A Philosophical Introduction to Anarchism

282
a brief philosophical introduction to anarchism Jesse Cohn

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Transcript of A Philosophical Introduction to Anarchism

Page 1: A Philosophical Introduction to Anarchism

a brief philosophical introduction to anarchism

Jesse Cohn

Page 2: A Philosophical Introduction to Anarchism
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Anarchism in History

MEXICO 1912

UKRAINE 1917

USA 1886SPAIN 1936

FRANCE 1871

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Anarchism in Culture

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Anarchism in U.S. Politics

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

Alexander Berkman (1870-1936 )

“Before I tell you what Anarchism is, I want to tell you what it is not . . .“It is not bombs, disorder, or chaos.“It is not robbery and murder.“It is not a war of each against all.“It is not a return to barbarism or to the wild state of man.“Anarchism is the very opposite of all that.”

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What Is Anarchism?

an·ar·chism (ăn'ər-kĭz'əm) 1. a. Absence of government; a state of lawlessness due to the absence or inefficiency of the supreme power; political disorder. b. A theoretical social state in which there is no governing body

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

“Anarchy is order; government is civil war.”–Anselme Bellegarrigue

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

“Of course, say the anarchists, society must be organized. However, the new organization . . . must be established freely, socially, and, above all, from below.”–Voline

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

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What Isn’t Anarchism?

“The greatest danger of bombs is in the explosion of stupidity that they provoke.”–Octave Mirbeau

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“propaganda by the deed”

• Between 1876-1900, a wave of anarchist bombings and assassinations

• Typically aimed at heads of state, judges, police, army, bosses

• Individual, spontaneous actions instead of organized resistance

• Extremely ineffective – merely outraged the public and strengthened the State

• Sometimes instigated or even perpetrated by government agents

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“propaganda by the deed”

The Haymarket Bombing, Chicago, 1886

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“propaganda by the deed”

Execution of Chicago anarchists, November 11, 1887

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• 1894: “Villainous Laws” in France enable government crackdown on the press

• 1902: New York Criminal Anarchy statute makes advocacy of anarchism illegal

• 1907: Immigration Act prohibits anarchists from entering the U.S.

• 1917-1920: “Criminal Syndicalist Laws” allow repression of anarcho-syndicalist unions; display of black flag illegal; anarchists deported from U.S. for opposition to war

• 1917-1921: Soviets jail and kill anarchists• 1918: Anti-Anarchist Act gives government

authority to deport anarchist “aliens” living in U.S.

• 1968-1971: FBI targets anarchist groups for surveillance and harassment via COINTELPRO program

• 2001: FBI declares anarchist groups Reclaim The Streets and Earth Liberation Front “domestic terrorists”

• 2004: FBI makes nationwide sweep, questioning anarchist groups

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. . . and the beat(ing) goes on . . .

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Jean Grave (1854-1939)

“Bombs . . . cannot, in fact, change social conditions.”

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Errico Malatesta (1853-1932)

“One only destroys, effectively and permanently, that which one replaces by something else.”

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Gustav Landauer(1870-1919)

“The state is a condition, a certain relationship among human beings, a mode of behavior between men; we ‘destroy’ it by contracting other relationships, by behaving differently toward one another.”

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Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)

“During the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war, and such a war as is of every man against every other man.”

–Leviathan (1651)

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Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)

“During the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war, and such a war as is of every man against every other man.”

–Leviathan (1651)

So support your local monarchy!

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“Every State . . . presupposes

man to be essentially evil and wicked.”

Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876)

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“Thus the State, like the Church, starts out with this fundamental supposition, that men are basically evil . . .”

Albrecht Dürer, Cain Killing Abel (1511)

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“. . . and that, if delivered up to their natural liberty, they would tear each other apart and offer the spectacle of the most terrifying anarchy, where the stronger would exploit and slaughter the weaker . . .” Victim of the “riots”

orchestrated by the government of Gujarat

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“. . . quite the contrary of what goes on in our model states today, needless to say!”

My Lai Massacre, 1968

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What Is Anarchism?

an·ar·chism (ăn'ər-kĭz'əm) 1. a. Absence of government; a state of lawlessness due to the absence or inefficiency of the supreme power; political disorder. b. A theoretical social state in which there is no governing person or body of persons, but each individual has absolute liberty (without implication of disorder).

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What Is Anarchism?

Emma Goldman (1869-1940)

“ANARCHISM: – The philosophy of a new social order based on liberty unrestricted by man-made law; the theory that all forms of government rest on violence, and are therefore wrong and harmful, as well as unnecessary.”

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What Is Anarchism?

Emma Goldman (1869-1940)

In other words, anarchists oppose all forms of coercion, hierarchy, and oppression – not just “government” per se.

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Anarchist critique of power

Errico Malatesta lists three means by which the powerful maintain power:

1. “directly, by brute force” : i.e., via “political power”

2. “indirectly, by depriving [workers] of the means of subsistence and thus reducing them to helplessness”: i.e., via “economic privilege”

3. “by acting on [our] emotional nature”: i.e., via “religious authority.”

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Anarchist critique of power

                     

         

I call these sources of power “the dark trinity” (la trinidad sombría):

Ricardo Flores Magon (1874-1922)

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Anarchist critique of power

                     

         

I call these sources of power “the dark trinity” (la trinidad sombría):

Ricardo Flores Magon (1874-1922)the gun

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Anarchist critique of power

                     

         

I call these sources of power “the dark trinity” (la trinidad sombría):

Ricardo Flores Magon (1874-1922)the gun the dollar

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Anarchist critique of power

                     

         

I call these sources of power “the dark trinity” (la trinidad sombría):

Ricardo Flores Magon (1874-1922)the gun the dollar the lie

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Anarchist critique of power

Mikhail Bakuninthe gun the dollar the lie

“Slavery may change its form or its name – its essence remains the same.”

