We have lost not only a most
humane human being, but the world's greatest optimist. I don't
know which is the greater loss, but perhaps there was an
intimate connection of humane optimism and/or optimistic
humanism; and, if so, the world's loss is multiplied and all the
greater. Not only shall we miss him; we still NEED him!
My relation with Ernest was
professional, political, and above all personal. It began with
his professional/political published praise of my early work on
Latin America and my request to him for help with my work on
dependence, to which he acceeded logistically by receiving me in
the Hague, taking me back to Brussles in his car, and lodging me
at his home in or about 1969. Ernest later changed his mind
about, and became ever more critical of, dependence
"theory" and my work; but our personal relations
continued to flourish.
Another professional tie was
our interest in Kondratieffs in general and the Kondratieff B
phase world economic crisis of accumulation since 1967, about
which we both wrotre so much. [A recent manifestation was the
1989 Brussels Kondratieff conference he organized whose papers
then appeared in a book edited by him, Kleinknecht and
Wallerstein. Another was our concern with whether Kondratieff
lower turning points are exogenous, as he maintained, or
possibly endogenous as I suggest, as eg. in our debate which
began between him and David Gordon in Boston in 1979 as
summarized and continued by the three of us in REVIEW 1994.
Also in 1979, we co-taught a
summer school course on the world economic crisis together at
Boston University. As I have recounted many times, Ernest and I
agreed on everything with each other [and very little with
almost everybody else], and we disagreed in class and in private
on only two issues: Ernest said the revolution is arond the
corner in several countries, and I said that it is not. I
claimed that the same capitalist economic law of value also
operates in the "socialist" economies, including the
Soviet Union, which really exist as part and parcel of the
[capitalist] world economy; and Ernest Mandel denied the same.
On several occasions both before -- and all the more so after --
1989-91, I found it increasingly difficult to avoid saying and
writing to Ernest that "I told you so."
I also recall standing on a
street corner with him in Brussles waiting for his first wife
Gisela to get some film she had left for developing at a photo
shop. Ernest asked me "don't you agree that we Trotskyists
do the best analysis of what is going on in the world?" and
I answered, yes I do. Well, "then you have to also agree
that we have the best political practice," Ernest
continued. NO, I answered, I do NOT agree; and I do not have to,
because what you say is a complete non-sequitur, which was born,
perhaps, more from his own great optimism and humanity than from
his analysis of the evidence, which has hardly supported his
aspiration. Even with all his humanism, I never understood how
Ernest Mandel maintained his inveterate optimism in the face of
all the evidence; and yet, the more the evidence comes in, the
more do we need his optimism and humanism -- as well as his
analysis -- to get out of it. So we shall miss him -- and
continue to need him.
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