In the early 20th century, when the world was shaken by revolutions and capitalism demonstrated its cruel logic, one person proposed to look at the history of humanity from an entirely unexpected angle. Not through class struggle or the change of formations, but through organization. Alexander Alexandrovich Bogdanov — a philosopher, economist, physician, revolutionary, and creator of the universal organizational science — believed that the key to the future lay not in the redistribution of property, but in the transformation of the very way people work together, understand the world, and govern themselves. His ideas about cooperatives and labor organization, which were far ahead of their time, sound surprisingly modern today.
Bogdanov began his career as one of the leaders of Bolshevism, but his path eventually diverged from Lenin's. The reason was a fundamental disagreement on how socialism should be built. Unlike Lenin, who bet on the seizure of power and the dictatorship of the proletariat, Bogdanov saw the main force in worker collaboration. During the revolutionary years, he spoke out against the entrenched prejudice against cooperation in left-wing circles.
Many revolutionaries of that time looked down on cooperatives. They believed that this "narrow-practical" work, associated with commercial calculations and compromises, could narrow the worker's perspective, undermine his battle idealism. They saw cooperators as opportunists engaged in trivial matters and indifferent to the higher ideals of the class struggle.
Bogdanov categorically rejected this disdain. He proved that work in a cooperative gives the worker a different, new meaning and significance, not narrowly commercial, but seriously social. For him, cooperation was not a secondary matter, but a direct school of socialism. It is in the cooperative that the worker learns to independently solve common tasks, manage common affairs, and see the connection between his work and the common good. Bogdanov mocked the shortsightedness of those leaders who did not see the basis of new consciousness in worker collaboration.
Bogdanov's views on cooperation were only part of his grand plan to create a universal organizational science, which he called tectology. He set himself a task that still astonishes by its boldness: to find universal principles of organization that work in nature, society, technology, and thought.
The starting point of his teachings is simple and radical: every human activity is objectively organizing or disorganizing. He claimed that any process — be it building a factory, scientific discovery, or even artistic creativity — can be considered an organizational process. His idea was to unite all human, biological, and physical sciences into a single system of knowledge based on the search for common organizational principles.
This approach made Bogdanov one of the pioneers of the systemic approach in modern science. He introduced the concept of an organized complex, which is close in meaning to the modern concept of a system. He formulated the law of the minimum, which states that the strength of the entire chain is determined by its weakest link. He also anticipated ideas later developed in cybernetics and management theory.
For Bogdanov, labor organization was not just a technical scheme. It was imbued with the deepest human and cultural meaning. He believed that socialism was not just a new economic system, but a transformation of the entire society according to its main type, its image, and likeness. And this new type of society should be born from a new culture — proletarian culture, imbued with the spirit of laboring comradeship.
Bogdanov was convinced that the working class carries the seed of a new civilization. Unlike the bourgeoisie, it is alien to individualism and competition. Its nature is collective labor, solidarity, and cooperation. The art that the proletariat needs should be collectivist, nurturing people in the spirit of deep solidarity, comradeship, close brotherhood of fighters and builders.
He saw the task of socialism as overcoming the fatal division of labor into organizational and executive. In a capitalist society, this chasm consolidates the power of some and the subjugation of others. The future society should be built on the principle of united, harmoniously structured, comradeship labor and cognition.
This idea runs through the entire tectology of Bogdanov. He refuses to see hierarchy and subordination in the world. Even in biological systems, he sees not subordination, but cooperation. For him, in the cell, in the beehive, in the human collective, the same principle always works: unity for the achievement of a common result. For Bogdanov, cooperation is not just a form of economic activity, but a creative force that permeates all life.
He insisted that cooperation, not competition, lies at the root of progress. The organizing class, which once performed a real useful function, according to Bogdanov, degenerates over time, becoming a parasitic class if its activities are not subordinate to common goals. Real development is possible only when all participants in the process — both organizers and executors — act as equal partners within the framework of comradeship cooperation.
Bogdanov's ideas about cooperation and labor organization were not realized in Soviet Russia. His teachings were declared idealistic and forgotten for a long time. However, today, in the era of network structures, flexible production, crowdsourcing, and open projects, his ideas are returning. Modern management theories, systemic analysis, concepts of self-organization — all of this to some extent echoes his insights. He showed that cooperation is not just a way of doing business, but a fundamental principle of life capable of transforming the economy, culture, and humanity itself. His universal organizational science still awaits its discovery — perhaps this time, without ideological blinders.
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