Anarchism

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Anarchism

Postby American Dream » Mon Dec 30, 2013 4:18 pm

http://cbmilstein.wordpress.com/2013/12/30/anarchism/

Anarchism

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Note: This piece is a reworked extract from my book Anarchism and Its Aspirations (IAS/AK Press, 2010, http://www.akpress.org/anarchism-and-it ... tions.html) for the Lexicon pamphlet series put together by the Institute for Anarchist Studies. You can download a PDF version of this pamphlet, designed by Josh MacPhee, along with the other four titles in this series at http://anarchiststudies.org/lexicon-pamphlet-series/.

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“By anarchist spirit I mean that deeply human sentiment, which aims at the good of all,freedom and justice for all, solidarity and love among the people; which is not an exclusive characteristic only of self-declared anarchists, but inspires all people who have a generous heart and an open mind.”

—Errico Malatesta, Umanita Nova, April 13, 1922

At its core, anarchism is indeed a spirit—one that cries out against all that’s wrong with present-day society, and yet boldly proclaims all that could be right under alternate forms of social organization. There are many different though often complementary ways of looking at anarchism, but in a nutshell, it can be defined as the striving toward a “free society of free individuals.” This phrase is deceptively simple. Bound within it is both an implicit multidimensional critique and an expansive, if fragile, reconstructive vision.

Here, a further shorthand depiction of anarchism is helpful: the ubiquitous “circle A” image. The A is a placeholder for the ancient Greek word anarkhia—combining the root an(a), “without,” and arkh(os), “ruler, authority”—meaning the absence of authority. More contemporaneously and accurately, it stands for the absence of both domination (mastery or control over another) and hierarchy (ranked power relations of dominance and subordination). The circle could be considered an O, a placeholder for “order” or, better yet, “organization,” drawing on Pierre-Joseph Proudhon’s seminal definition in What Is Property? (1840): “as man [sic] seeks justice in equality, so society seeks order in anarchy.” The circle A symbolizes anarchism as a dual project: the abolition of domination and hierarchical forms of social organization, or power-over social relations, and their replacement with horizontal versions, or power-together and in common—again, a free society of free individuals.

Anarchism is a synthesis of the best of liberalism and the best of communism, elevated and transformed by the best of traditions that work toward an egalitarian, voluntarily, and nonhierarchical society. The project of liberalism in the broadest sense is to ensure personal liberty. Communism’s overarching project is to ensure the communal good. One could, and should, question the word “free” in both cases, particularly in the actual implementations of liberalism and communism, and their shared emphasis on the state and property as ensuring freedom. Nonetheless, respectively, and at their most “democratic,” one’s aim is an individual who can live an emancipated life, and the other seeks a community structured along collectivist lines. Both are worthy notions. Unfortunately, freedom can never be achieved in this lopsided manner: through the self or society. The two necessarily come into conflict, almost instantly. Anarchism’s great leap was to combine self and society in one political vision; at the same time, it jettisoned the state and property as the pillars of support, relying instead on self-organization and mutual aid.

Anarchism as a term emerged in nineteenth-century Europe, but its aspirations and practices grew out of, in part, hundreds of years of slave rebellions, peasant uprisings, and heretical religious movements around the world in which people decided that enough was enough, and the related experimentation for centuries with various forms of autonomy.

Anarchism was also partly influenced by Enlightenment thought in the eighteenth century, which—at its best—popularized three pivotal notions, to a large degree theorized from these revolts. First: Individuals have the capacity to reason. Second: If humans have the capacity to reason, then they also have the capacity to act on their thoughts. Perhaps most liberating, a third idea arose: If people can think and act on their own initiative, then it literally stands to reason that they can potentially think through and act on notions of the good society. They can innovate; they can create a better world.

A host of Enlightenment thinkers offered bold new conceptions of social organization, drawn from practice and yet articulated in theory, ranging from individual rights to self-governance. Technological advancements in printing facilitated the relatively widespread dissemination of this written material for the first time in human history via books, pamphlets, and periodicals. New common social spaces like coffeehouses, public libraries, and speakers’ corners in parks allowed for debate about and the spread of these incendiary ideas. None of this ensured that people would think for themselves, act for themselves, or act out of a concern for humanity. But what was at least theoretically revolutionary about this Copernican turn was that before then, the vast majority of people largely didn’t believe in their own agency or ability to self-organize on such an interconnected, self-conscious, and crucially, widespread basis. They were born, for instance, into an isolated village as a serf with the expectation that they’d live out their whole lives accordingly. In short, that they would accept their lot and the social order as rigidly god-given or natural—with any hopes for a better life placed in the afterlife.

