Antonio Labriola (July 2, 1843 - February 12, 1904) was an Italian
Marxist theoretician. Although an academic philosopher and never an active member of any political party, his thought exerted influence on many
political theorists in Italy during the early 20th century, including the founder of the
Italian Liberal Party Benedetto
Croce and one of the leaders of the Italian Communist Party
Antonio Gramsci.
Biography
Labriola was born in Cassino (then in the Papal
States), the son a schoolteacher. In 1861, he entered the University of Naples. Upon graduating, he remained in Naples and became a schoolteacher. During this period, he pursued an interest in philosophy, history and ethnography. The early 1870s saw Labriola take up
journalism and his writings from this time express liberal and anticlerical views.
In 1874, Labriola was appointed as a professor in
Rome, where he was to spend the rest of his life teaching, writing and debating. Although he had
been critical of liberalism since 1873, his move towards Marxism was gradual, and he did not
explicitly express a socialist viewpoint until 1889.
Thought
Heavily influenced by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and
Johann Friedrich Herbart, Labriola's approach to Marxist theory was more
open-ended than the orthodoxy of theorists such as Karl Kautsky. He saw Marxism not as a
final, self-sufficient schematisation of history, but rather as a collection of pointers to the understanding of human
affairs.
It was necessary that these pointers be somewhat imprecise if Marxism was to take into account the complicated social
processes and variety of forces at work in history. Marxism was to be understood as a "critical theory", in the sense that it sees no truths as everlasting, and was ready to drop its own
ideas if experience should so dictate. His description of Marxism as a "philosophy of praxis" would appear again in Gramsci's Prison
Notebooks.
External links
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)