Page 83 - CONSCIENCISM By Kwame Nkrumah_Neat
P. 83

7 6   CONSCIENCISM        SOCIETY  AND  IDEOLOGY                77
 can be  said  to be adequate.  Here we discern one of capitalism's   materialism suggests a socialist philosophy I have explained in my
 deadly sins.  Under this  social-political system,  man's  materialist   sccond chapter.
 approach to nature loses its bearings. It sheds its humanist stimulus   In  sum,  the  restitution  of Africa's  humanist  and  egalitarian
 under the impulse ofthe profit motivc. Ifhappincss is defmed in the   principles  of society  requires  socialism.  It  is  materialism  that
 context ofsociety, thcn happiness becomes that fecling which an   ensures the only effective transformation ofnature, and socialism
 individual derives,  from a given economic, political and cultural   that derives the highest development from this transformation.
 context, that he is in a position to make good his aspirations. Since
 capitalist  development  is  unfortmlately  a  process  in  which  a
 rapacious oligarchy is pitted against an exploited mass. happiness,
 according to this definition, is denied to many. The achievements
 ofthe capitalist oligarchy defme new limits ofwhat is attainable by
 the individual, and thereby push outward the frontiers oflegitimate
 aspirations.  But  capitalism  is  a  system  in  which  these  limiting
 aspirations are by defmition denied to the people, and only reserved
 for a few.
 The evil of capitalism consists in its  alienation  of the  fruit  of
 labour from those who with the toil oftheir body and the sweat of
 their brow produce this fruit. This aspect of capitalism makes it
 irreconcilable  with  those  basic  principles  which  animate  the
 traditional  African  society.  Capitalism  is  unjust;  in  our  newly
 independent cotmtries it is not only too complicated to be work­
 able, it is also alien.
 Under socialism, however, the study and mastery ofnature has a
 humanist  impulse,  and  is  directed  not  towards  a  profiteering
 accomplishment, but the affording of ever-increasing satisfaction
 for the material and spiritual needs ofthe greatest number. Ideas of
 transformation and  development,  in  so  far  as  they relate  to  the
 purposes ofsociety as a whole and not to an oligarch purpose, are
 properly speaking appropriate to socialism.
 On the philosophical level,  too, it is materialism, not idealism,
 that in one form or another will give the flrmest conceptual basis to
 the  restitution  of Africa's  egalitarian  and  humanist  principles.
 Idealism breeds an oligarchy, and its social implication, as drawn
 out in my second chapter, is  obnoxious to Mrican society.  It is
 materialism, with its monistic and naturalistic account of nature,
 which  will  balk  arbitrariness,  inequality  and  injustice.  How·
   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88