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Title: Fanatics of freedom Author: Amedeo Bertolo Date: 1989 Language: en Topics: Freedom Source: Retrieved on 17th May 2021 from https://autonomies.org/2020/10/amedeo-bertolo-fanatics-of-freedom/ Notes: This essay was presented at the seminar âLa libertĂ , le libertĂ , i libertariâ, in Milan, 2â3 of December, 1989, later revised and published in VolontĂ , n. 3â4, 1996. An abridged English translation of a previous version of this writing was published as âFanatics of Freedomâ in Our Generation, vol. 23, n. 2 (1992), pp. 50â66. (An Our Generation Magazine archive is available online).
I am a fanatical lover of freedom.
Michail Bakunin
Anarchism is an exaggeration of the idea of freedom.
Karl Popper
My title and the epigraphic quotations must already show very clearly
which way my argument is to head. I hope that this will allow us to
avoid losing our way in the labyrinth of the more than two hundred
recognized meanings of the word âfreedomâ.[1] This âporousâ,
âproteiformâ, constantly appearing word is probably the most used word
in the world of politics, whether in its doctrine, its practice or in
political news.[2] With the events in Eastern Europe over the past few
months, the inflation in the use of the word freedom is in danger of
reaching monstrous levels. And, as we all know, with inflation money
loses value. With the current inflation in the use of the word freedom,
too, its semantic value is in danger of plummeting with the speed of
some South American currencies ⊠Even the fascists feel themselves to
have the right to speak of freedom, in one of its many aberrations,
called âpositiveâ freedom (to which we will return later). As indeed had
Stalin, as had Wojtyla. Or, somewhat more nobly, as had Plotinus or
Montesquieu. In Plotinusâ words: âMan becomes free when he moves towards
the Good.â[3] Or from Montesquieu: âFreedom consists in being able to do
what one must wantâ (italics mine) âŠ[4]
So, out of the more than two hundred meanings for the word âfreedomâ,
the only ones that interest us are those which serve to define the
theoretical and practical dimension of anarchist freedom, of freedom in
its anarchist sense.
With what purpose? With the purpose of redefining my, our identity, as
anarchists, on the basis of the central value of our imaginary, with the
purpose of reaffirming the inexhaustible diversity of anarchism,
especially when confronted with a complementary and today âtriumphantâ
liberal democracy. But, at the same time, we can reduce this diversity
to its essence, so as not to waste it in defending the indefensible,
such as, for example, statements of the kind, âfrom an anarchist point
of view, dictatorship and democracy are one and the same.â And finally,
in order to find, if it is indeed possible, a lay or secular concept of
freedom, that is to say a âneutralâ area which will allow real
communication and action between anarchists and non-anarchists. We are
different and should remain so, as it is our diversity which gives
meaning to our existence and to our resistance to assimilation (to
homologation, as it is said today). Different, yes, cultural mutants,
yes â but not Martians. We share a great part of the common cultural
heritage of humanity and, in particular, as far as values are
considered, a great part of European culture and, more specifically, of
the culture of the Enlightenment and the post-Enlightenment. There are
some differences which are important, indeed fundamental to our identity
â but only some, after all. To pursue the genetic metaphor, our
diversity concerns some few cultural genes out of millions ⊠which
however make the difference. Think: between humans and chimpanzees,
there is but a 1â2 percent difference in DNA.
It is in this direction that the following reflection moves. But for
this goal, one single definition, one single accepted meaning of the
word âfreedomâ is not enough. We need several, though it is necessary to
reduce them to one central meaning. There are different levels,
different environments, different contexts which reflect, directly or
indirectly, the anarchist concept of freedom in both its descriptive and
prescriptive understandings, in both its effectual and valuative
meanings.
Brief excursus. The distinction between value-related and descriptive
terms (or, better, concepts) is far from clear and is more a matter of
convention than of âobjectivityâ. To term a âfactâ a fact is already
something of a value judgment. The meaning of âvalueâ is itself
difficult to define clearly â in the words of one dictionary of
philosophy â âbecause this word most often expresses an unstable
concept, a step from fact to rightâ.[5] For example, the statement (from
the Declaration of the Rights of Man, Art. 1) that âAll men are born and
live freeâ is presented as an assessment of fact, whereas it is at the
same time a value judgment.
According to Max Planck, âthe problem of freedom leads to the heart of
those dark woods in which philosophy lost itself.â[6] We are looking for
the path or better, a path.
Hannah Arendt writes: âto raise the question of âwhat is freedom?â seems
an impossible task. ⊠In its simplest form the difficulty can be
summarised in the contradiction between our conscience which tells us we
are free and therefore responsible, and our everyday experience of the
world around us, in which we are directed by the principle of cause and
effect.â[7] Freedom and causalityâŠ
In 1963, a tiny group of anarchists (of which I was one) founded and
produced, albeit briefly, a periodical entitled âMaterialismo e
libertĂ â. As we were (or felt we were) materialists and, at the same
time we considered ourselves (and were) profoundly libertarian, we
considered that there could not, indeed should not, be any contradiction
between the two things. Had Bakunin himself not talked of the
âmaterialistic conception of freedomâ? If the âgrand old manâ said itâŠ
At that time I was twenty-two.
