György Márkus (13 April 1934 – 5 October 2016) was a Hungarian
philosopher
Philosophy ('love of wisdom' in Ancient Greek) is a systematic study of general and fundamental questions concerning topics like existence, reason, knowledge, Value (ethics and social sciences), value, mind, and language. It is a rational an ...
, belonging to the small circle of critical theorists closely associated with
György Lukács
György Lukács (born Bernát György Löwinger; ; ; 13 April 1885 – 4 June 1971) was a Hungarian Marxist philosopher, literary historian, literary critic, and Aesthetics, aesthetician. He was one of the founders of Western Marxism, an inter ...
and usually referred to as the
Budapest School.
Biography
Márkus was born in Budapest in 1934 and survived the Holocaust as a young boy. After the war and the final victory of the Communist government he was sent to complete his philosophical training at
Lomonosov University in
Moscow
Moscow is the Capital city, capital and List of cities and towns in Russia by population, largest city of Russia, standing on the Moskva (river), Moskva River in Central Russia. It has a population estimated at over 13 million residents with ...
from 1953 until 1957. There he met his future wife
Maria Márkus who was also studying philosophy. They had their first of two sons György (Gyuri) in 1956 and Andras two years later in Budapest, where they returned in 1957 shortly after the
Hungarian Revolution and where he taught until 1965.
From 1960 he joined a
small group of like-minded philosophers established around the internationally renowned Marxist philosopher
György Lukács
György Lukács (born Bernát György Löwinger; ; ; 13 April 1885 – 4 June 1971) was a Hungarian Marxist philosopher, literary historian, literary critic, and Aesthetics, aesthetician. He was one of the founders of Western Marxism, an inter ...
who in his last period founded a programme based on the ‘Renaissance of Marx’. This project was to resurrect the original emancipatory meaning of Marx's works and demonstrate their contemporary relevance. Other notable members of this group included
Ágnes Heller, Ferenc Fehér,
István Mészáros,
Mihály Vajda, György's wife
Maria Márkus and later his students
György Bence and
János Kis
János Kis (born 17 September 1943) is a Hungarian philosopher and political scientist, who served as the inaugural leader of the liberal Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ) from 1990 to 1991. He is considered to be the first Leader Hungarian pa ...
. As a specialist in analytical English and American philosophy, Márkus wrote his dissertation on Wittgenstein's
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
The ''Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus'' (widely abbreviated and Citation, cited as TLP) is the only book-length philosophical work by the Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein that was published during his lifetime. The project had a broad goal ...
, which he had previously translated into Hungarian for the first time, and spent 1965–1966 at the
University of Pittsburgh
The University of Pittsburgh (Pitt) is a Commonwealth System of Higher Education, state-related research university in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. The university is composed of seventeen undergraduate and graduate schools and colle ...
in the United States supervised by
Wilfrid Sellars
Wilfrid Stalker Sellars (; May 20, 1912 – July 2, 1989) was an American philosopher and prominent developer of critical realism who "revolutionized both the content and the method of philosophy in the United States". His work has had a profou ...
and
Willard V. O. Quine.
Márkus received the Academy Prize of the Philosophy and Humanities Section of the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
The Hungarian Academy of Sciences ( , MTA) is Hungary’s foremost and most prestigious learned society. Its headquarters are located along the banks of the Danube in Budapest, between Széchenyi rakpart and Akadémia utca. The Academy's primar ...
in 1966.
By this time Márkus could speak Russian, English, German, Polish, French and Latin aside from his native Hungarian.
Lukács’ death in 1971 deprived the members of the 'Budapest School' of the degree of protection he had been able to offer against an increasingly hostile regime, and in 1973 the Communist Party officially condemned their work and some of the members of the group were dismissed from their academic positions. In solidarity, Markus resigned from his post. Márkus was dismissed from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and banned from teaching and his two sons suffered discrimination with regard to their schooling.
In 1977, György and Maria Márkus along with Heller and Feher decided to leave Hungary and by 1978 all four had settled in
Australia
Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country comprising mainland Australia, the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania and list of islands of Australia, numerous smaller isl ...
, where Márkus had been offered an appointment in the Department of General Philosophy at the
University of Sydney
The University of Sydney (USYD) is a public university, public research university in Sydney, Australia. Founded in 1850, it is the oldest university in both Australia and Oceania. One of Australia's six sandstone universities, it was one of the ...
. Over the next two decades he taught across a range of areas including History of Philosophy, Marxism and Critical Theory, and Aesthetics. He was awarded a personal chair in 1996 and retired in 1998.
Following political liberalisation in Hungary, Markus was allowed to return, but he did so only occasionally and remained resident in Sydney. He rejoined the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
The Hungarian Academy of Sciences ( , MTA) is Hungary’s foremost and most prestigious learned society. Its headquarters are located along the banks of the Danube in Budapest, between Széchenyi rakpart and Akadémia utca. The Academy's primar ...
as an external member in 1990, and was elected to the
Australian Academy of the Humanities
The Australian Academy of the Humanities was established by Royal Charter in 1969 to advance scholarship and public interest in the humanities in Australia. It operates as an independent not-for-profit organisation partly funded by the Australi ...
in 1999. He was also on the editorial board of the academic journal ''
Thesis Eleven: Critical Theory and Historical Sociology''.
