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Title: From Reflections on Individualism
Author: Manuel Devaldes
Date: 1936
Language: en
Topics: individualism, individualist anarchism, philosophy
Source: Retrieved on 24th September 2020 from https://www.marxists.org/archive/devaldes/1936/individualism.htm
Notes: Originally published in La Brochure mensuelle. Translated by Mitchell Abidor.

Manuel Devaldes

From Reflections on Individualism

As he is understood by individualist philosophy, the individual –

potential capacity for uniqueness and autonomy – is not an entity, a

metaphysical formula: it is a living reality. It is not, as Fichte

believed in criticizing Stirner’s “unique,” a mystical, abstract self,

whose ridiculous and harmful cult would arrive at the negation of

sociability, which is an innate quality in man and which engenders moral

needs which must be satisfied under penalty of suffering.

With this peculiar religious character individualism would be nothing

but a stupid systematic isolation, as well as a barbarous and incessant

struggle in which man would lose every ancestral acquisition and any

possibility of progress. The cult of this abstract Self would engender

slavery, in the same way that from the cult of the Citizen Positivism:

Man – is born modern servitude, characterized by the associationist and

solidarist constraints of current society that the State imposes on

individuals.

To be sure, the individualist self is not an abstraction, a spiritual

principle, an idea. It is the corporeal self with all of its attributes:

appetites, needs, passions, interests, strengths, thoughts, etc. It

isn’t the ideal Self, it is me, you, him – precise realities. In this

way individualist philosophy bends itself to all individual variations,

the latter having as motive the interest the individual attaches to

facts and things and as the regulator of the strength he disposes of.

For this very reason it establishes a natural harmony, truer and more

durable than the factitious and entirely superficial harmony owed to

religions, to dogmatic moralities and laws, to the forces of ruse, and

armies, to the police, penal colonies and gallows, and to the forces of

violence which the authoritarians have at their disposal.

Individualism moves only in the realm of the real. It rejects any

metaphysics, any dogma, any religion, any faith. Its methods are

observation, analysis, reasoning, and criticism, but it is by referring

to a criterion issued from himself, and not one he finds in the

collective reasoning honored by his surroundings, that the individual

establishes his judgment. Individualism repudiates the absolute; it

cares only for the relative. Finally, it poses the individual, the only

living and unique reality capable of autonomy, as the center of every

moral, social or natural system.

“Certainly, monsieur professor of morality, our navel is the center of

the world, as you say when, through inattention, you wander into the

land of Irony. It is the center of the world for each of we

individualists, as much as it is for you, Mr. Slave, or rather

Slaveholder. Except we say it out loud, while you carefully hide it by

teaching the opposite.”

I am for me, you are for you, he is for him the center of the world.

Don’t laugh. As God loses in each of us that long preserved prerogative

to be the center of the world, the aim of our acts, and the usurping

motive for our activity, to that same degree each of us takes control of

that prerogative for himself. But for this to be, it is first necessary

that all metaphysical absolutes, which are nothing but divine avatars,

join God in his flight that resembles that of a grotesque ghost. Our

reason then proclaims the permanence of the relative – of that which is

relative to our selves, naturally.

‘Where, my Christian contradictor, do you place the center of the

world?”

“In God”

“And you, Monsieur Positivist, Monsieur Atheist, who believe you don’t

believe in God, because you ingest the anti-clerical sausage on sainted

Friday?”

”...”

You no longer know which to choose of the various monstrances that offer

themselves to your view. You’re overflowing with centers of the world.

In the realm of the sacred you have an embarrassment of riches; you can

gravitate at will around this or that center as the occasion dictates.

This is why you are the same poor being, if not worse, as your theist

neighbor, who at least only knows his one God. In the world in which you

move you place the center everywhere except where you should see it: in

you. Of your own will – do you even have a will? – of your own

unconscious will you are nothing but a poor satellite who continuously

spins around illusory centers which to your eyes are more or less

divine. During this time the clerical and lay priests of all religions

fulfill their roles as hamstring cutters and pickpockets.

I, the individualist, I am the center of all that surrounds me, and I

say my activities, all my acts, reasoned as well as impassioned,

premeditated as well as spontaneous, have one goal, which is always my

personal satisfaction. When my activity is aimed at others I am certain

that in the end its material and moral product will return to me. It is

only up to the other that it be the same for him.