Today the âmaterialistic conception of freedomâ seems to me to be a far
more complex philosophical problem than I or we believed then. In
particular, I see freedom (not just in the âanarchistâ sense, but
freedom pure and simple) as incompatible with a reductionist concept of
materialism â mechanicism â that we so boldly proclaimed. Today, when we
are no longer sure what is the real nature of nature (matter? energy?
-try to find an answer from sub-atomic physics and astrophysics as they
stand today). Today, when we do not know exactly what is the âreality of
realityâ (do we present reality in a certain way because it âisâ like
that or âisâ reality in fact like that because we present it in a
certain way? Or ⊠[8]).
And yet ⊠And yet, I still consider myself to be a âmaterialistâ. The
quotation marks are a candid admission of uncertainty concerning this
philosophical term. This âmaterialistâ is, and probably always was, to
be seen to hold to a âPopperian realism of common senseâ.[9] I am a
materialist in that, unlike the various types and degrees of idealists,
I see âmatterââ (in the sense of the physical world) as the model of
reality, in the sense that, unlike the various orders and levels of
mystics, I believe I need the instruments of reason to explain reality
and to transform it (although this is not of course the same as
âinstrumental rationalityâ â indeed far from it).
Today, if we want to find a rational explanation of âthingsâ, we must
cope with the â enormous â problem of the relationship between
determinism (cause and effect as a necessary relationship between
phenomena, even if with all the complexities of retroaction and the
other devilries of contemporary epistemology) and freedom. If reality
can be reduced to purely deterministic relationships, how can âfreedomâ
exist and be conceived of? If everything is determined, then the
âfreedomâ of a choice â of every choice â is purely apparent, no more
than a way (as is âchanceâ as well) of describing our ignorance of all
the causes that have necessarily determined that sequence of phenomena
that we have chosen. But, to paraphrase Bakunin speaking of the
non-existence of god, âman is, wants to be free, therefore, absolute
causal determination does not existâ.[10]
There is a watered-down version of determinism, also called
âauto-determinismâ (although if this term is looked at closely, it has
very little to do with what I will later be calling self-determination)
which is interesting, almost convincing, from the point of view of a
âlibertarian materialistâ â but it is still not quite enough. This soft
determinism, as one critic has referred to it,[11] according to which
(quoting Berlin[12]): âThe nature and the structure of the personality,
the emotions, attitudes, choices, decisions and other acts that occur
would play a fundamental role in what happens, but would therefore be
the result of causes, whether psychological or physical, social or
individual, which in their turn are effects of other causes and so on in
an uninterrupted succession. According to the best-known version of this
doctrine, I am free if I do what I what I want to (âŠ) However my choice
is itself âcausallyâ determined, because if not it would be a âchanceâ
event.â (my italics)
Chance is the bĂȘte noir of the determinists, both hard and soft. I,
however, while I have always felt close to the deterministsâ position
(as a good materialist, first without quotes and then with them), I
believe that the solution to the philosophical dilemma of freedom can
only start with the introduction of âchanceâ at the side of causal
determination.
Chance has been a category of thought since very ancient times[13] which
seemed to have been swept disdainfully aside by modern science (in
theory if not in practice) as mere ignorance of the relationships of
cause and effect, until almost the end of the 19^(th) century, when
quantum indeterminacy and the subsequent developments in physics and
genetics brought it back into question, not only at a subatomic level
but also at the macro-molecular one.
So chance seems to have been firmly ensconced at the side of cause and
effect as a âscientificâ fact. Reality presents, at its various levels
of organisation, chance breaking into the causal chain.
But naturally this is not yet freedom. Causal indeterminism (although
probability may go some way to reducing it to the domain of the
âdeterminableâ) is no more freedom than is causal determination.[14] The
two together, however, are the presuppositions of freedom, the logically
necessary conditions of its appearance at a human level, that is, at the
socio-cultural level.
Freedom, understood as individual or collective choice of behaviour from
among various possibilities, in the face of a certain state of
things,[15] calls for both an openness to behaviour which is equally
compatible with the pre-established present state of things and the
voluntary intervention (therefore determined by chance) in the causally
determinable elements of this state of things.
Chance can also be seen anthropomorphically as a sort of physical
predecessor of freedom,[16] but this, in its most fundamental meaning
(and so that which interests us here) appears only â as we were saying â
with the emergence of human nature, with the emergence, that is, of an
animal whose behavior is essentially not determined by the âlawsâ of
biology[17] (although they cannot of course be ignored). It is true that
other species of animals also exhibit behaviour which is in some degree
voluntary,âfreeâ, but it is only in the human being that this dimension
of freedom, of the voluntary nature of behaviour, has become essential,
characteristic and identifying. This was a qualitative leap analogous to
that when the biological developed out of chemical and the chemical out
of physical.
