (Bogdanov 1989: Book 1, 110).
Russian Marxism had seen the Revolution and class struggle as the path towards achieving a new social order. Bogdanov had an opposite vision; the idea of struggle did not fit in with Bogdanov’s organizational and harmonic vision of the world. Tektology was an ‘all-human science’ for the gathering together of man and the world, to produce a scientifically organized collective by stages of self-organization without class struggle. The collectivistic organizational logic of tektology was based on Bogdanov’s biological worldview, fused with a Russian philosophical
Bogdanov introduced the term ‘complex’ as ‘expedient unity’ (‘ Bogdanov identified three types of complex – ‘organized’, ‘disorganized’ and ‘neutral’ – since an increase in the degree of organization (‘organized’ complex) was just one possible outcome of organizational processes; however, he was mostly interested in the ‘organized’ complex.
Following Darwin, Bogdanov conceived of development as the adaptation of a complex to its environment. The universal regulating mechanism of tektological development and its adaptation was ‘
How far did Bogdanov really follow Darwin? Was his conception of selection really an extension of Darwin’s?
Darwin’s theory of evolution ‘by means of natural selection’ was greatly influenced by the English economist Thomas Malthus and his theory of population growth exceeding resources. Malthus’s metaphor of the ‘struggle for existence’ was the matrix for Darwin’s theory of evolution based on competition. Darwin wrote: ‘Nothing is easier than to admit in words the truth of the universal struggle for life’ (Darwin 1902: 77).
Russian naturalists perceived nature very differently from Western naturalists, seeing in nature not over-population but under-population. Russian philosophy, with its humanistic and collectivistic tendencies, believed in the best sides of both human nature and society. The same attitude was applied to nature. As the Russian writer and publicist Aleksandr Herzen put it, everybody has to have a place at nature’s feast.
For Russian intellectuals, the constructions of Malthus were offensive, even repugnant, and contrary to the Russian humanistic tradition, which believed in high human moral ideals and strove for the improvement of human society. As Todes has noted, Malthus was seen in Russia as a ‘hack writer’ (Lev Tolstoi), whose doctrine was a ‘morally repugnant’ (Beketov) expression of the secret desires of the wealth-producing classes (Kropotkin). See Todes 1989: 169.
In the first Russian translation of Darwin’s
The correct translation of Darwin’s term ‘natural selection’ – ‘ In the translation of Petr Kropotkin 1914. Kropotkin wrote his book as a response to social Darwinism, particularly that of Thomas Henry Huxley (known as ‘Darwin’s Bulldog’) and his book
Kropotkin did not deny the existence of competition within the same species or Darwin’s concept of ‘survival of the fittest’. But he believed that the ‘fittest’ are animals that co-operate with each other. Kropotkin viewed human morality as a product of the solidarity and self-sacrifice that originated from the co-operative instincts of the animal world. Another great example of Russian collectivistic thinking is the Russian religious philosopher Nikolay Fyodorov, the father of Russian cosmism. In
It was in conformity with this Russian anti-Malthusian assessment and tradition that Bogdanov wrote in Bogdanov was familiar with the correct translation of Darwin’s term ‘natural selection’ as ‘
Darwin’s evolution works only through heredity in the succession of generations. His natural selection meant selective biological reproduction; each generation continues its evolutionary direction by taking the next evolutionary step. In Bogdanov’s tektological organizational scheme, the mechanism of ‘
The most important difference, however, resides in the systems character of tektological ‘ The modern understanding of ‘selection’ in the context of global evolutionism corresponds to Bogdanov’s ‘
Tektological
It was not so much the functioning of organizations that interested Bogdanov as the principles by which an organization as ‘expedient integrity’ (‘
Bogdanov chose the category of ‘organization’ not by chance. The philosophical term ‘organization’ had acquired in Marxism a special meaning as ‘social organization’. For Russian Marxists, the idea of the construction of a new rational social organization based on science was central – and science played a primary role in Bogdanov’s conception of scientifically organized humankind. But he viewed the science of the old world as full of contradictions, too complicated and fragmented, and therefore not suitable for the purpose of managing the ‘grandiose task … the triple organization – of things, people and ideas’ – the objective of which was to achieve a new social organization (Bogdanov 1989: Book 1, 106).
Bogdanov considered Marx to be the ‘great forerunner of “organizational science”’. As White has put it, Bogdanov’s concept of socialism as the ‘gathering of man’ was close to Karl Marx’s original idea. Marx believed that socialism would create an integral human community which would end the fragmentation of the human psyche brought about by the division of labour and specialization. Bogdanov conceived of the future collective in a similar fashion – all of its members would be able to transfer from speciality to speciality. Science would be available to everyone and the human collective would be able to control it. But, for Marx, the future socialist society was to result from the inherent social nature of mankind, whereas for Bogdanov it would result from the active self-organization of society (White 1998: 37–38).