Works and philosophy
Markus's publishing record is fragmented in comparison to other leading members of the Budapest School like Heller. Several of his earlier works in Hungarian have not been translated into English. He often published in smaller journals and usually only when asked by editors.
The first publication that brought international attention to Markus was his ''Marxism and Anthropology'' (1978), originally published in Hungarian in 1965 and translated later into Spanish, Japanese, Italian, English and German. ''Dictatorship over Needs: An Analysis of Soviet Societies'' (1983), written together with Fehér and Heller, gave expression to the Budapest School's earlier critique of life in the Soviet Union and its Eastern European satellites. Another influential book from this period was published in its English version as ''Language and Production: A Critique of the Paradigms'' (1986). His long-standing ambition was to prepare a work on the theory of cultural autonomy in modernity. Although he was unable to complete this project, a number of his later essays on this theme were collected by John Grumley and presented in ''Culture, Science and Society: Constitution of Cultural Modernity'' (2013). A further selection of essays comprising his
Nachlass
''Nachlass'' (, older spelling ''Nachlaß'') is a German language, German word, used in academia to describe the collection of manuscripts, notes, correspondence, and so on left behind when a scholar dies. The word is a compound word, compound in ...
is forthcoming, edited and with an introduction by Harriet Johnson.
Although there is a clear internal consistency in Markus's output, his interests can be organised chronologically according to three main phases.
His first period was concerned with fleshing out a ‘humanist’ Marxism, and saw Markus exploring the idea of a normative philosophical anthropology that could guide this theoretical project - an anthropology that was still largely based on a theory of evolving needs articulated through a more or less traditional Marxist view of historical development.
The second period is marked by a more critical standpoint on Marx and a special focus on the methodological limitations of the orthodox Marxian paradigm of labour. Markus also begins to look to the early Marx (rather than a later teleological theory of history) for the normative underpinnings of his philosophical anthropology. Markus also begins in this period to engage more with non-Marxist theorists like
Hans-Georg Gadamer
Hans-Georg Gadamer (; ; 11 February 1900 – 13 March 2002) was a German philosopher of the continental tradition, best known for his 1960 on hermeneutics, '' Truth and Method'' (''Wahrheit und Methode'').
Life
Family and early life
Gad ...
,
Leo Strauss
Leo Strauss (September 20, 1899 – October 18, 1973) was an American scholar of political philosophy. He spent much of his career as a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, where he taught several generations of students an ...
as well as renewing his interest in Wittgenstein. Here the extensive scope of Márkus’ grasp of developments in the wider philosophical world allowed him to engage critically with the variety of ways in which ‘language paradigm’ had gained ascendancy in twentieth-century humanistic studies. Márkus argued against this linguistic model, advocating a view of culture as a type of productive process better understood along (expanded) Marxist lines.
The third and final period is even more critical of the narrow Marxist technicist paradigm of production. Via a critique of Habermas’ communicative turn, he argues that the legacy of this paradigm had prevented the critical theoretical tradition from giving a sufficiently rich account of the subject's concrete interactions with nature as also a thoroughly social process. Habermas had also recognised the normative deficit of this paradigm but largely abandoned it altogether, opting instead - in a Kantian twist - for an idealised, transcendental perspective extracted from the conditions of linguistic interaction. For Markus this change of perspective leaves the tradition with, on the one hand, a frozen and idealised form of rationality, and on the other hand, a reductive and purely instrumental idea of historical development. Markus remained committed, for the remainder of his working life, to the idea that a non-reductive paradigm of production could ground a theory of culture, a ‘unified’ theory of social normativity and emancipatory political action.
Selected publications
* Marxizmus és „antropológia”. Az emberi lényeg fogalma Marx filozófiájában, 1966 (Marxism and Anthropology, 1978)
*Irányzatok a mai polgári filozófiában, 1972 together with Zádor Tordai
* Hogyan lehetséges kritikai gazdaságtan?, 1973 together with György Bence and János Kis
* Diktatúra a szükségletek felett, with Ferenc Feher and Agnes Heller, 1983 (Dictatorship Over Needs, 1983)
* Why is there no hermeneutics of natural sciences? Some preliminary theses. Science in Context 1987;1:5-51
pdf)
* Kultúra és modernitás. Hermeneutikai kísérletek, 1992
* Metafizika – mi végre?, 1998
*“The Soul and Life: The Young Lukács and the Problem of Culture”
''Telos''32
* Language et production, 1982 (Language and production: A critique of the paradigms, 1986)
* "A Society of Culture: The constitution of modernity" in Rethinking Imagination, 1994
* Culture, Science, Society: The Constitution of Cultural Modernity, 2013. Edited by John Grumley
*Is a Critical Economics Possible? with Janos Kis and Gyorgy Bence, 2021. Edited by John Grumley
*Critical Theory, Radical Historicism, Science: The Contemporary György Markus, 2021. Edited and Introduced by John Grumley and Harriet Johnson
Prizes
* Academy Prize of the Philosophy and Humanities Section of the MTA (Hungarian Academy of Sciences), 1966
* Lukács György-Prize 2005
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Markus, György
1934 births
2016 deaths
Marxist theorists
20th-century Hungarian philosophers
Hungarian Jews
Hungarian Holocaust survivors
Jewish philosophers
Members of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Australian educators
Hungarian expatriates in Australia
Writers from Budapest
21st-century Hungarian philosophers