“The premises from which we begin are not arbitrary ones, not dogmas, but real premises from which abstraction can only be made in the imagination. They are the real individuals, their activity, and the material conditions of their life, both those which they find already existing and those produced by their activity.”
- Karl Marx, The German Ideology (1845-46)
Marx’s dialectic is misinterpreted, twisted, and vulgarized to this day, 180 years after he first expounded on his method. Marx’s dialectical method has been persistently misunderstood, often through its assimilation to either economic determinism or Hegelian idealism. The passage quoted above establishes the epistemological starting point of the Marxist dialectical method and plainly states its break from the metaphysical method explicated by earlier social science.
From the beginning Marx has made it very clear that he firmly breaks from the interpretivists of the German Philosophical Tradition. Marx says the premises that form the basis of his critique are “the real individuals, their activity, and the material conditions of their life,” yet, critics will still say that Marx was bogged by an incorrect focus on moral abstractions and empty phrase-mongering about “human nature”.
It is important to note that Marx explicitly emphasizes that abstraction is secondary, i.e., it is derived from reality, not imposed upon it. This is a direct inversion of Hegel’s idealism, and it is crucial to understanding dialectical materialism because Marx is often misread and misinterpreted as a reduction of dialectics to Hegel’s thesis-antithesis-synthesis. To quote Engels on this topic: “The mistake lies in the fact that these laws are foisted on nature and history as laws of thought, and not deduced from them.”
Taking material reality as the premises of his critique, Marx’s investigation into social formations led him to conclude that modern (capitalist/bourgeois) society is based on relations of production that arose from earlier societies.
“The totality of these relations of production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation, on which arises a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond definite forms of social consciousness.”
- Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (1859), Preface
Here we can see that Marx is not offering a rigid mechanical formula of society based on base/superstructure; he is insisting that social phenomena are relational and must be understood as such, are internal products of dialecticism, and develop historically. Consciousness, politics, economics, and legal systems cannot be explained satisfactorily as autonomous domains and have to be understood as components of a whole.
The dialectical method of Marx is a systematic analysis and critique that rejects isolated explanations. Marx’s method thus avoids both economism and the reductionism characteristic of much pre-Marxian social science.
“Dialectics, so-called objective dialectics, prevails throughout nature, and so-called subjective dialectics, dialectical thinking, is merely the reflection of the motion through contradictions which asserts itself in nature.”
- Friedrich Engels, Anti-Dühring (1877)
Dialectics is not about inventing anything, rather it is about understanding real movement, how change is not accidental, but the natural outcome of internal contradictions. Dialectics, says Engels, can be seen in the natural world. For example, through the process of bacterial resistance to antibiotics. This example is not meant to reduce social development to biological processes, but to illustrate the general dialectical principle of contradiction-driven transformation.
A bacterial population is not a static or homogeneous whole, but contains internal differences that become decisive when material conditions change. The introduction of antibiotics creates a contradiction within the population between susceptible and resistant bacteria. As exposure continues, small quantitative differences in survival and reproduction accumulate until the population undergoes a qualitative transformation: resistance becomes the dominant form and the antibiotic loses its effectiveness. This outcome is not planned or directed, but emerges necessarily from the struggle between opposing tendencies within the system, demonstrating how material contradictions drive development through irreversible qualitative change.
“My dialectic method is not only different from the Hegelian, but is its direct opposite. To Hegel, the life-process of the human brain… is the creator of the real world. With me, on the contrary, the ideal is nothing else than the material world reflected by the human mind.”
- Karl Marx, Capital, Vol. I (1867), Afterword to the Second German Edition
There cannot be a more definitive line drawn between Marx’s and Hegel’s dialectical methods than for Marx to elucidate the inversion of idealist metaphysics into materialist critique. Few passages more clearly articulate the distinction between Marx’s materialist dialectic and Hegel’s idealism than this one.
Marx was always grounded in reality, in real social relations. He was not interested in condemning bourgeois society from a standpoint of morality, but from one of analysis of real movement through history. Marx did not begin with his critique of capitalism, but arrived at it through the application of his dialectical method to existing relations of production as the basis for all others, which just so happened to be capitalist and riddled with internal contradictions.
