Skip to main content

dialectical materialism

The Marxian interpretation of reality that views matter as the sole subject of change and all change as the product of a constant conflict between opposites arising from the internal contradictions inherent in all events, ideas, and movements.
The dialectic materialism between Bob and Alice, as manifested in their respective adherence to quintessential gender roles, became indisputably resolved as Bob skeeted all up on her face.
dialectical materialism mug front
Get the dialectical materialism mug.
See more merch

Historical-Dialectical Materialism

The classical Marxist framework that analyzes society, history, and nature through the lens of material conditions, class struggle, and dialectical change—where contradictions drive development and quantitative changes lead to qualitative leaps. It posits that the economic base (modes of production) shapes the superstructure (law, culture, politics), and that history progresses through stages (tribal, ancient, feudal, capitalist, socialist) driven by internal contradictions. Unlike mechanical materialism, it emphasizes the active, reciprocal relationship between humans and their material world, and the role of praxis: changing conditions changes consciousness, and vice versa. In Urban Dictionary terms, it’s the idea that history isn’t just a list of events or great men; it’s the messy, conflict‑driven story of how people produce food, tools, and wealth—and how those processes create new problems that demand new solutions.
Historical-Dialectical Materialism Example: “He explained the Industrial Revolution not as a series of inventions but through historical‑dialectical materialism: new machines (productive forces) clashed with old feudal relations, creating class conflict that eventually reshaped everything from laws to family structures.”

Historical-dialectical Materialism

masculine noun Philosophy and social-scientific method developed by Marx and Engels. Historical materialism: material conditions of production (economy) are the real basis of society, and ideas, laws, politics are superstructure. Dialectical: internal contradictions of the mode of production generate transformations (thesis → antithesis → synthesis). Applied to analysis of classes, revolutions, and social evolution. It is not a conspiracy theory but an explanatory framework.
Example: "For historical-dialectical materialism, the fall of the Berlin Wall was not just ideological – it resulted from internal economic contradictions (low productivity, inefficient planning) that made the system materially unsustainable."

Historical-Dialectical Materialism

The classical Marxist framework that merges Hegelian dialectics with a materialist ontology. It posits that history progresses through the clash of material contradictions—primarily class struggles rooted in the relations of production. Society evolves via thesis (existing mode of production), antithesis (opposing class forces), and synthesis (new social formation). Unlike mechanical materialism, it emphasizes that human consciousness and agency are both products of and active forces within material conditions. It rejects both idealism (ideas driving history independently) and economic determinism (crude reductionism). In practice, it analyzes how technological, economic, and social forces interact dialectically to produce revolutionary change. It remains a living method for critiquing capitalism, imperialism, and state bureaucracy.
Example: “Using historical-dialectical materialism, she explained that the gig economy wasn’t just a technological shift—it was a contradiction between capital’s need for flexibility and labor’s need for stability, generating new forms of class struggle.”

Historical-Dialectical Materialism

The classical Marxist framework that merges Hegelian dialectics with a materialist ontology. It posits that history progresses through the clash of material contradictions—primarily class struggles rooted in the relations of production. Society evolves via thesis (existing mode of production), antithesis (opposing class forces), and synthesis (new social formation). Unlike mechanical materialism, it emphasizes that human consciousness and agency are both products of and active forces within material conditions. It rejects both idealism (ideas driving history independently) and economic determinism (crude reductionism). In practice, it analyzes how technological, economic, and social forces interact dialectically to produce revolutionary change. It remains a living method for critiquing capitalism, imperialism, and state bureaucracy. It is not a dogmatic formula but a flexible analytical tool that insists on contradiction, totality, and historical specificity. Its critics accuse it of economic reductionism, but its defenders argue that proper application never reduces everything to economics; it treats the economic as “ultimately determining” only in a complex, mediated sense.
Example: “Using historical-dialectical materialism, she explained that the gig economy wasn’t just a technological shift—it was a contradiction between capital’s need for flexibility and labor’s need for stability, generating new forms of class struggle and potential revolutionary subjects.”

Theory of Historical-Dialectical Materialism

A foundational Marxist framework that understands society and history through the interaction of material conditions (economics, technology, class relations) and dialectical change (the clash of opposites leading to transformation). It argues that history progresses through modes of production—tribal, ancient, feudal, capitalist, socialist—driven by internal contradictions (e.g., between workers and owners). Change occurs not through ideas alone but through material struggles that eventually reach a tipping point, revolutionizing the entire social order. The theory rejects both idealism (ideas drive history) and mechanical determinism, emphasizing that humans make history but under circumstances inherited from the past.
Theory of Historical-Dialectical Materialism Example: “The theory of historical‑dialectical materialism explained the industrial revolution not as a sudden burst of invention, but as the culmination of centuries of tension between feudal lords and emerging merchant classes, resolved by a new mode of production.”
An acronym for an "aznbbygirl" meaning an asian female gangster. ABG's like to hang with gangsters and wear thin (slutty) clothing. They like to jump other girls who talk shit and make out with their boyfriends 24/7 (maybe even have sex.) Usually own side kicks who also like to text frequently. ABG'S also normally have a "ride or die" homie, someone who is always down for them, or die trying. ABG's are also known for dying their hair alot. From blonde to black. They have many piercings: multiple on the ears, and stomach/lip. They probably have teased hair, bangs, and have had extensions at one point or another. Could also have painted nails and tatoos. ABG's are super hot, but you would probably get jumped if you tried to hit on them. They also loiter and hang out past curfew.
"Oh shit look at those hotties at that boba house.."
"Watch out, see those gangsters next to them? Their obviously ABG's."
"Damn..still hot."
ABG by Lolzercoptorzallday February 7, 2009
Word of the Day on June 14, 2026