Every subsequent âlevel of organisationâ[18] of reality absorbs within
itself the âlawsâ of the preceding levels, adding and superimposing its
own âlawsâ on them. The hydrochloric acid in my stomach reacts
chemically, that is to say according to the laws of chemistry, with the
substances it encounters, but the stomach cannot be explained by those
laws, nor even the release of hydrochloric acid in the gastric tract.
For that we have to turn to the biological level.
Then, after the biological level, we find, in natural history the level
of the socio-cultural, that is, the typically human level. It is here
that freedom appears as a new dimension of reality, which introduces
itself between causality and chance. Freedom is neither determinism nor
indeterminism: it is self-determination. And it is at this point that
socio-historical creation[19] takes over from the simple interaction
between chance and necessity in the appearance of the new.
In the course of the development of the human race, instinct has come to
play an ever-decreasing role[20] and has been replaced by culture, that
is, by norms, rules, codes of communication and interaction. As I have
written elsewhere: âIt is precisely in this substitution where human
freedom at its highest level is situated: self-determination.â[21]
This freedom of human beings, which belongs to the species as Homo
Sapiens, but also and unavoidably to every individual member of the
species, is a freedom which, with all the reservations already
mentioned, lies in judgments of fact. It is not a freedom as value. And,
as I have already said, it is freedom as a value that interests me.
Nonetheless this âanthropologicalâ dimension of freedom â not yet
ethical but open to ethical questions â is the albeit fragile foundation
of every possible interpretation of freedom as value â including ours.
This assumption seems to me to be essential to our discussion.[22]
This brings us to another problematical step, intricate but unavoidable,
in a discussion of anarchist freedom. It is the fact that freedom is not
a value in itself. No value, in any axiological system, is independent
of other values. There are no individual values but only systems of
interconnected values. This is equally true of the anarchist system of
values, whose essential nucleus (as with those of its siblings, children
of the Enlightenment, liberalism and socialism) refers back to the
Enlightenment-revolutionary triad (revolutionary in the sense of the
French Revolution):
liberté-egalité-fraternité/freedom-equality-brotherhood.
So we are faced with not a unique value but a configuration of values,
whose reciprocal relationships are determining. Unfortunately our words
can only follow the linear path of spoken thought, becoming, at best,
two-dimensional with ramifications, deviations and excursus. But to
really speak of freedom, we should be able to speak in three or four
dimensions at the same time, so as to be able to include all the
âconfigurationsâ of values. The only artifice of logic which I can think
of is that of projecting onto to freedom all of the other essential
anarchist values, thereby also attributing to it the features of its
relationships with the other elements of the axiological configuration.
This is as much as to say that we may project the solid whole on to one
plane or rather we can say that we will incorporate the other values
into freedom, which may indeed be less of a misuse of words than it
seems. Freedom in the axiological configuration of anarchism has a
specific value, an âexuberanceâ which is such that other values can,
albeit with a little effort, be recognised as premises or consequences.
At this point, however, we must consider these other anarchist values,
to render explicit what may then be taken as implicit.
The foremost of these is â predictably â equality, which the liberals
continually label the enemy sister of freedom. Today, we are in this
continuity. But it is not difficult to show that, at least from an
anarchist point of view, the two values not only can, but inevitably
must, be compatible. We need only point out the different â indeed
opposing â logical and value content of diversity and inequality.
Diversity is the opposite not of equality but of uniformity. We need
only show that diversity is a category in itself and raise it to the
rank of an explicit value, to see that equality ceases to be its
negation.
This is not mere word play, but is rather a semantic operation which is
very much in line with our tradition and even with the most honest of
liberal traditions. In our tradition, anarchists have always seen
diversity as implicit in freedom as a value, as their inevitable
individualism, their obvious âextravaganceâ, continually go to show. It
is also in the best liberal tradition, as when John Stuart Mill, for
example, writes: âMy writings on freedom form a sort of philosophical
manual of a simple truth (âŠ) that is to say the importance for man and
for society of a wide variety of characters and of a complete freedom
for human nature to develop in innumerable different directions.â[23]
It is time to make explicit what was implicit (as I already suggested
ten years ago).[24] It is time to see that diversity â understood as
difference devoid of any hierarchical connotation â is a value in
itself, which is to give value to an incontrovertible fact of nature:
the infinite diversity of reality.[25] This reflects the analogous
operation by environmentalists and feminists. At the same time, the
negative value of inequality, of difference inherent in hierarchy, must
also be stressed.
At this point we are left with equality as a value cleansed of
ambiguity, a value reduced to its essential form of qualitative
equality: equality in freedom. This does not, of itself, obviate the
quantitative dimension of equality as defined by Castoriadis:
âarithmeticâ (âpossessed equally by allâ) and âgeometricâ (âto each
according to âŠâ, âin proportion to âŠâ).[26] However, this quantitative
dimension can be reduced to applications and measures which are only
partial and can be debated in the light of qualitative equality, that is
to say, equality with respect to power and so, according to my
definition of power[27], with respect to freedom. Even such an honest
enemy of equality as Raymond Polin can admit this from the start,
writing, âIt is true that even I hold it to be undeniable that men are
born free, that is to say capable of freedom, and also that they are
born fitted to exist in freedom. The capacity for freedom and awareness,
which are in fact one and the same thing, is the very essence of human
nature. It does not follow that men must be considered equal in their
capacity to be free.â[28]
Nonetheless, in order to be equally free, human beings must be equal, if
I may be forgiven the word play. Equality must be seen as a value if we
are to go on.