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Anarchist critique of power

Mikhail Bakunin

Even a “democratic” State is still oppressive.

In democracy, as I like to say, “the people are beat with the people’s stick.”

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“If men were angels, no government would be necessary.”

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“If men were angels, no government would be necessary.”

“The people are turbulent and changing; they seldom judge or determine right.”

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. AnarchismIf all of us are corrupted by power, which of us is angelic enough to be trusted to govern?

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. AnarchismIf all of us are corrupted by power, which of us is angelic enough to be trusted to govern?

Freedom is the only school that can prepare us to live in freedom.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty is this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.”

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

No government can be trusted to check itself.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

No government can be trusted to check itself.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

No government can be trusted to check itself.

Separation of powers is a bureaucratic solution to a problem created by the centralization of power that government creates in the first place.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

No government can be trusted to check itself.

Separation of powers is a bureaucratic solution to a problem created by the centralization of power that government creates in the first place.

Power must be decentralized, dispersed among the people themselves, to prevent its abuse. This is what a federation of free communities and associations will do.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“[The] Representative Assembly . . . should be in miniature, an exact portrait of the people at large. It should think, feel, reason, and act like them.”

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

Representatives cease to represent anything but themselves the moment they are elected.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

Representatives cease to represent anything but themselves the moment they are elected.

What need have I of a representative? Can’t I express my wishes myself?

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“A democracy [is] the only pure republic, but impracticable beyond the limits of a town.”

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

In a decentralized federation of communities, each unit can make agreements with others in the region, and regional assemblies can coordinate with one another.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“Different interests necessarily exist in different classes of citizens. If a majority be united by a common interest, the rights of the minority will be insecure.”

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

Majority rule and minority rule are equally tyrannical. Neither has a right to impose its will on the other.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

Majority rule and minority rule are equally tyrannical. Neither has a right to impose its will on the other.

What you are really afraid of, however, is that your wealthy minority will be outvoted by the working class majority.

Thomas JeffersonJohn Adams James Madison

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

Thomas Jefferson

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

“I am convinced that those societies (as the Indians) which live without government, enjoy in their general mass an infinitely greater degree of happiness, than those who live under the European governments. Among the former, public opinion is in the place of law, and restrains morals as powerfully as laws ever did anywhere.”

Thomas Jefferson

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

Yes.

Thomas Jefferson

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Representative Democracy vs. Anarchism

That must be why you denied Indians the vote.

Thomas Jefferson

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Representative democracy

• Popular consent only required periodically at election time

• Elected representatives craft policy on behalf of constituents

• Once elected, officials exercise authority over citizens

• Little citizen initiative or participation necessary or possible

Direct democracy

• Direct participation instead of elections

• People craft policy themselves in small assemblies

• Assemblies send delegates to discuss policy in larger bodies

• Delegates are given strict instructions – if these are violated, they may be recalled immediately

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Mikhail Bakunin

“Where all govern, no one is governed, and the State as such does not exist.”

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Mikhail Bakunin

“Where all govern, no one is governed, and the State as such does not exist.”

But how to practice this self-government?

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Methods of decision-making

• Negotiation: formal or informal agreements between individuals

• Sortition: random selection of “policy jury” from community at large

• Rotation of responsibilities• Simple majority with right of minority to disassociate• Supermajority: two thirds majority required• Consensus minus one• Pure consensus

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Extension of democracy

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Extension of democracy

• Democratic planning: direct involvement of those affected by decisions in decision-making

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Extension of democracy

• Democratic planning: direct involvement of those affected by decisions in decision-making

• Democratic education: teachers, students, and parents negotiate policies and curricula

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Extension of democracy

• Democratic planning: direct involvement of those affected by decisions in decision-making

• Democratic education: teachers, students, and parents negotiate policies and curricula

• Military democracy: election and rotation of officer duties

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Extension of democracy

• Democratic planning: direct involvement of those affected by decisions in decision-making

• Democratic education: teachers, students, and parents negotiate policies and curricula

• Military democracy: election and rotation of officer duties

• Consumer democracy: consumers make collective decisions about needs and investments

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Extension of democracy

• Democratic planning: direct involvement of those affected by decisions in decision-making

• Democratic education: teachers, students, and parents negotiate policies and curricula

• Military democracy: election and rotation of officer duties

• Consumer democracy: consumers make collective decisions about needs and investments

• Workplace democracy: producers collectively decide how to organize production

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Anarchism as direct democracy

“No one knows better than the workers themselves the capacity of each one in a specific workplace. There, where everybody knows everybody, the practice of democracy is possible.” D.A. de Santillan

(1897-1983)

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Workers’ CouncilFarm Cooperative

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm Cooperative Farm Cooperative

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm Cooperative Farm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm Cooperative Farm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm Cooperative Farm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm Cooperative Farm Cooperative

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Transregional federation

Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

Local Council of Production

Workers’ CouncilWorkers’ CouncilFarm CooperativeFarm Cooperative

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Regional Producers’ Federation

Transregional federation

Local Council of Production

Regional Producers’ Federation Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Regional Producers’ Federation

Transregional federation

Regional Producers’ Federation Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Regional Producers’ Federation

Transregional federation

Regional Producers’ Federation Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Regional Producers’ Federation

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Regional Producers’ Federation Regional Producers’ Federation

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Local Council of Production

Global Federation

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Neighborhood Assembly

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Neighborhood Assembly

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Regional federation

Community assembly

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Community assembly

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Regional federation Regional federationRegional federation

Transregional federation

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Anarchism as direct democracy

Transregional federation

World assembly

Transregional federation

Community assembly

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Regional assembly Regional assemblyRegional assembly

Transregional federation Transregional federationTransregional federation

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A Cooperative Commonwealth

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A Cooperative Commonwealth

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A Cooperative Commonwealth

“The principle of organization must not issue from a center created in advance to capture the whole and impose itself upon it but, on the contrary, it must come from all sides to create nodes of coordination, natural centers to serve all these points.”