I have a personal morality, and I rebel against Morality; I practice a

personal justice and I refuse the cult of Justice, etc.

I am the wise man and you are the fool; I am the free man and you are

the slave, I am the man of joy and you are the man of suffering...

The primary meaning of individualism is thus summed up in this, that it

opposes to the entities and abstractions supposedly superior to man and

in the name of which he is governed, the sole reality there is for him:

the individual; man – not the Man of the Positivists, “the essence of

man,” the man citizenized, electoralized, mechanized, annihilated – the

man that I am, that you are, that he is : the self .

In this way everything which in every religious philosophy and

consequently in every religious system, emanated from the individual –

inferior, low matter, contemptible atom, simple unit, to arrive at these

entities, these divinized abstractions and to remain their property, the

individual being thus dispossessed – all of this remains the property of

the individual. The abstractions which have the right to be admitted to

human mentality in order to express inter-individual relations, are

henceforth stripped of their false superiority, of their sanctity, are

reduced to their simply utilitarian role; they are, from this point

forward, stripped of the ability to cause harm which they’d been

granted.

And so, no more sacrifice of the individual to Society and its priests,

to the Fatherland and its priests, to the Law and its priests, to God or

the gods and their priests. Man finally becomes the sole beneficiary of

his labors, the sole owner of everything whose conquest motivated his

efforts and labors.

What is society if not the result of a collection of individuals? How

can a society have an interest (why not also appetites, sentiments,

etc.)? And if it were to have an interest, how could this be superior

and antagonistic to the interests of the individuals who make it up, if

the latter are free? As a result, what nonsense and what hypocritical

misdeed is it to mold individuals for society instead of making society

for individuals?

Can we individuals not replace the State by our free associations?

For the general, collective law could we not substitute mutual

agreements, revocable as soon as they are a hindrance to our welfare?

Do we need the parceled out fatherlands our masters have made when we

have one that is vaster: the earth?

And so on... So many questions that the free examination of the

individualist justly resolves to the advantage of the individual.

Doubtless, those who live on lies, who rule through hypocrisy, the

masters and their domestic class of priests and politicians, might have

a different opinion because their petty, very petty interests invite

them to do so. But I, an individualist and a working man, who has

neither the interest nor the wish to rob from others, nor to be robbed

by others, I can’t think like them, and I rebel.

They will take vengeance for this insurrection by discrediting me. So be

it. The individualist is abhorred by masters, lackeys, and the

sheep-like mass. This is quite understandable. This will remain the norm

as long as ignorance is the queen of the world. The individualist

thinker, if he wants justice rendered to his words and acts, must wait

for a distant age of reason – under the evolutionist elm ... But he

could care less for the justice of others. His own suffices to

immediately satisfy himself.

Individualism being generalized, the individual is not in the least

dispossessed and enchained. He is the owner of the products of his labor

and is independent. As for the parasites who only lived thanks to this

belief in illusory Superior Causes, demanding the holocaust of inferior

beings, they are forced to become producers like everyone else, or to

disappear.

It is after what we have just said that the idea of the aristocratic M.

de Voltaire, who held the people – the canaille, to use his words – for

a herd to be shorn, can be clearly understood: “If God didn’t exist he

would have to be invented.” A God is needed so that the pretexts of his

mysterious wishes, his religion, his cult serve to maintain the mass of

individuals in a servitude favorable for the profits and privileges of

all kinds, and especially those of the masters.

But also, with what light is Bakunin’s proud quip not surrounded, that

“If God existed he would have to be abolished!” If God existed, he would

entail the servitude of a true Superior Cause; he would dispossess man

of his possessions. For the freedom and happiness of man it would be

necessary that he not exist.

Laplace said: “The God hypothesis . is useless.” Since his time the

sciences have progressed. The results of their investigations in the

realm of man and human societies leads us to say: the lie God is

harmful, which Proudhon affirmed in other terms in his famous

aphorism:“God is evil.” For the cause of God is the Superior Cause par

excellence, from which flow all the other causes of superiorised,

divinized abstractions, with their paraphernalia of rights and duties,

of rewards and punishments based on the superiority of free will.

What is the use of killing God if we give birth to the divine. As long

as man is persuaded of the existence of causes superior to his own, he

will be fatally, and so to say legitimately, deprived of real autonomy;

his uniqueness would be but a word. The phantom called God, in his

various and coexistent avatars, would snatch joy from him.