And then, what of brotherhood, or less ideologically, of solidarity, the
Cinderella of the triad? For me too it remains something of the
Cinderella as it seems only slightly problematic, although of course
necessary in the context of the present discussion of freedom. It is
clearly necessary on an effective level, such an eminently social animal
as the human is inconceivable without a wide and growing practice of
mutual aid.[29] The autonomy of individual human beings must needs
coexist with social interdependence (âinterdependenceâ: yet another term
which is quite rightly dear to ecological thought). But solidarity is
also necessary at the level of the pursued values, as the âmortarâ of
freedom, equality and diversity, to ensure that freedom does not decline
into indifference, and diversity does not become inequality. And also to
ensure that justice is not blind, avoiding, as Bookchin says, an
inequality of equals, an âinequality in factâ of âequals in rightâ and
safeguarding the differences of, and means for, an equality of
diversity. Solidarity is necessary to give a sense of coherence to a
seeming paradox: âthe communitarian individualismâ, to which Alan Ritter
effectively reduces the axiological nucleus of anarchism.[30]
This call for a sense of community, however, must not distract from the
fact that anarchist solidarity is not limited to small units. It goes
beyond the family, the clan, the lodge, the corporation, the nation⊠to
take in the entire human species, although inevitably in a series of
concentric circles of decreasing intensity (and with particular
attention for the weakest). The intensity of this solidarity may
decrease but its nature remains unchanged, never becoming extraneous.
This, then, is a brief sketch of the context of the anarchist
interpretation of freedom as a value. The first step in fleshing it out
may be with the words of Bakunin.
Is this an appeal to authority? Nothing of the sort. This is rather due
to the fact that I have quite honestly failed to find anything better to
define the essence of that interpretation, its most profound meaning,
even though Bakuninâs definitions are intuitive (and must be understood
intuitively) rather then being wholly explicable by logic. On the other
hand, the anarchist conception of freedom, in its fundamental nature,
probably lies outside the scope of logical analysis and cannot be
reduced to a precise and complete rational definition. It is almost
intangible and can only be explained in metaphors. However, even I,
atheist and rationalist since my early adolescence, must cede â a little
â before the fact that the founding principle of my system of values is
not completely reducible to logic.
I am in no way ashamed of this, as Bakunin himself said that freedom is
first and foremost aesthetic, a passion, before it is political and
even, perhaps, before it is ethical. The grand old man said, âI am a
fanatical lover of freedomâ. A lover, do you understand? This brings us
entirely within the aesthetic dimension, the realm of âfeelingâ. I like
freedom, I like it to death (literally, I would even, in the last
resort, die for it). I love freedom. But, getting back to the more
tangible, if still slippery level of the ethical-political, Bakunin
said, âI can say that I feel free only in the presence of other men and
in relationship to them ⊠I am only free and human insofar as I
recognise the freedom and the humanity of those around me ⊠A slave
owner is not a man but a master.â And he goes on to reach the heart of
the matter: â⊠the freedom of others is far from being a limit to or a
denial of mine, on the contrary it is a necessary condition which
confirms it. I can only be truly free through the freedom of others so
that, the more free men around me, the wider, deeper and more
far-reaching their freedom, the wider, deeper and more far-reaching is
my own.â[31] And yet again, âI am speaking of that freedom in which each
individual, rather than feeling limited by the freedom of others, sees
it as his confirmation and his gateway to infinity.â[32] What then is
this freedom which produces an effect of âcollective forceâ,[33] so that
the final result when individual freedoms are added together is greater
than their sum, analogous to that which Proudhon described for the
economy? Clearly, it is anarchist freedom which is strongly and
necessarily tied to equality, solidarity and diversity,[34] strong
equality,[35] strong solidarity, strong diversity. It is this
âstrengthâ[36] which makes them compatible, in contrast with the feeble
conception[37] of freedom and equality which weaken each other,
retaining and even reinforcing their seeming contradictions âŠ
It is perhaps then this peculiar configuration of freedom, equality,
diversity and solidarity understood in the strong sense, traceable,
finally, to that very strong Bakuninist conception of freedom, which
could represent the âhard coreâ of anarchism, and be a good and useful
definition of anarchy. This is a definition of anarchy as a moral
imperative of the kind, âbe neither slaves, nor mastersâ, but expressed
positively. It is a definition of anarchy as an organising principle of
reality and action, as a central element of an imaginary, that precisely
of the anarchist, which translates as much as is possible both sides of
the Janus face of being anarchists: that of living with libertarians and
acting for a social transformation in the libertarian sense.
Posterior Digression. In a recent article in âVolontĂ â [Il
fondamentalismo anarchico, n. 1, 1996, pp. 173â191], Pietro Adamo
utilises, for some reflections on anarchism, the epistemological model
of Imre Lakatos. In Lakatosâ model (conceived of for âscientific
programmesâ in competition between themselves), for each programme, a
âcoreâ of founding ideas and a âprotective beltâ [of âauxillary
hypothesesâ â TN.] are identified which contain âeverything that is
useful for the ideas of the core and for the growth of the programme
itselfâ.
