In a letter published in the first issue,
Trotsky wrote: Arm the will and not only the thought, we say, because, in the era of great world upheavals, now more than ever before our will cannot break, but must harden only if it rests upon the scientific understanding of the conditions and causes of historical development On the other hand, it is precisely in such a critical era as ours, especially if it drags on – i.e., if the pace of revolutionary events in the West proves slower than hoped for – that attempts of various idealist and semi-idealist philosophical schools and sects will likely possess the consciousness of young workers. Captured unaware by the events – without prior extensive experience of practical class struggle – the thought of young workers could be defenseless against various doctrines of idealism, which are essentially translations of religious dogma into the language of pseudo-philosophy. All of these schools, despite the diversity of their idealist, Kantian, empirio-critical, and other designations, in the end agree that consciousness, thought, knowledge prefaces matter, and not vice versa.
Alexander Bogdanov, referred to by the term "empirio-critical" saw this as an attack upon himself and his science of organisation,
Tektology. Let me remind you of my situation over the past three years. I was subjected not to tens, but, I believe, to hundreds of attacks by influential persons, and even influential circles – in official documents, public speeches, in newspaper, magazine articles, whole books. I once said that the magazine
Under the Banner of Marxism is published half against me, while
Sholom Dvolajckij, himself one of the closest employees of this journal, corrected me: "Not half, but completely." My attempts at responding were not published; and it would be unthinkable to answer everything. After the death of Bogdanov
UBM did publish
Stefan Krivtsov's memories of Bogdanov. The first responsible editor of the journal was
Vagarshak Ter-Vaganyan who ran it from 1922 to 1923 and later
Abram Deborin who edited the journal from 1926 until 1931, then from 1931 to 1944 the editor was
Mark Mitin and the final editor was
Mikhail Iovchuk before the journal was closed and succeeded by
Problems of Philosophy.
Bonifaty Kedrov (first editor-in-chief of
Problems of Philosophy) wrote: Among Soviet philosophers, during 1922-1943 there was a magazine called
Under the Banner of Marxism. It was born in early 1922, and in its issue No. 3 was printed a program article by VI Lenin "On the Significance of Militant Materialism". For 20 years, this magazine published a lot of good militant articles on their pages; but during the war it somehow faded and in the middle of 1943 its existence stopped altogether. It was not closed. No, it just did not have the strength to go out.
Problems of Philosophy was established in July 1947 as a successor to
Under the Banner of Marxism. ==Articles==