–Voline

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A Cooperative Commonwealth

“The principle of organization must not issue from a center created in advance to capture the whole and impose itself upon it but, on the contrary, it must come from all sides to create nodes of coordination, natural centers to serve all these points.”

–Voline

“[Such a society,] like every organized living being . . . has its center everywhere and its circumference nowhere.”–Proudhon

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Community assembly

Community assembly

“Do you need a road? . . .”

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Community assembly

Community assembly

Regional federation

“Do you need a road? Then the inhabitants of the neighboring communities will reach an agreement between themselves and will make one better than the Minister of Public Works.”

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“. . . Do you need a railway? . . .”

Regional federationRegional federation

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“. . . Do you need a railway? The communities concerned in a whole region will make one better than the contractors who pile up millions building bad railways.”

Regional federationRegional federation

Transregional federation

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Crime and anarchism

“The fruitful source of crimes consists in this

circumstance, one man's possessing in abundance that

of which another man is destitute.”

–William Godwin (1756-1836)

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Crime and anarchism

• Crime is strongly linked to unemployment, lack of education, and poverty; eliminating these should sharply reduce the crime rate.

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Crime and anarchism

• Crime is strongly linked to unemployment, lack of education, and poverty; eliminating these should sharply reduce the crime rate.

• “Victimless crimes” – e.g., narcotics possession – are created by the State and would vanish with it.

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Crime and anarchism

• Crime is strongly linked to unemployment, lack of education, and poverty; eliminating these should sharply reduce the crime rate.

• “Victimless crimes” – e.g., narcotics possession – are created by the State and would vanish with it.

• Prisons function as “universities of crime”; abolishing prisons could actually reduce crime.

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Crime and anarchism

• Crime is strongly linked to unemployment, lack of education, and poverty; eliminating these should sharply reduce the crime rate.

• “Victimless crimes” – e.g., narcotics possession – are created by the State and would vanish with it.

• Prisons function as “universities of crime”; abolishing prisons could actually reduce crime.

• Crime is also a symptom of social alienation. A culture of solidarity can reduce motives for crime.

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Crime and anarchism

• Mediation and conflict resolution • Citizen patrols with rotating duties and community oversight• Ad-hoc courts convened by community assembly, with popularly

elected judges and randomly selected jury of peers• Reparations and rehabilitation instead of incarceration• Asylums for the criminally insane• Expulsion from the community

Some possible responses to crime in an anarchist society

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Crime and anarchism

“There will be no solution to crime and antisocial behaviour without

the resurrection of human community.”

–Graham Purchase

Anarchism and Ecology (1997)

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1872: The International Workingmen’s Association . . .

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SPLITS

1872: The International Workingmen’s Association . . .

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SPLITS

. . . over the conflict between Marx and Bakunin, leaders of the two largest factions.

1872: The International Workingmen’s Association . . .

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Marxism vs. Anarchism

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Marxism vs. AnarchismChurch and State are the servants of the Marketplace.

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Marxism vs. AnarchismChurch and State are the servants of the Marketplace.

Church, State, and Marketplace are merely different forms of enslavement.

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Marxism vs. AnarchismChurch and State are the servants of the Marketplace.

Church, State, and Marketplace are merely different forms of enslavement.

Don’t forget race!

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Marxism vs. AnarchismChurch and State are the servants of the Marketplace.

Church, State, and Marketplace are merely different forms of enslavement.

Don’t forget race!

And gender, too!

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Marxism vs. AnarchismAfter the revolution, there must be a transitional government – a dictatorship of the proletariat.

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Marxism vs. AnarchismAfter the revolution, there must be a transitional government – a dictatorship of the proletariat.

“Dictatorship” of whom over whom??

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Marxism vs. AnarchismAfter the revolution, there must be a transitional government – a dictatorship of the proletariat.

You want to create a Red bureaucracy!

“Dictatorship” of whom over whom??

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Marxism vs. AnarchismAfter the revolution, there must be a transitional government – a dictatorship of the proletariat.

You want to create a Red bureaucracy!

“Dictatorship” of whom over whom??

Revolutionary means must be consistent with revolutionary ends.

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Marxism vs. AnarchismCapitalism has to create the conditions for a successful revolution.

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Marxism vs. AnarchismCapitalism has to create the conditions for a successful revolution.

We can make a revolution whenever enough of us want it!

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Marxism vs. AnarchismCapitalism has to create the conditions for a successful revolution.

We can make a revolution whenever enough of us want it!

Hah! You think revolutions are made by “will power.”

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Marxism vs. AnarchismCapitalism has to create the conditions for a successful revolution.

We can make a revolution whenever enough of us want it!

Hah! You think revolutions are made by “will power.”

No, by collective action.

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Marxism vs. Anarchism

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Marxism vs. Anarchism

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Marxism vs. Anarchism

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Marxism vs. Anarchism

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Marxism vs. Anarchism

From a Marxist perspective . . .• the road to socialism is through capitalism.• the path to a free society is through the

“dictatorship of the proletariat.”From an anarchist perspective . . .• means must be consistent with ends.• rather than engaging in actions contrary to

our values, we need to put our values into action.

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In other words . . .

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Direct Action

• Indirect action brings about something other than or even contrary to one’s real goals.

• An indirect response to a problem means working through existing (bureaucratic) channels, getting someone else to deal with the problem. For instance: writing letters of complaint to the newspaper, signing petitions, demonstrating, or campaigning for a reform candidate.

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Direct Action

• Direct action brings means and ends together.

• A direct response to a problem means intervening directly in the situation, without waiting for official permission or accepting the given rules. For example: blocking troop trains and bulldozers, creating alternative media channels – doing it yourself.

