April 14, 2026, 17:15
Sala Mattos Romão (Department of Philosophy, Room C201.J)
School of Arts and Humanities — University of Lisbon
How to Grasp a Totality? On Marx’s Method in Grundrisse
Tamara
Caraus (Praxis-CFUL)
Abstract
This
presentation advances the premise that understanding today’s interconnected, capital-shaped global reality requires returning to Marx’s concept of totality in the
Grundrisse. It proceeds by outlining the key features of totality in the
Grundrisse: an ‘organic whole’ constituted through contradictory moments, historically formed, open, and continuously transforming,
with a more focused examination on how totality emerges alongside a new form of social connection that simultaneously produce alienation - ‘an alien
power’ and thing-like social relations. The central question addressed is how the features of capital’s totality are depicted and what method enables
their discovery and apprehension. Thus, the presentation argues that totality in the
Grundrisse is both an explanatory meta-category and a target of critique. As a meta-category, it encompasses all other categories of political economy not as a sum but by viewing them as interlinked moments of a whole. Totality is simultaneously a
target of critique, since it is not a harmonious entity but is constituted through discontinuities and alienation. The method of critique proceeds immanently, by tracking ‘inner connections’ from one disconnection to another, from one thing-like social relation
to the next, to reveal underlying dependencies and co-constitutions. This de-alienating critique, tentatively elaborated in the
Grundrisse, functions as a guiding methodological principle for Capital. A crucial yet often overlooked aspect of this critique is that it operates only on the presupposition of totality, and conversely, totality and the alienated social relations
it generates can be grasped only through critique. The concluding remarks emphasize the continuity of Marx’s critical project and point out how the concept of totality in the
Grundrisse provides a foundational principle for developing a Global Critical Theory capable of understanding contemporary interconnected and alienated social realities.
All our sessions are free and open to the public.
The Praxis Seminar is a weekly, in-person event organized by Praxis-CFUL, the Practical Philosophy Research Group of the
Centre of Philosophy of the University of Lisbon. This event is funded by Portuguese national funds through FCT – Fundação
para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, I.P., within the project UID/00310/2025 (https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/00310/2025).