Recent Trends in Dialectical Materialism: Ecological, Post-Digital, and Decolonial Horizons in Contemporary Western Philosophy
Hoa Thi Kim Do
DOI: 10.18355/XL.2025.18.03.09
Abstract
Over the last decade, Western philosophy has witnessed a quiet—but decisive—renaissance of dialectical materialism. This article reconstructs that revival across four interlocking fronts. First, eco-dialectical naturalists have re-centered Marx’s metabolic-rift problematic, exemplified by John Bellamy Foster and Brett Clark’s recent work on Richard Levins’s “human-nature metabolism”. Second, theorists of digital capitalism such as Søren Mau diagnose the “mute compulsion” of algorithmic markets, extending dialectical categories to intangible labor and data abstraction. Third, feminist and decolonial scholars are re-tooling contradiction analysis to track gendered and colonial formations, advancing a self-described “feminist dialectical materialism” that bridges Marxist and intersectional methods. Fourth, philosophers of science have reopened the question of a dialectics of nature. We follow here Carlos Garrido’s ontological defense of motion and the ensuing synthesis of historical and biological evolution. Our paper attempts to combine these into a synthesis. We propose a “Dialectical Materialism 2.0” that retains the materialist core while incorporating several key elements, namely complexity theory, posthumanist insights, and contemporary AI-ethics concerns. To achieve this, we combine genealogical reconstruction with conceptual mapping. Our goal is to show how the unity-and-struggle-of-opposites now plays out in climate systems, platform economies, and liberation movements. Also, our aim is to reflect on this Western development through the lens of South-East Asian (Vietnamese) philosophical perspective, which we will do at the end of our study. The conclusion points out some obvious research gaps the resolution of which could inform both critical theory and applied scientific practice.
Key words: Dialectical Materialism, Metabolic Rift, Digital Capital, Social Reproduction, Dialectics of Nature, Eco-Marxism, Feminist Dialectics
Pages: 127-143
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