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Direct Action

Voltairine de Cleyre (1866-1912)

“Every person who ever in his life had a difference with anyone to settle, and went straight to the other persons involved to settle it . . . was a direct actionist.”

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Direct Action

Murray Bookchin (1921-)

Direct democracy is a permanent form of direct action.

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Direct Action

• We live highly “indirect” lives: we spend all day doing things we don’t want to in order to be allowed to do the things we want to do. We produce useless things for other people in exchange for money. “Overproduction” throws workers out of work. Houses stand empty and food goes to waste while millions starve out in the open.

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Direct Action

• Anarchists aspire to live more “directly.” Production and consumption are united when we produce goods for our own use. Work becomes play when the activity of working is made enjoyable, so that it is its own reward, containing its end within itself. When we work for ourselves, we don’t need bosses, surveillance, and discipline.

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

•Only voluntary, limited, and temporary forms of organization

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

•Only voluntary, limited, and temporary forms of organization•Free exchange without the State

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

•Only voluntary, limited, and temporary forms of organization•Free exchange without the State•Emphasis on individual autonomy

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

•Only voluntary, limited, and temporary forms of organization•Free exchange without the State•Emphasis on individual autonomy

•Organization crucial, but must be decentralized and non-authoritarian

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

•Only voluntary, limited, and temporary forms of organization•Free exchange without the State•Emphasis on individual autonomy

•Organization crucial, but must be decentralized and non-authoritarian•Socialism without the State

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Schools of Anarchist Thought

Individualist Anarchism

Social Anarchism

•Only voluntary, limited, and temporary forms of organization•Free exchange without the State•Emphasis on individual autonomy

•Organization crucial, but must be decentralized and non-authoritarian•Socialism without the State•Balance of autonomy and community

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Individualism

Max STIRNER

(1806-1856)

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Max STIRNER (1806-1856)

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

All of history is really the progress of Ideas – the journey of a World Spirit (Weltgeist) toward self-discovery..

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

All of history is really the progress of Ideas – the journey of a World Spirit (Weltgeist) toward self-discovery..

Ideas progress through the dialectic: first, the idea appears positively, as a Thesis, which calls forth its opposite or Antithesis; then a Synthesis can emerge, combining the best of both. This, too, becomes a thesis, and the process repeats . . .

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

All of history is really the progress of Ideas – the journey of a World Spirit (Weltgeist) toward self-discovery..

Ideas progress through the dialectic: first, the idea appears positively, as a Thesis, which calls forth its opposite or Antithesis; then a Synthesis can emerge, combining the best of both. This, too, becomes a thesis, and the process repeats . . .

Until finally an all-encompassing Idea is attained – the Absolute.

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

Truly, you are haunted by a ghost (Geist)! Your disembodied “World Spirit” is imaginary – a mere abstraction.

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

Truly, you are haunted by a ghost (Geist)! Your disembodied “World Spirit” is imaginary – a mere abstraction.

The only true subject is the concrete, bodily individual – the Einzige.

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

Truly, you are haunted by a ghost (Geist)! Your disembodied “World Spirit” is imaginary – a mere abstraction.

The only true subject is the concrete, bodily individual – the Einzige.

Nothing is “Absolute.” Everything is what it is relative to my interests.

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Stirner vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Max Stirner

Truly, you are haunted by a ghost (Geist)! Your disembodied “World Spirit” is imaginary – a mere abstraction.

The only true subject is the concrete, bodily individual – the Einzige.

Nothing is “Absolute.” Everything is what it is relative to my interests.

“Nothing is more to me than myself!”

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max Stirner

Søren Kierkegaard Albert Camus

Jean-Paul Sartre Friedrich Nietzsche

Stirner’s negation of God and any source of values beyond the individual places him in the company of the existentialists . . .

EXISTENTIALISTS

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max Stirner

Søren Kierkegaard Albert Camus

Jean-Paul Sartre Friedrich Nietzsche

Stirner’s negation of God and any source of values beyond the individual places him in the company of the existentialists . . .

. . . But we also wonder if he isn’t just a nihilist.

EXISTENTIALISTS

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max Stirner

“Stirner is the dialectician who reveals nihilism as the truth of the dialectic.”

Gilles Deleuze (poststructuralist

philosopher, 1925-1995)

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max Stirner

“Stirner is the dialectician who reveals nihilism as the truth of the dialectic.”

Gilles Deleuze (poststructuralist

philosopher, 1925-1995)

. . . which makes him an important

ancestor of poststructuralism.

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max StirnerJean Baudrillard

(postmodern theorist, 1929-)

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max StirnerJean Baudrillard

(postmodern theorist, 1929-)

We share a similar critique

of Marx’s Hegelian notion of “alienation.”

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max StirnerJean Baudrillard

(postmodern theorist, 1929-)

We share a similar critique

of Marx’s Hegelian notion of “alienation.”

“What an absurdity it is to pretend that men are 'other', to try to convince them that their deepest desire is to become 'themselves' again!  Each man is totally there at each instant.”

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Stirner’s place in philosophy

Max StirnerJean Baudrillard

(postmodern theorist, 1929-)

We share a similar critique

of Marx’s Hegelian notion of “alienation.”

“The true man does not lie in the future, an object of longing, but lies, existent and real, in the present. Whatever and whoever I may be, joyous and suffering, a child or a graybeard, in confidence or doubt, in sleep or in waking, I am it, I am the true man.”

“What an absurdity it is to pretend that men are 'other', to try to convince them that their deepest desire is to become 'themselves' again!  Each man is totally there at each instant.”

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Max Stirner

“The true man does not lie in the future, an object of longing, but lies, existent and real, in the present. Whatever and whoever I may be, joyous and suffering, a child or a graybeard, in confidence or doubt, in sleep or in waking, I am it, I am the true man.”