Curiously, about a dozen years ago, while having no knowledge of
Lakatos, I employed in âVolontĂ â a similar image in
research/experimentation for a âpost-classicalâ anarchism. I wrote about
a âshared core of valuesâ and added that starting from this ââutopianâ,
hard core, of anarchism, all of the possible and imaginable wealth of
experience, sensibilities, individual and collective creativity, visible
and hidden, should be mobilised to think and make a living rainbow
anarchism.â And two years earlier, again in âVolontĂ â, I wrote, with a
slightly agronomic metaphor, of a âhard coreâ of anarchism that must be
surrounded by a âpulpâ of flexible, experimental, disputable, and
absolutely non-dogmatic thought and action âŠ
This would be, in my opinion, both in theory and practice, a more
proficuous definition than the more traditional and negative definitions
of a society (or model of society) âwithout governmentâ or, already
better, âwithout a Stateâ, or, much better, âwithout hierarchy or
dominationâ. Even though, I admit it, there are no lack of good
arguments in favour of a ânegative anarchismâ, that is, to cite the poet
Eugenio Montale, âwe can only say this, what we are not, what we do not
wantâ ⊠Let us leave then to a kind of âprotective beltâ all of the
positive attributes (classical and emergent) of an auspicious model of
anarchist society and all of the strategic and tactical conjectures and
experiences.
We have taken a step forward in the direction of a more complete
verbal-logical, formal definition of the anarchist conception of
freedom. At this point, it may be useful to distinguish between two
categories which roughly correspond to the âpublicâ and the âprivateâ
spheres. This is a logical distinction, rather than a real contrast or
contradiction. The juxtaposition of freedom from politics and freedom in
politics, to use Arendtâs term,[38] is not important here. The anarchist
conception brings together, in Benjamin Constant de Rebequeâs term, the
ancient and the modern ideas of freedom.[39] They are brought together,
while remaining separate.
They must, perhaps, remain formally distinct, if, as Norberto Bobbio
tells us, âthe problem of freedom is how to act in such a way that we
can distinguish a public sphere and a private one, so that man is not
entirely reduced to the citizen.â[40] This gives us two manifestations
of the same phenomenon: of freedom as self-determination and
self-realisation of the human being, of all concrete individual human
beings. Human beings determine and realise themselves by actively and
directly participating in the process of cultural determination, of
socio-historical creation, the process of decision making in the
âpoliticalâ sphere. And human beings determine and realise themselves by
their choices in the âprivateâ sphere, that is, in everything that has
to do with individual life styles.
The first sphere, the public or âpoliticalâ, is that of the generalised
grid of social determinations of behavior. And these determinations may
not be external or extraneous to (imposed on) the individual, but only
if the individual participates in their continual creation and
re-creation (modification or confirmation) on a basis of parity. Only
thus is the second sphere, the âprivateâ, not a residual refuge of
freedom (a âprivatizedâ freedom), but rather the space of another game
of freedom, that of individual freedom within the network of collective
freedom, or rather (as the term âcollectiveâ freedom may be ambiguous)
the collective game of freedom. I use the word âgameâ intentionally as
all games have rules (and it is even a game to invent new rules).[41]
There are, of course, games which are almost completely governed by
rules or by chance, but these are the least enjoyable. Or at least I
think so.
So the juxtaposition of freedom from politics and in politics has
nothing to do with us (as anarchists), it is a dilemma which only faces
those who see politics, the âpublicâ sphere, social norms, as the sphere
of non-freedom, of necessity, or, alternatively, those who want
everything to be controlled, decided and predictable and see individual
freedom as an absurd claim, an intolerable disorder. But for anarchists,
as ĂlisĂ©e Reclus said, âanarchism is the highest form of orderâ âŠ
The problem of the distinction between negative and positive freedom,
between freedom from and freedom to[42] is analogous. It may be useful
on the level of logical analysis for studying and testing the different
conceptions of freedom. It is well-known that positive freedom is prone
to gross mystification. If ârealâ freedom is freedom to move towards the
âGoodâ, a good which may be defined in a hundred different ways, both
religious and lay, everything is possible in the name of ârealâ freedom:
the Gulag, the Inquisition and the like. But a purely negative
conception of freedom is equally liable to mystification, particularly
because it undervalues or even in fact deprives individuals (in the game
of freedom) of that sphere of power, of functions instituted and
controlled by society, which is fundamental to our humanity, to our
being fully human. And even in the private sphere we may only too likely
see the return of an interiorised pseudo-freedom in the form of freedom
from: from sin⊠from our worse nature⊠[43]
It is probably true, as Berlin says, that positive freedom and negative
freedom have generally developed historically in different
directions.[44] But it is not true, it is in fact absolutely false, in
the case of anarchism, which represents the historically most complete
synthesis of the two âfreedomsâ. To the anarchists, both freedoms have
always been closely and strongly linked. They are two ways of saying
essentially the same thing. To return to Bakunin, ââŠnot that
individualistic, egoistic, narrow-minded, sham freedom practised by the
school of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and by all the other school of bourgeois
liberalism, which consider the so-called rights of all, represented by
the State, as the limits on the individual and which inevitably end by
reducing the rights of the single individual to zero ⊠No, I mean ⊠the
freedom that consists of the full development of all material,
intellectual and moral activities that are latent in each and every one
of usâ (my italics).[45]
This brings us to the final knot to be unraveled in my train of thought
(although obviously not to the end of the unending discussion of
freedom). This last knot concerns the existence (or not) of a âneutralâ,
or better, a lay conception, acceptable to different âfaithsâ, even
though a purely neutral conception of freedom, stripped of values, is a
contradiction in terms.[46] Is there or not a conception of freedom
which allows for communication and action, including but not limited to
(and herein lies the problem), the specific anarchist conception of
freedom?