Bogdanov’s answer was In
The class struggle did not fit into Bogdanov’s organizational vision of a harmonious world. As he explained in
Bogdanov completely discarded the notion of class struggle – now the construction of a new social organization could be achieved only through the long-term cultural self-organization of the proletariat. This explains why he left active political life in 1911 and became Lenin’s most serious intellectual antagonist and rival. On the Proletkult, see Sochor 1988. Bogdanov was obsessed with this idea. In 1918, at the First All-Russian Conference of the Proletkult, in his speech ‘Science and the Proletariat’ (‘Nauka i proletariat’), Bogdanov spoke of the need to master tektology as a means towards socialism (the Proletkult catered not for everyone but primarily for the proletarian vanguard or proletarian élite).
When Bogdanov says ‘tektology’, he means proletarian science, and vice versa. Tektology was a proletarian science that had simplified all sciences from an organizational point of view and so was Bogdanov tried to achieve ‘physiological collectivism’ in practice, through exchange of blood transfusions, seeing this as a way of eliminating the ‘weak link’ of each organism and, most interestingly, of achieving an ‘outcome beyond the limits of individuality’ (Bogdanov 1989: Book 2, 86). At that time, many scientists believed in heredity via blood. See Krementsov 2011. In the 1920s, official Soviet Marxists distorted Bogdanov’s notion of organizational proletarian science and used it to divide science into ‘proletarian’ and ‘bourgeois’.
The Proletkult represented a fusion of Bogdanov’s utopian aspirations – the scientific utopia of a universal monistic discipline that was capable of mastering any combination of elements and the social utopia of the construction of ‘tektological socialism’.
How did Bogdanov’s view of the world via the prism of organization influence Russian intellectuals in the first decades of the twentieth century? Vesa Oittinen, in his preface to
The post-revolutionary era in Russia witnessed the advent of a project to create a ‘new Soviet man’. This ideological construct was no longer an individual but a ‘collective proletarian’. Many strands of this project were rooted in tektology, which during the early years of the Soviet regime was used by Russian Marxists as a creative intellectual tool. Political leaders and the ‘proletarian’élite, both before the revolution and after, in their search for a new model human being and a new society, closely studied See Udal’tsov 1922: 82–83. The programme of the Proletkult abandoned traditional authoritarian teaching and relationships and encouraged students to work as a collective. Particularly in the journals It is interesting that Bogdanov introduced the term ‘Soviet exhaustion’ (‘Sovetskaya iznoshennost’), which he considered to be a consequence of the ‘enthusiasm of socialistic construction’. See Bogdanov 1928: 22.
In 1924, in the journal For example, tektology was evaluated as reactionary concept because it ‘interfered with the revolutionary tactics of the proletariat’ (Veinstein ibid.); the tektological principle of the ‘weak link’ (‘printsip slabogo zvena’) provoked the ‘Marxist’ response that ‘our Party successfully leads the peasantry towards socialism, which is, “from Bogdanov’s point of view[,] an impossible case” since for Bogdanov it is the “weak link” that determines development’ (Karev 1926: 43); tektology ‘results in almost mystical concepts because of the mechanical transfer of models from one area to another’ (1926: 27). ‘Ob itogach i novych zadachakh na filosofskom fronte’ (1930: 109).
Slava Gerovitch, in discussing the evolution of the Soviet notion of self, has pointed out: ‘The “totalitarian model” of Soviet society traditionally considered “the cog in a wheel” as a central metaphor for the new Soviet type of human being. This metaphor embodied the notion of a passive individual subsumed under the collective …’ (Gerovitch 2007: 137).
Recently, however, scholars have begun to challenge the passive nature of the Soviet ‘totalitarian self’. They argue that the ‘new Soviet human being’ was not just a passive recipient of official ideology; this new person, in aspiring after an alluring ideal, actively attempted to construct a new identity (Gerovitch 2007).
Proletarian collectivism was an essential feature of this identity and all aspects of a new ‘proletarian’ life – and a necessary precondition of the construction of a new proletarian art. Bogdanov’s slogan of ‘organization’ and organizational laws and his attempt to construct a collective integral personality-organization possessed a creative conceptual power. As Susiluoto has pointed out, in Russia, systems thinking arose as a comprehensive challenge without proof, through philosophy and theoretical concepts, and possessed a ‘utopian creative power to influence and change the entire world, now and at once’ (Susiluoto 2009: 86).