Due to the catalytic relationship between theory and practice, many people gradually embraced these three Enlightenment ideas, leading to a host of libertarian ideologies, from the religious congregationalisms to secular republicanism, liberalism, and socialism. These new radical impulses took many forms of political and economic subjugation to task, contributing to an outbreak of revolutions throughout Europe and elsewhere, such as in Haiti, the United States, and Mexico. This revolutionary period started around 1789 and lasted until about 1871 (reappearing in the early twentieth century).

Anarchism developed within this milieu as, in “classical” anarchist Peter Kropotkin’s words, the “left wing” of socialism. Like all socialists, anarchists concentrated on the economy, specifically capitalism, and saw the laboring classes in the factories and fields, as well as artisans, as the main agents of revolution. They also felt that many socialists were to the “right” or nonlibertarian side of anarchism, soft on their critique of the state, to say the least. These early anarchists, like all anarchists after them, saw the state as equally complicit in structuring social domination; the state complemented and worked with capitalism, but was its own distinct entity. Like capitalism, the state will not “negotiate” with any other sociopolitical system. It attempts to take up more and more governance space. It is neither neutral nor can it be “checked and balanced.” The state has its own logic of command and control, of monopolizing political power. Anarchists held that the state cannot be used to dismantle capitalism, nor as a transitional strategy toward a noncapitalist, nonstatist society. They advocated an expansive “no gods, no masters” perspective, centered around the three great concerns of their day—capital, state, and church—in contrast to, for example, The Communist Manifesto’s assertion that “the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.” It’s not that anarchists didn’t take this history seriously; there were other histories, though, and other struggles—something that anarchism would continue to fill out over the decades.

As many are rediscovering today, anarchism from the first explored something that Marxism has long needed to grapple with: domination and hierarchy, and their replacement in all cases with greater degrees of freedom. That said, the classical period of anarchism exhibited numerous blind spots and even a certain naïveté. Areas such as gender and race, in which domination occurs beyond capitalism, the state, and the church, were often given short shrift or ignored altogether. Nineteenth-century anarchism was not necessarily always ahead of its day in identifying various forms of oppression. Nor did it concern itself much with ecological degradation.

Of course, comparing classical anarchism to today’s much more sophisticated understanding of forms of organization and the myriad types of domination is also a bit unfair—both to anarchism and other socialisms. Anarchism developed over time, theoretically and through practice. Its dynamism, an essential principle, played a large part in allowing anarchism to serve as its own challenge. Its openness to other social movements and radical ideas contributed to its further unfolding. Like any new political philosophy, it would take many minds and many experiments over many years to develop anarchism into a more full-bodied, nuanced worldview—a process, if one takes anarchism’s initial impulse seriously, of always expanding that worldview to account for additional blind spots. Anarchism was, is, and continually sees itself as “only a beginning,” to cite the title of a recent anthology.

From its beginnings, anarchism’s core aspiration has been to root out and eradicate all coercive, hierarchical social relations, and dream up and establish consensual, egalitarian ones in every instance. In a time of revolutionary possibility, and during a period when older ways of life were so obviously being destroyed by enormous transitions, the early anarchists were frequently extravagant in their visions for a better world. They drew on what was being lost (from small-scale agrarian communities to the commons) and what was being gained (from potentially liberatory technologies to potentially more democratic political structures) to craft a set of uncompromising, reconstructive ethics.

These ethics still animate anarchism, supplying what’s most compelling about it in praxis. Its values serve as a challenge to continually approach the dazzling horizon of freedom by actually improving the quality of life for all in the present. Anarchism always “demands the impossible” even as it tries to also “realize the impossible.” Its idealism is thoroughly pragmatic. Hierarchical forms of social organization can never fulfill most peoples’ needs or desires, but time and again, nonhierarchical forms have demonstrated their capacity to come closer to that aim. It makes eminent and ethical sense to experiment with utopian notions. No other political philosophy does this as consistently and generously, as doggedly, and with as much overall honesty about the many dead-ends in the journey itself.

Anarchism understood that any egalitarian form of social organization, especially one seeking a thoroughgoing eradication of domination, had to be premised on both individual and collective freedom—no one is free unless everyone is free, and everyone can only be free if each person can individuate or actualize themselves in the most expansive of senses. Anarchism also recognized, if only intuitively, that such a task is both a constant balancing act and the stuff of real life. One person’s freedom necessarily infringes on another’s, or even on the good of all. No common good can meet everyone’s needs and desires. From the start, anarchism asked the difficult though ultimately pragmatic question: Acknowledging this self-society juggling act as part of the human condition, how can people collectively self-determine their lives to become who they want to be and simultaneously create communities that are all they could be as well?