Since we pose the question, we must obviously accept the idea that there
is no one true conception of freedom (that is, ours). The anarchist idea
is âobviouslyâ (for me, us) the most beautiful, the richest, the most
promising, the most in line with human nature⊠But it is not the only
one, nor that one which is the most widespread in the collective
imaginary today. Far from it. It will not, I believe, be difficult to
accept this statement, which is both a statement of fact and a value
judgment (and so in fact the anarchist conception is not and cannot be
the only conception of freedom because freedom, by its very nature,
cannot be reduced to one particular interpretation without denying
itself),[47] and so we must determine whether or not the anarchist
conception of freedom is not only essentially different but also
incompatible with other conceptions.
If we apply the mix of utopia and common sense that I suggested to
anarchists some years ago[48] to this dilemma (which is theoretical, but
also â strongly â practical), I arrive at the almost obvious
hypothetical reply: the freedom of the anarchists is fundamentally
irreducible to other freedoms, however similar they may seem, (the
utopian dimension), but at the same time it is compatible with them (the
common sense dimension). I believe that there is, or at least may be, a
lay idea of freedom in which different conceptions, including the
anarchist one, can confront each other and coexist. Some, but not all,
that is, as the fascist interpretation, to take one example, or the
Leninist one, would automatically be excluded once this lay dimension of
freedom has been more or less broadly defined.
I will try to define it. This is not an easy task, partly because I have
only just started to think about it. We need definitions which are not
overly neutral, as otherwise everything could be included, from
Wojtylaâs âfreedom is wanting what must beâ(1983) to some pseudo-poetsâ
âfreedom to be enslaved by your beautiful black (or blue or greenâŠ)
eyesâ. So not overly neutral, but obviously acceptable in principle to
various doctrinal approaches. In view of my cultural make-up, I am
thinking of the other two great schools of post-Enlightenment thought,
liberalism and socialism (including but not limited to the Marxist
variety). So I am seeking definitions which can appeal to the less
hierarchical minds of these two traditions, to their genuine âweakâ
libertarian (and/or egalitarian) natures. I would like to start with
Berlin: âAnyone who sees a value in freedom in itself has believed that
freedom of choice is an inalienable element of what makes human beings
human. This is the underlying factor in both the positive demand for a
voice in the laws and practices of the society in which one lives, and
in the demand for a personal space .. in which one is oneâs own
master.â[49] Freedom is also a ânegative space in which a man is not
obliged to account for his actions to anyone else as long as this can be
compatible with the existence of an organised society.â[50]
Although a somewhat âweakerâ version than the anarchist one, it includes
both freedom as participation in power and freedom as the arbitrariness
of individual choice (limited only by the âequal freedom of othersâ). It
is, or could be, a basis for a constructive dialogue, together with a
series of struggles for freedom, for individual and collective freedom,
in the âprivateâ and the âpublicâ. We may move progressively, through
âsuccessive dislocationsâ, towards a widespread acceptance of the
anarchist conception of freedom, while still remaining within the âlayâ
context.[51]
âHaving a voiceâ in politics may quite well lead to direct democracy in
the political sphere (that is to say the negation of the State as a
principle of hierarchical organization).[52] âEqual freedomâ may provide
equality and lead quite logically to self-management in the economic
sphere. And the limit of the freedom of others may, also quite
logically, come to seem a pseudo-limit. We may well discover and prove,
both in theory and in practice, that (or better, if, keeping doubt
alive) the equal freedom of all may not reduce but rather reinforce the
freedom of each, of the freedom of all and of everyone.
As, after all, that âgrand old manâ Bakunin said.
Notes
[1] âThe meaning of this term [âŠ] is so porous that it will allow almost
any interpretationâ (I. Berlin, Quattro saggi sulla libertĂ ,
Feltrinelli, Milan, 1988, p. 188). I too would prefer to avoid
âdiscussing either the history of the more than two hundred meanings
that have been recorded for this proteiform term by the historians of
ideasâ (Ibid.).
[2] âFreedom is possibly the most frequently used word in political life
and doctrine⊠It tends to be used by all and sundry to designate
whatever action, institution, directive or political system that they
may hold most dear, from obedience to the law (positive or natural) to
economic well-beingâ (F.E. Oppenheimer, Dimensioni della libertĂ ,
Feltrinelli, Milan, 1982, p. 121).