Tektology as a science of the organization of rational combinations was a powerful and creative instrument, and its ideas were promoted and available to Soviet intellectuals, artists and the mass membership of the Proletkult. Many links were forged between groups of the Proletkult and the Constructivists after the founding of Constructivism in March 1921. For example, Boris Arvatov taught at the Central Proletkult in Moscow.
The Art Deco style of the early twentieth century was a celebration of the rise of commerce and machine art: the human being was included in the universe of the machine and viewed as a technical system. During the early Soviet period, life was synonymous with art, and art became life. New ‘proletarian’ art and ‘proletarian’ art objects were to be imbued with the idea of a purpose that was understandable for the proletariat and clearly connected with everyday life and work experience. Aleksandr Rodchenko, in writing about the new essence of proletarian items of daily life, referred to ‘the capitalistic world’s “opium of things”’.
The Constructivists were dedicated to creating art objects that would organize the new Soviet man in a collective direction towards socialism. They were seeking to create the projects and objects of proletarian Constructivist art as a fusion of human being, technique, science and everyday life, based on the principle of concordance of the parts, forms and materials. Alekseiy Gan designated the three principal elements of Constructivism as ‘construction’, ‘faktura’ and the ‘tectonic’.
Tektology provided Constructivists with a scientific rationale, and with terminology and models for their experiments in a new ‘production art’. Bogdanov viewed expediency as the universal principle of every form of organization, and considered that it derived from the inherent activity of all complexes: ‘Any practical or theoretical task comes up against a tektological question: how to organize most expediently a collection of elements, whether real or ideal’ (Bogdanov 1989: Book 1, 142).
For the Constructivists, the conception of ‘organization’ as an expedient combination of active elements was a powerful idea and stimulus. Tektological models demonstrated the practical ways for artists to construct an expedient complex of ‘production art’ in order to fulfil the political command which required proletarian artists to deliver practical and functional proletarian art objects.
In 1922, Aleksei Gan published the ground-breaking work The term ‘tectonic’ (‘tektonika’) was also used by Constructivists Varvara Stepanova and Alexandr Rodchenko. Stepanova, in her 1921 lecture on Constructivism, discussed ‘tectonic construction’ and the role of the artist as an organizer.
Bogdanov spoke of the ‘worker-organizer’, the Constructivists of the ‘artist-organizer’ – both models implied collective work. Bogdanov conceived of tektology as the ultimate tool that would contribute to the attainment of socialism. The Constructivists saw collective artistic labour as a path towards socialism. Bogdanov did not make a distinction between creation and labour – and the Constructivists focused on practical objects inspired by labour, technique and everyday life.
The Constructivist artist was an ‘artist-organizer’, an ‘artist-worker’ – a member of the proletarian collective, organizing and creating an object of organized art in collective production. For example, Rodchenko asked his students to create the objects which would organize the collective.
Tektological ‘ See Vertov, 1922. Variant Manifesta ‘My’:
In 1923, Dziga Vertov’s
I have argued that there is a remarkable link connecting the understanding of the Russian Darwinists of ‘natural
The conceptions of a new class of organizers of socialism as a ‘proletarian’ collectivity – Bogdanov’s tektology as organizer and Constructivist production art as organizer – were not acceptable to the Soviet political leadership since they did not integrate the leadership’s conception of Marxism into their organizational constructions and models. The fraught relationship between these two great Utopian projects of the twentieth century has yet to be fully investigated.
I met the ideas of Aleksandr Bogdanov only recently, while writing a book on foundational issues raised by modern science. Quantum physics challenges naive forms of reductionism and materialism, such as those defended by Lenin in
Since this initial encounter, the ideas of Aleksandr Bogdanov have had a steadily increasing influence on my thinking and views. I find more and more that organization as a central notion for understanding natural processes, from atomic physics to chemistry, from biology to society, is a powerful intellectual tool that allows us to address open questions that range from ontology (I think that contemporary structural realism, fashionable in analytical philosophy, owes an unrecognized intellectual debt to Bogdanov’s ideas, for instance) to concrete scientific questions.
Simona Poustilnik’s text on the relations between Bogdanov’s idea and Darwinism, on the one hand, and between it and the Constructivists, on the other, has added still further layers to my fascination with the extraordinarily rich legacy of Bogdanov’s thought. In the context of evolution theory, in particular, the never-ending scientific debate on group selection and on the exact relation between competition and collaboration is still vital, and it seems to me that it would benefit from a re-reading of the ideas of the early twentieth century. As a scientist, I find Bogdanov’s thinking deep and solid. As a human being, I find his political views subtly seductive.