Logos in the shape of the thought of the whole is, besides other things, represented by Lukács's philosophy. This theoretical line has nearly vanished in contemporary social thought - witness a critical stance on the idea of the whole in post-Marxism.
I sketch Badiou's set criticism of the concept of the whole and conclude that his criticism involves a performative contradiction. I argue that Badiou's criticism does not hold for Lukács's concept of the whole.
With recapitulating Lukács's theory I highlight "imputed class consciousness" as a precondition for opening the perspective of the social whole.