[3] Quoted in Oppenheimer, op. cit, p. 175.
[4] Quoted in H. Arendt, La Crise de la Culture, Gallimard, Paris, 1989,
p. 209, (my italics).
[5]
A. Lalande, Dizionario critico di filosofia, ISEDI, Torino, 1971.
[6] Quoted in Arendt, op. cit., p. 188.
[7] Quoted in Arendt, op cit., p. 188.
[8] Arendt, op. cit., p. 186.
[9] It is worthwhile considering Karl Popper in this context, as he has
attempted a useful approach to reality that is neither monistic (all is
matter/all is spirit) nor dualistic (matter/spirit). Popper
distinguishes three levels of reality, which he terms World 1, World 2,
World 3. World 1 is the world of physics, chemistry and biology; World 2
of psychology (both human and animal), that of fear, hope, the impulse
to act, of all type experience, including those of the subconscious and
the unconscious; World 3 is the world of the products of the human mind
(works of art, ethical values, social institutions, scientific works,
books, theories â including the false ones as Popper is quick to
specify). This World 3, which only begins with the evolution of a
distinctive human language (âin the beginning there was the Word and the
Word was manâ, one might say) is every bit as real as Worlds 1 and 2,
and its âobjectsâ are in âclose interactionâ with those of the other two
levels of reality (see K. Popper, LâIndeterminisme nâest pas suffisant,
in LâUnivers irresolu, Hermann, Paris, 1984, pp. 93â107).
[10] âWhile, along with Doctor Johnson, Alfred Lande and other sensible
realists, World 1 (see preceding note) is the real model of reality, I
am not for this re but rather a pluralist (Popper, op. cit., p. 107).
[11] âIf man is free so, at least in part, will nature be as wellâ
(Popper, op. cit., p.105); and âOur universe is partly causal, partly
probabilistic and partly openâ (Ibid., p. 107).
[12]
W. Jones, quoted in Berlin, op. cit., p. 13.
[13] Ibid.
[14] âEverything that exists in the universe is the fruit of chance and
of necessityâ (Democritus, quoted in Monod, Il caso e la necessitĂ ,
Mondadori, Milano, 1986, p. 9).
[15] Despite the protests of Einstein, quantum mechanics has introduced
what may be termed a âgod playing diceâ⊠[But] the indeterminism of the
laws of probability, does not, of itself, lead to human liberation. What
we are seeking to understand is not how we can act in an unpredictable
and fortuitous fashion but rather how we can act deliberately and
rationally⊠Indeterminism is necessary but, in itself, is insufficient
to bring about human freedom and creativityâ (Popper, op. cit., pp.
102â103).
[16] This definition is virtually the same as that of Ludovico Geymonat
(La libertĂ , Rusconi, Milano, 1988, p. 27), whose ideas on liberty have
been of little assistance overall.
[17] Moreover, we can also accept the ideas of a âcreativityâ of nature
which goes beyond pure chance and which can be considered as the matrix,
to use Murray Bookchinâs term (The Ecology of Freedom, Cheshire Books,
Palo Alto, 1983), of creativity and so of human freedom, but which is
not totally identifiable with the latter.
[18] âRecent research in anthropology suggests that the prevailing view
that the mental dispositions of men are genetically prior to culture⊠is
incorrect⊠the final stages of the biological evolution of man occurred
after the initial stages of the growth of culture [and] implies thatâŠ
tools, hunting, family organization, and, later, art, religion, and
âscienceâ molded man somaticallyâ (Clifford Geerz, quoted in A. Montagu
(ed.), Man and Aggression, Oxford University Press, New York, 1973, p.
15). Therefore, âmanâs brain began to grow and develop in a simultaneous
feedback interaction with cultureâ (Montagu, Ibid.)
[19] See C. Castoriadis, LâImaginaire: la creation dans le domain
socialhistorique, in Domaines de lâhomme, vol. II, Seuil, Paris, 1986,
pp. 219â237.
[20] Under the selection pressures exerted by the necessity to function
in the dimension of culture, instinctive behavior would have been worse
than useless, and hence would have been negatively selected, assuming
that any remnant of it remained in manâs progenitors. In fact, I also
think it very doubtful that any of the great apes have any instinctsâ
(Montagu, op. cit., p. 15). Or, less extremely, âthe higher the animal
on the evolutionary scale, the more its tendencies are shaped, developed
and organized into behavior by its interactions with its environmentâ.
And, âa number of distinguished zoologists and animal psychologists
insist that even if insects and lower animals are largely guided by
instincts, man himself is almost instinctlessâ (M. Hunt, in Montagu
(ed.), op. cit., p. 21).
[21]
A. Bertolo, Potere, autoritĂ , dominio: una proposta di definizione,
âVolontĂ â, 2/83, p. 59.