Anarchism maintains that this tension is positive, as a creative and inherent part of human existence. It highlights that people are not all alike, nor do they need, want, or desire the same things. At its best, anarchism’s basic aspiration for a free society of free individuals gives transparency to what should be a productive, harmonic dissonance: figuring out ways to coexist and thrive in our differentiation. Anarchists create processes that are humane and substantively participatory. They’re honest about the fact that there’s always going to be uneasiness between individual and social freedom. They acknowledge that it’s going to be an ongoing struggle to find the balance. This struggle is exactly where anarchism takes place. It is where the beauty of life, at its most well rounded and self-constructed, has the greatest possibility of emerging—and at times, taking hold.

Although it happens at any level of society, one experiences this most personally in small-scale projects—from food cooperatives to free schools to occupations—where people collectively make face-to-face decisions about issues large and mundane. This is not something that people in most parts of the world are encouraged or taught to do, most pointedly because it contains the kernels of destroying the current vertical social arrangements. As such, we’re generally neither particularly good nor efficient at directly democratic processes. Assembly decision-making mechanisms are hard work. They raise tough questions. But through them, people school themselves in what could be the basis for collective self-governance, for redistributing power to everyone. More crucially, people self-determine the structure of the new from spaces of possibility within the old.

Anarchism gives voice to the grand yet modest belief, embraced by people throughout human history, that we can imagine and also implement a wholly marvelous and materially abundant society. That is the spirit of anarchism, the ghost that haunts humanity: that our lives and communities really can be appreciably better. And better, and then better still.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby NeonLX » Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:29 pm

My favorite bumper sticker, and it resides on the back of a very rusty old Ford pickup: "There's no government like no government".
America is a fucked society because there is no room for essential human dignity. Its all about what you have, not who you are.--Joe Hillshoist
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Re: Anarchism

Postby minime » Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:35 pm

Anarchism is a government.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby NeonLX » Mon Dec 30, 2013 8:01 pm

minime » Mon Dec 30, 2013 6:35 pm wrote:Anarchism is a government.


Yeah...I can kinda see that now, after reading through the article again.

Back to the corner I go, with my little chair and pointy hat.
America is a fucked society because there is no room for essential human dignity. Its all about what you have, not who you are.--Joe Hillshoist
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Re: Anarchism

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Mon Dec 30, 2013 8:23 pm

Same contribution I always make:

Anarchy is the natural state of the Universe at any and every given second.

A hundred billion words have been expended in an effort to codify Anarchism, none of it matters. If it needs to be defended, if it needs to be explained, it's just another opinion.

Anarchy, like gravity, has little regard for our opinions on the matter.


Lao Tzu has a lot more to say on this subject than Noam Chomsky, which is to say: he didn't say very much at all.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby minime » Mon Dec 30, 2013 9:51 pm

Anarchy is the natural state of the Universe at any and every given second.


The Tao that can be trodden is not the enduring and unchanging Tao. The name that can be named is not the enduring and unchanging name.

That which is at rest is easily kept hold of; before a thing has given indications of its presence, it is easy to take measures against it; that which is brittle is easily broken; that which is very small is easily dispersed. Action should be taken before a thing has made its appearance; order should be secured before disorder has begun.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby freemason9 » Tue Dec 31, 2013 12:24 am

Wombaticus Rex » Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:23 pm wrote:Same contribution I always make:

Anarchy is the natural state of the Universe at any and every given second.

A hundred billion words have been expended in an effort to codify Anarchism, none of it matters. If it needs to be defended, if it needs to be explained, it's just another opinion.

Anarchy, like gravity, has little regard for our opinions on the matter.


Lao Tzu has a lot more to say on this subject than Noam Chomsky, which is to say: he didn't say very much at all.


Beautiful.
The real issue is that there is extremely low likelihood that the speculations of the untrained, on a topic almost pathologically riddled by dynamic considerations and feedback effects, will offer anything new.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby minime » Tue Dec 31, 2013 1:07 pm

minime » Mon Dec 30, 2013 8:51 pm wrote:Anarchy is the natural state of the Universe at any and every given second.


Something like tautology. By your view/definition of anarchy, anarchism is both unnecessary and impossible.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby coffin_dodger » Wed Jan 01, 2014 7:31 am

Wombaticus Rex » Tue Dec 31, 2013 1:23 am wrote:Same contribution I always make:

Anarchy is the natural state of the Universe at any and every given second....


Not sure I agree with this.

Systems and Networks are evident everywhere that life exists. Systems and networks upwards, systems and networks downwards. Computer science has really opened up systems and networks thinking and acknowledgement in the last half century. Can't see much anarchy in biology and chemistry. I'm open to being persauded, though.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby jakell » Wed Jan 01, 2014 7:46 am

coffin_dodger » Wed Jan 01, 2014 11:31 am wrote:
Wombaticus Rex » Tue Dec 31, 2013 1:23 am wrote:Same contribution I always make:

Anarchy is the natural state of the Universe at any and every given second....