Mikhail Bakunin

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Max Stirner

“The true man does not lie in the future, an object of longing, but lies, existent and real, in the present. Whatever and whoever I may be, joyous and suffering, a child or a graybeard, in confidence or doubt, in sleep or in waking, I am it, I am the true man.”

Mikhail Bakunin

Demystifying ideas, stripping them of sacred authority, is healthy – but Stirner deifies the ultimate abstraction: the self-contained “ego.”

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Max Stirner

“The true man does not lie in the future, an object of longing, but lies, existent and real, in the present. Whatever and whoever I may be, joyous and suffering, a child or a graybeard, in confidence or doubt, in sleep or in waking, I am it, I am the true man.”

Mikhail Bakunin

Anarchism is a philosophy of human development – of the potential contained within the actual. We only become free to develop fully in community. For Stirner, there is no potentiality, no becoming or development.

Demystifying ideas, stripping them of sacred authority, is healthy – but Stirner deifies the ultimate abstraction: the self-contained “ego.”

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Max StirnerMikhail Bakunin

And as for economics – Stirner’s criticism leaves the competitive individualism of capitalism unscathed.

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Max StirnerMikhail Bakunin

And as for economics – Stirner’s criticism leaves the competitive individualism of capitalism unscathed.

“My intercourse with the world, what does it aim at? I want to have the enjoyment of it, therefore it must be my property, and therefore I want to win it. I do not want the liberty of men, nor their equality ; I want only my power over them, I want to make them my property, i. e. material for enjoyment.”

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Max StirnerMikhail Bakunin

And as for economics – Stirner’s criticism leaves the competitive individualism of capitalism unscathed.

Property is theft!

“My intercourse with the world, what does it aim at? I want to have the enjoyment of it, therefore it must be my property, and therefore I want to win it. I do not want the liberty of men, nor their equality ; I want only my power over them, I want to make them my property, i. e. material for enjoyment.“

P.-J. Proudhon

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Stirner vs. the social anarchists

Mikhail Bakunin P.-J. Proudhon

In fact, the critique of “property” and the creation of economic alternatives to capitalism will turn out to be central to anarchist theory.

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Social Anarchism

• Mutualism

• Anarcho-syndicalism

• Anarcho-communism

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MutualismPierre-Joseph PROUDHON

(1805-1865)• Voluntary contracts between

individuals• Producer-consumer

cooperatives• Decentralized federations

instead of centralized States• Exchange economy without

rent, profit, or interest on loans

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

“In all things and everywhere, I proclaim Progress . . .”

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

“In all things and everywhere, I proclaim Progress . . .”

Yes! Progress is the law of History!

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

“In all things and everywhere, I proclaim Progress . . .”

“. . . and no less resolutely, in all things and everywhere, I denounce the Absolute.”

Yes! Progress is the law of History!

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

“In all things and everywhere, I proclaim Progress . . .”

“. . . and no less resolutely, in all things and everywhere, I denounce the Absolute.”

Yes! Progress is the law of History!

Frickin’ anarchists,

always gotta be different . . .

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Proudhon’s place in philosophy• Hegel’s cherished notion of

“the Absolute” is anathema to Proudhon. He identifies it with “absolutism,” or “the search, in nature, society, religion, politics, morality, etc., for the eternal, the immutable, the perfect, the final, the unchangeable, the undivided” – in short, a defense of “the status quo.”

• For Hegel, everything that exists is the necessary result of a rational process. For Proudhon, everything that exists is capable of change and must be made “rational.”

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

History is the work of the World Spirit thinking its way through the dialectic. In effect, History is the operation of Reason.

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

History is the work of the World Spirit thinking its way through the dialectic. In effect, History is the operation of Reason.

Or, as I like to say: “What is real is rational, and what is rational is real.”

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

History is the work of the World Spirit thinking its way through the dialectic. In effect, History is the operation of Reason.

Or, as I like to say: “What is real is rational, and what is rational is real.”

On the one hand, this is ridiculous. There is no World Spirit, only individual minds working in a material world.

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

History is the work of the World Spirit thinking its way through the dialectic. In effect, History is the operation of Reason.

Or, as I like to say: “What is real is rational, and what is rational is real.”

On the one hand, this is ridiculous. There is no World Spirit, only individual minds working in a material world.

On the other hand, just as our combined labor – our “collective force” – can accomplish more than the sum of our individual efforts, so society as a whole can be said to possess a “collective reason.”

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Proudhon’s place in philosophy• Labor, for Proudhon, always

involves the exercise of intelligence and creativity. The working class possesses, therefore, not only a “collective force” but a “collective reason.”

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Proudhon’s place in philosophy• In effect, while “hitherto . . .

philosophy, like wealth, has been reserved for certain classes,” as Proudhon remarks, “to make every artisan a philosopher . . . it would be enough to teach him — what? his profession.”

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

Mere sensory experiences can only render limited knowledge of the material world. Higher knowledge must come from the contemplation of pure ideas.

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

Mere sensory experiences can only render limited knowledge of the material world. Higher knowledge must come from the contemplation of pure ideas.

Karl Marx

You have things backwards! Ideas are merely a reflection of the material world.

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. Proudhon

Mere sensory experiences can only render limited knowledge of the material world. Higher knowledge must come from the contemplation of pure ideas.

Karl Marx

You have things backwards! Ideas are merely a reflection of the material world.

I refuse the very distinction between “ideas” and “matter.” The two cannot be separated from one another.

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Proudhon vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel P.-J. ProudhonKarl Marx

I refuse the very distinction between “ideas” and “matter.” The two cannot be separated from one another.

Frickin’ anarchists!