If Marx’s dialectical method begins from real material premises and proceeds through the analysis of social totality, its defining feature is its capacity to grasp historical movement. Marxism does not treat society as a static arrangement of institutions or norms, but as a developing process structured by internal contradictions. Social formations change not through moral awakening or individual intent, but through tensions that arise necessarily from their material organization.
For Marx, a mode of production generates social relations that initially facilitate its development but eventually come into conflict with the further expansion of productive forces. These contradictions are not imposed from outside the system; they emerge from its normal operation. Dialectical analysis therefore seeks the inner antagonisms of a social order rather than its surface appearances. What appears stable or natural is revealed, through dialectical inquiry, as historically contingent and internally unstable.
This method stands in contrast to empiricist and moralistic explanations of social change. Empiricism fragments social reality into discrete facts without grasping their interrelation, while moralism explains historical development through ethical failure or subjective intent. Both approaches obscure the material sources of social transformation. Dialectical materialism, by contrast, treats contradiction as the motor of development rather than an anomaly to be explained away.
Marx’s analysis of capitalism exemplifies this method. Capitalism is defined not merely by markets or private property, but by a specific social relation between capital and labor. This relation contains a fundamental contradiction: capital depends upon labor as the source of value while simultaneously seeking to reduce labor to a cost. The drive to increase productivity intensifies this contradiction, as the expansion of productive forces undermines the conditions of value production itself. These tensions are not external to capitalism; they arise from its internal logic.
Historical development, in this framework, does not proceed linearly or smoothly. Quantitative changes accumulate unevenly until they produce qualitative transformations in social relations. Crises, ruptures, and reorganizations are therefore not aberrations, but expressions of underlying contradictions reaching their limits. Each social formation must be understood as historically specific, governed by its own internal dynamics and bounded by determinate conditions of existence.
Crucially, Marxist contradiction is not a logical abstraction but a material and social reality. It refers to real antagonisms embedded in relations of production and class structure. Consciousness, ideology, and politics emerge from these contradictions and may act back upon them, but they do not constitute their origin. Dialectical materialism thus grounds historical change in objective social relations while accounting for the mediated role of human activity within them.
Marx’s dialectical method is neither an abstract philosophy nor a moral doctrine. It is a scientific approach that begins from material premises, apprehends society as a structured totality, and explains historical development through internal contradiction. By rejecting both idealist metaphysics and mechanical materialism, Marx establishes a method capable of grasping social reality as a dynamic and historically specific process.
This method grounds Marx’s critique of capitalism. Capitalism is not condemned from an external ethical standpoint, but analyzed immanently according to its own laws of motion. The antagonism between capital and labor, the compulsion to expand productivity at the expense of value production, and the recurrence of crisis are not accidental distortions but necessary expressions of capitalist social relations. Dialectical critique thus reveals capitalism as historically limited and internally unstable, rather than morally deficient.
Historical necessity, in this framework, does not imply inevitability. It names the constraints imposed by material conditions on social development and the tendencies that arise from them. Capitalism generates contradictions that undermine its own reproduction, but their resolution depends on concrete struggle rather than automatic progression. Necessity operates through contradiction, and contradiction unfolds through human activity within determinate social relations.
Taken together, Marx’s dialectical method unifies analysis, critique, and historical development without collapsing into determinism or voluntarism. It demonstrates that social formations are neither eternal nor accidental, but historically produced and internally conditioned. In doing so, dialectical materialism provides not a prophecy of the future, but a rigorous framework for understanding the real movement of history and the limits of existing social orders.
Very good explanation of Marx’s dialectical method and the history of it. In essence, Marx’s dialectical and historical materialism was simply the first systematic application of the scientific method to the study of economy, society and history (which are all intertwined and cannot be separated from one another).
I am fairly certain you will not be able to find anywhere that Hegel actually articulates thesis antithesis synthesis as his formulation of dialectics. It’s a misattribution made the world over, but it needs to be corrected if we are to understand the history of dialectics accurately
I’m just going to shamelessly plug my explanation of dialectics :) https://dialecticaldispatches.substack.com/p/the-toolset-of-reality