Not sure I agree with this.

Systems and Networks are evident everywhere that life exists. Systems and networks upwards, systems and networks downwards. Computer science has really opened up systems and networks thinking and acknowledgement in the last half century. Can't see much anarchy in biology and chemistry. I'm open to being persauded, though.


If one were to say that entropy represents anarchy, then this is apparent everywhere. Of course there are forces that oppose entropy, and this is why we see patterns against the noise.

As far as I can see, the use of 'anarchy' in the OP is about human political systems and it seems a confabulation to apply it to the rest of the Universe.
" Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism"
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Re: Anarchism

Postby coffin_dodger » Wed Jan 01, 2014 8:18 am

If one were to say that entropy represents anarchy, then this is apparent everywhere.


Indeed. Who says that, though? I understand entropy to be the 'winding down of energy, following a distinct and formulatable path - a 'universal constant', even. Still not seeing anarchy, even in entropy.

Of course there are forces that oppose entropy, and this is why we see patterns against the noise.


Why 'oppose' - as opposed to - 'work in tandem with'? Wouldn't the universe better evolve in co-operation, rather than conflict - way before we were here to perceive it?

Anthropormorphising the workings of the Universe may be the best we can achieve within the confines of our language and... well... being us, but all the cosmic violence, clashing and disinterested, casual cruelty of the Universe assigned to it by our sciences is possibly more a reflection of our own species traits and outlook, than that of what exists beyond the thin blue layer of our tiny environment.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby jakell » Wed Jan 01, 2014 8:30 am

coffin_dodger » Wed Jan 01, 2014 12:18 pm wrote:
If one were to say that entropy represents anarchy, then this is apparent everywhere.


Indeed. Who says that, though? I understand entropy to be the 'winding down of energy, following a distinct and formulatable path - a 'universal constant', even. Still not seeing anarchy, even in entropy.

Of course there are forces that oppose entropy, and this is why we see patterns against the noise.


Why 'oppose' - as opposed to - 'work in tandem with'? Wouldn't the universe better evolve in co-operation, rather than conflict - way before we were here to perceive it?

Anthropormorphising the workings of the Universe may be the best we can achieve within the confines of our language and... well... being us, but all the cosmic violence, clashing and disinterested, casual cruelty of the Universe assigned to it by our sciences is possibly more a reflection of our own species traits and outlook, than that of what exists beyond the thin blue layer of our tiny environment.


I said it. The reason you are not seeing anarchy in entropy is because it's comparison (with the 'natural' state of the Universe) is wobbly at the outset and needs binning

As regards opposition, we could also use 'working in tandem with' if you like. I was positing an organising principle in contrast to entropy to explain why we do not see disorder everywhere.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Jan 01, 2014 2:47 pm

It may help your interpretation of my words to know I don't consider "the unnatural state of the Universe" to be a phrase with any actual meaning. That is a hypothetical, an abstract construct without an anchor in matter and flesh.

Kings and Presidents alike delude themselves; the network has and yields the power, the Leviathan(s) are the agent.

I don't consider styrofoam or hedge funds to be "unnatural" because this distinction is hubris more than semantics.

I completely agree with the several riffs on networks and cooperation above. Happy 2014.

Edit: This post by Nomo says it perfectly and at fascinating length. viewtopic.php?f=8&t=37573
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Re: Anarchism

Postby jakell » Wed Jan 01, 2014 4:09 pm

Wombaticus Rex » Wed Jan 01, 2014 6:47 pm wrote:It may help your interpretation of my words to know I don't consider "the unnatural state of the Universe" to be a phrase with any actual meaning. That is a hypothetical, an abstract construct without an anchor in matter and flesh.

Kings and Presidents alike delude themselves; the network has and yields the power, the Leviathan(s) are the agent.

I don't consider styrofoam or hedge funds to be "unnatural" because this distinction is hubris more than semantics.

I completely agree with the several riffs on networks and cooperation above. Happy 2014.

Edit: This post by Nomo says it perfectly and at fascinating length. http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/ ... =8&t=37573


It could be said that the 'natural state of the universe' is at it's point of highest entropy, but you're right, this state would have no human meaning as we wouldn't exist in it .

(when this thread settles back into a discussion on anarchy in the context of politics, I will post my own favourite text on this)

I have a problem with the labeling (high vs low) of entropy. The maximum point of disorder should really be zero (ie, low) as this is a point that can be converged upon, this other way lies infinity.
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Re: Anarchism

Postby coffin_dodger » Wed Jan 01, 2014 4:59 pm

" Ism's " assume and inherit the status of the moment of their creation.

Their definition remains trapped in the stasis of that moment.

We live in a non-static reality.

They remain usefool tools for reference to the past.

Not the future.
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