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Proudhon’s place in philosophy• Since ideality and materiality

are two inseparable aspects of Being, there can be no firm distinction between “manual labor” and “mental labor.” All labor requires intelligence and creativity –if workers merely obeyed direct commands, work would grind to a halt.

• If all labor is done with the mind as well as the body, then workers are potentially capable of self-management – and there is no reason for the existence of “managers.”

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Anarcho-syndicalismMikhail

BAKUNIN

(1814-1876)• Labor unions as means of

revolution and framework for new society

• Collective self-management in the workplace

• Limited wage system retained

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Bakunin vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Mikhail Bakunin

Since history is the progress of ideas, philosophy is the science of history. In fact, the goal of history is to produce the philosopher who can render history’s pattern clear.

Karl Marx

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Bakunin vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Mikhail Bakunin

Since history is the progress of ideas, philosophy is the science of history. In fact, the goal of history is to produce the philosopher who can render history’s pattern clear.

Hegel, a professional thinker, imagines that history is a matter of progress in ideas. In fact, ideas follow material, economic progress. My science of history will be founded on the study of economics.

Karl Marx

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Bakunin vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Mikhail Bakunin

Since history is the progress of ideas, philosophy is the science of history. In fact, the goal of history is to produce the philosopher who can render history’s pattern clear.

Hegel, a professional thinker, imagines that history is a matter of progress in ideas. In fact, ideas follow material, economic progress. My science of history will be founded on the study of economics.

There is no “science of history,” and even if there were, the “scientists” would have no right to dictate to the rest of us.

Karl Marx

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Bakunin vs. Hegel

G.W.F. Hegel Mikhail Bakunin

There is no “science of history,” and even if there were, the “scientists” would have no right to dictate to the rest of us.

Frickin’ anarchists!

Karl Marx

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Bakunin’s place in philosophy• Bakunin is profoundly

suspicious of claims to knowledge, particularly when that knowledge is cited as a badge of authority.

• Knowledge (ideas, categories, words, discourse) is inevitably “an abstraction,” a generalization – “and, for that very reason, in some sort a negation of real life.” Thus, Bakunin calls for “the revolt of life against science.”

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Bakunin’s place in philosophy

Søren Kierkegaard Mikhail Bakunin

EXISTENTIALISM

Bakunin and I attended the same lecture by the philosopher Friedrich Schelling at which he argued that Hegel’s philosophy had to be replaced by a “philosophy of existence” – the inspiration for my existentialist philosophy. Both of us distrust abstract systems of thought.

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Bakunin’s place in philosophy

Søren Kierkegaard Mikhail Bakunin

EXISTENTIALISM

Bakunin and I attended the same lecture by the philosopher Friedrich Schelling at which he argued that Hegel’s philosophy had to be replaced by a “philosophy of existence” – the inspiration for my existentialist philosophy. Both of us distrust abstract systems of thought.

True. However, I am before all else an atheist and a socialist – not for me Kierkegaard’s incessant whining, his preoccupation with “dread,” “despair,” and God, and his individualistic indifference to politics.

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Bakunin’s place in philosophy

Mikhail BakuninJean-François

Lyotard

POSTMODERNISM

Bakunin’s rejection of “science” in favor of “life” puts him close to my own postmodernist philosophy, which is all about being skeptical toward “grand narratives” – big ideas like History, Progress, God, Reason, Nature, Truth, etc. Intellectuals use grand narratives to enhance their own authority and power at our expense. In fact, there is no objective knowledge, only stories we tell ourselves about the world we live in.

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Bakunin’s place in philosophy

Mikhail BakuninJean-François

Lyotard

POSTMODERNISM

Bakunin’s rejection of “science” in favor of “life” puts him close to my own postmodernist philosophy, which is all about being skeptical toward “grand narratives” – big ideas like History, Progress, God, Reason, Nature, Truth, etc. Intellectuals use grand narratives to enhance their own authority and power at our expense. In fact, there is no objective knowledge, only stories we tell ourselves about the world we live in.

But I would make a bad postmodernist, too. I value the natural sciences for making it possible to understand the world without reference to God. Nor do I deny the possibility of objective knowledge. It’s just that we should never grand absolute authority to anyone, not even to those who possess knowledge.

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Anarcho-communismPeter

KROPOTKIN(1842-1921)

• No wage system or ownership of the means of production

• Communist distributive ethic: from each according to ability, to each according to need

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

My place is not so much with the pure philosophers as it is with the scientists and ethicists.

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

Thomas Huxley Charles Darwin John Stuart Mill Peter Kropotkin

“Of all the differences between man and the lower animals, the moral sense or conscience is by far the most important.”

“The moral feelings are not innate, but acquired.”

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

Thomas Huxley Charles Darwin John Stuart Mill

“The practice of that which is ethically best – what we call goodness or virtue – involves a course of conduct which, in all respects, is opposed to that which leads to success in the cosmic struggle for existence.”

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

Thomas Huxley Charles Darwin John Stuart Mill

“[In primitive societies,] the weakest and stupidest went to the wall, while the toughest and shrewdest, those who were best fitted to cope with their circumstances, but not the best in another way, survived. Life was a continuous free fight, and beyond the limited and temporary relations of the family, the Hobbesian war of each against all was the normal state of existence.”

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

Thomas Huxley Charles Darwin John Stuart Mill

We must find a conception of morality which is thoroughly compatible with the findings of natural science, not requiring any supernatural authority to establish right and wrong. Fortunately, Darwin has shown us the way to one.

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

Thomas Huxley Charles Darwin John Stuart Mill

We must find a conception of morality which is thoroughly compatible with the findings of natural science, not requiring any supernatural authority to establish right and wrong. Fortunately, Darwin has shown us the way to one.

Natural selection does not promote the survival of the fittest individuals, but that of the fittest species. This explains why, as we can see from the abundance of “social” species on Earth, cooperation is as much the law of nature as competition.

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Kropotkin’s place in philosophy

Thomas Huxley Charles Darwin John Stuart Mill

Natural selection does not promote the survival of the fittest individuals, but that of the fittest species. This explains why, as we can see from the abundance of “social” species on Earth, cooperation is as much the law of nature as competition.

Altruism is as much part of human nature as egoism is – our collective survival has required it. Our customs and institutions can encourage the development of one instinct or the other – that is all.

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Social Anarchist Economics

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Anarchist economics is simply the art of arranging for needs to be met with the minimum of wasted effort. From each according to ability, to each according to need.

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But who is to decide my abilities or my needs? I say my needs are 100; you say they are 90. I say my abilities are 90; you say they are 100.

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It’s all a matter of labor. If you are able to work and don’t, you shouldn’t share in the wealth produced by others’ labor. To each according to his deeds!

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A community does have the right to eject someone who refuses to help out. Still, it shouldn’t come to that most of the time – and a wage system only creates new problems.

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A community does have the right to eject someone who refuses to help out. Still, it shouldn’t come to that most of the time – and a wage system only creates new problems.

Such as?

Page 230: A Philosophical Introduction to Anarchism

A community does have the right to eject someone who refuses to help out. Still, it shouldn’t come to that most of the time – and a wage system only creates new problems.

Such as?

Well, who is to decide how valuable the products of my labor are? Is brain work worth more or less than manual labor? What about child-rearing?

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It is true that economic value is very difficult to formulate. That’s why it should be a matter of negotiation – of contract.

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There are two problems with reliance on a system of free contracts between individuals.

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First of all, it will be necessary to coordinate and plan on a bigger scale than a couple of individuals making a deal..

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First of all, it will be necessary to coordinate and plan on a bigger scale than a couple of individuals making a deal..

Second, the outcome of those contractual arrangements may be that someone ends up as exclusive owner of the means of production – which gives them the power to force others to work for them.

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There are a few ways we can avoid these problems.

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There are a few ways we can avoid these problems.

For instance, we can establish equitable systems of trade – for instance, “labor note” currencies which allow us to trade work-time for work-time.

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There are a few ways we can avoid these problems.

For instance, we can establish equitable systems of trade – for instance, “labor note” currencies which allow us to trade work-time for work-time.

We can also make contracts between groups of producers and consumers organized into cooperatives, which can in turn be networked.

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Such a system is still too divisive – too much haggling. Anarchism requires a deeper sense of community. When people are assured that their needs will be met, they feel more secure and are capable of more generous behavior.

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We should look to the example set by those primitive societies in which the primary form of property is still the gift – an institution which still survives among us in forms such as the barn-raising, the Red Cross, the quilting bee . . . and, of course, the family.

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin

• Right and wrong are not just a matter of the good or bad results of one’s action (so that it all depends on the circumstances) . . .

• . . . nor is it just a matter of pure principle (so that right and wrong are always the same for everyone).

• Both principles and circumstances – means and ends – must be taken into account.

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Anarchism as ethics

John Stuart Mill

CONSEQUENTIALIST

Peter Kropotkin

ANARCHIST

Immanuel Kant

DEONTOLOGICAL

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Anarchism as ethics

John Stuart Mill

CONSEQUENTIALIST

Peter Kropotkin

ANARCHIST

Immanuel Kant

DEONTOLOGICAL

“Actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness; wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness.”

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Anarchism as ethics

John Stuart Mill

CONSEQUENTIALIST

Peter Kropotkin

ANARCHIST

Immanuel Kant

DEONTOLOGICAL

“Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law.”

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Anarchism as ethics

John Stuart Mill

CONSEQUENTIALIST

Peter Kropotkin

ANARCHIST

Immanuel Kant

DEONTOLOGICAL

“The morality which emerges from the observation of the whole animal kingdom may be summed up in the words: ‘Do to others what you would have them do to you in the same circumstances.’”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin

• Moral materialism: no appeal to a separate world of spirit as source of meaning

• Moral naturalism: morality rooted in the struggle for species survival

• Moral historicism: moral truths are not eternal or unchanging, but evolve over time

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“We need a critique of moral values, and we must first question the very value of these values. For that we need a knowledge of the conditions and circumstance out of which these values grew, under which they have developed and changed . . .”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“The conception of good or evil varies according to the degree of intelligence or of knowledge acquired. There is nothing unchangeable about it . . .”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“There are epochs in which the moral conception changes entirely . . . Let us welcome such epochs, for they are epochs of criticism. They are an infallible sign that thought is working in society. A higher morality has begun to be wrought out.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“Nihilism is the necessary consequence of the ideals entertained hitherto . . . [for] all the old ideals are hostile to life.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“The end of morals cannot be ‘transcendental,’ as the idealists desire it to be: it must be real. We must find moral satisfaction in life and not in some form of extra-vital condition.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“What is good? – All that heightens the feeling of power, the will to power, power itself in man.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“Nature was represented by the Darwinists as an immense battlefield upon which one sees nothing but an incessant struggle for life and an extermination of the weak ones by the strongest . . . evil was the only lesson which man could get from Nature . . .”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“But if a scientist maintains that ‘the only lesson which Nature gives to man is one of evil,’ then he necessarily has to admit the existence of some other, extra-natural, or super-natural influence which inspires man with conceptions of ‘supreme good,’ and guides human development towards a higher goal . . .”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“In reality, however, things do not stand so badly as that . . . Mutual aid is the predominant fact of nature.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“Life manifests itself in growth, in multiplication, in spreading . . . . From this consciousness of the superabundance of vital force, which strives to manifest itself in action, results that which we usually call self-sacrifice. We feel that we possess more energy than is necessary for our daily life, and we give this energy to others.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“Be strong. Overflow with emotional and intellectual energy, and you will spread your intelligence, your love, your energy of action broadcast among others! This is what all moral teaching comes to.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“‘Equal to the equal, unequal to the unequal’ – that would be the true slogan of justice; and also its corollary: ‘Never make equal what is unequal.’”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“Equality in mutual relations with the solidarity arising from it, this is the most powerful weapon of the animal world in the struggle for existence.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“‘The world is perfect’ – thus says the instinct of the most spiritual . . . What is bad . . . Is born of weakness, of envy, of revenge. The anarchist and the Christian have the same origin.”

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Anarchism as ethics

Peter Kropotkin Friedrich Nietzsche

“[You] did not understand anything about the economic workers' revolt. The great Nietzsche . . . remained a slave to bourgeois prejudice.”

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Anarchism and spirituality

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Anarchism and spirituality

Long before Proudhon became the first to call himself “an anarchist” in 1840, anarchist ideas and movements had emerged in religious forms.

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Anarchism and spirituality

• In ancient China, Taoism and Buddhism counseled avoidance of power and possession.

Long before Proudhon became the first to call himself “an anarchist” in 1840, anarchist ideas and movements had emerged in religious forms.

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Anarchism and spirituality

• In ancient China, Taoism and Buddhism counseled avoidance of power and possession.

• The Hebrew Scriptures centered on themes of emancipation from bondage to worldly power.

Long before Proudhon became the first to call himself “an anarchist” in 1840, anarchist ideas and movements had emerged in religious forms.

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Anarchism and spirituality

• In ancient China, Taoism and Buddhism counseled avoidance of power and possession.

• The Hebrew Scriptures centered on themes of emancipation from bondage to worldly power.

• In medieval Europe, heretical and mystical forms of Christianity denounced princes and Popes alike as usurpers.

Long before Proudhon became the first to call himself “an anarchist” in 1840, anarchist ideas and movements had emerged in religious forms.

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Anarchism and spirituality

• In ancient China, Taoism and Buddhism counseled avoidance of power and possession.

• The Hebrew Scriptures centered on themes of emancipation from bondage to worldly power.

• In medieval Europe, heretical and mystical forms of Christianity denounced princes and Popes alike as usurpers.

• Protestantism opened the way to a series of anarchic religious revolts, including those of the Diggers, Ranters, Lollards, and Anabaptists.

Long before Proudhon became the first to call himself “an anarchist” in 1840, anarchist ideas and movements had emerged in religious forms.

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Anarchism and spirituality

CONFLICTS

• Anarchists are strongly critical of organized religion as ally of the State

• Anarchist materialism rules out appeal to otherworldly values

• Anarchists reject appeals to divine authority

CONVERGENCES

• Strong precedents for anarchism in religious heresies

• Anarchism is also idealist, but in an immanent sense – the living world is infused with values

• Anarchists share a rejection of worldly authority

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Anarchism and spirituality

• Mohandas K. Gandhi• Martin Buber• Leo Tolstoy• Dorothy Day

A few who have combined opposition to State and Capital with

religious belief:

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Anarchism and spirituality

“I myself am an anarchist, but of another type.”

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Anarchism and spirituality

“I wish people would not be so afraid of words, such as the word anarchist.”

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Anarchism and spirituality

“All forms of rule have this in common: each wields more power than the given conditions require.”

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Anarchism and spirituality

• Leo Tolstoy• Mohandas K. Gandhi• Martin Buber• Dorothy Day

A few who have combined opposition to the State and Capital

with religion:

“All state obligations are against the conscience of a Christian – the oath of allegiance, taxes, law proceedings, and military service. And the whole power of the government rests on these very obligations.”

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Anarchism and spirituality

“[In] a state of enlightened anarchy . . . every one is his own ruler. He rules himself in such a manner that he is never a hindrance to his neighbour . . . therefore, there is no political power because there is no State.”

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Anarchism today

• Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, international anarchist movements have recovered some of the momentum lost to authoritarian communist and nationalist forces following the apparent success of Bolshevism and various national liberation struggles (e.g., Cuba, China, Kenya).

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Anarchism today

• At the same time, the apparent triumph of global capitalism has put working-class movements everywhere on the defensive. Even the word “libertarian” – once a synonym for anarchism – has become a term for laissez-faire capitalism.

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Anarchism today

• Anarchist practices – direct action, organization via decentralized networks, consensus decision-making – have been widely adopted in the “global justice” movement which has gained international attention since the Seattle WTO protests of 1999.

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Anarchism today

• Anarchist practices – direct action, organization via decentralized networks, consensus decision-making – have been widely adopted in the “global justice” movement which has gained international attention since the Seattle WTO protests of 1999.

• Oddly enough, anarchists make great organizers.

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Anarchism today

• Anarchist critiques of property and the State have also resurfaced, to some extent, in the Open Source Software and Cryptoanarchy movements.

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Anarchism today

• Anarchist political and economic strategies – producer-consumer cooperatives, squatting, factory occupations, popular assemblies – have been adopted as survival tactics in the world’s economic shock zones, from Mexico, Argentina and Brazil to Russia and South Africa.

Popular assembly, Argentina

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Anarchism today

• Meanwhile, anarchism continues to evolve. In the absence of a strong labor union movement, a concern with ecology has taken center stage. Varieties of eco-anarchism range from Murray Bookchin’s “social ecology” to John Zerzan’s anti-technological “primitivism” and the “monkeywrenching” tactics of Earth First.

Murray Bookchin

John Zerzan

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How do you live as an anarchist in a hierarchical world?

• “Resist much, obey little.”• Find ways to make work into play.• “Don’t mourn, organize” – form cooperatives,

unions, and other horizontal associations.• Treat others with respect; demand respectful

treatment.• Name and denounce oppression wherever you

see it.• Be strong and daring and unashamed.

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The End?¡No cuente con él, muchachas!