[22] âIf we accept classic determinism, we cannot pretend (as do any
philosophers) to be endowed with real freedom and creativityâ (Popper,
op. cit., p. 102). The point of view of classic determinism âleads to
predestination, to the idea that hundreds of thousands of years ago, the
elementary cells contained the poetry of Homer, the philosophy of Plato,
the symphonies of Beethoven, just as the seed contains the flowerâ
(Ibid., p. 105). If determinism was shown to be thus, it would require a
drastic review of all the language of ethicsâ (Berlin, op. cit., p. 22).
âIn effect, the idea of a morally responsible being would be, at best,
the result of a mythâ (Ibid., p. 17) However, âuntil now we have not
been given valid arguments against the openness of the universe or
against the fact that radically new things are continually appearing,
nor have we been given any valid reason to doubt human freedom and
creativityâ (Popper, op. cit., p. 107).
[23] âIf man is free so, at least in part, will nature be as wellâ
(Ibid., p.105); and, âOur universe is partly causal, partly
probabilistic and partly openâ (Ibid., p. 107).
[24] Quoted in G. Giorello, Introduzione to J. Stuart Mill, Saggio sulla
libertĂ , il Saggiatore, Milano, 1984, p. 7. But, following the liberal,
we can turn to what contemporary Italian marxists write: âWe must freeâŠ
difference from its hierarchical elementâ (R. Gagliardi, âII
Bimestraleâ, a supplement to âil manifestoâ, 31-1-1989); and,
âEgalitarianism in social practice, in the concrete dimension of its
conflicts and micro-conflicts, has never [well!!!] attacked difference
but rather hierarchy, never a world of diverse beings but one made up of
inferiors and superiors, of rulers and subjects, inequality as a
principle of command and a system of Dominationâ (M. Bascetta, âII
Bimestraleâ, Ibid., my italics; for I feel like I am dreaming and
reading the words of an anarchist!).
[25]
A. Bertolo, La gramigna sovversiva, in âInterrogationsâ, no. 17â18,
1979, pp. 26â27.
[26] âEach infant differs from the others: no two, except for identical
twins, share a common gene, and even identical twins may differ
phenotypically because of gestational inequalitiesâ (L. Eisenberg, in
Montagu (ed.), op. cit., p. 65).
[27]
C. Castoriadis, Nature et valeur de lâegalitĂ©, in LâExigence dâegalitĂ©,
La Baconniere, Neuchatel, 1982, p. 321.
[28]
A. Bertolo, Power, Authority and Domination, cit., p. 60.
[29]
R. Polin, Les deux soeurs ennemies: egalitĂ© et libertĂ©, in LâExigence
dâegalitĂ©, cit., p. 277.
[30] See, obviously, P. Kropotkin, II mutuo appoggio, Salerno, Roma,
1981.
[31]
A. Ritter, Lâindividuo comunitario, âVolontĂ â, 1/84.
[32]
M. Bakunin, Dio e lo Stato, in Rivolta e LibertĂ (ed. M. Nejrotti),
Editori Riuniti, Roma, 1973, pp. 55â56.
[33] Ibid., p. 71.
[34] With this question I would also like to say that Bakuninâs
definition is not at all a judgment based on fact. That is to say that
it is not freedom that causes âcollective force, but that a freedom can
do so (the anarchist one: âmy freedom grows rather than diminishes with
the freedom of othersâ) if it becomes a central element in the imagined
institution of society.
[35] Bakunin again: âThe unlimited freedom of each by means of the
freedom of all; freedom through solidarity, freedom and equalityâ
(Ibid.)
[36] An âexaggerated freedomâ, as Popper says (SocietĂ aperta, universo
aperto, Borla, Roma, 1984, p. 26).
[37] Or, as Nico Berti said, in their âulteriorizationâ (La dimensione
utopica del pensiero anarchico, âVolontĂ â, 3/81). And again: âFor
anarchists, individual freedom can only be truly realized through the
complete generalization of social equality and social equality can only
be fully realized through the complete generalization of individual
freedomâ (Per un bilancio storico e ideologico dellâanarchismo,
âVolontĂ â, 3/84).
[38] The use of the adjectives, strong and weak, may be misleading as it
seems to indicate a purely quantitative difference; whereas, while
certainly quantitative features of freedom, equality, etc. can be
measured, it is, above all, qualitative.
[39] Arendt, op. cit., p. 194.
[40] âThe ancient citizens wanted the division of social power between
all the citizens of a State: this was what they called freedom⊠The
modern aim is the safeguarding of private well-being and freedom is seen
as the guarantee that the institutions offer for this well-beingâ (B.
Constant, De la liberté des anciens comparée a cette des modernes, 1819,
quoted in C. Viviani, Enciclopedia filosofica, p. 102.
[41] Quoted in Viviani, op. cit., p. 203.
[42] ââŠa system of conditional checks which allows the establishment of
rules of the game which are able to cope with a considerable number of
combinations of actions and wishes, without the threat of a radical
rupture of the entire system with opportunities for qualitative
transgression and complete renewal of the rules of the game which
preside over the formation of a new and different system of freedomâ (F.
Riccio, S. Vaccaro, E. Fiordilino, Il sapere e le sue parole, Ila Palma,
Palermo, 1989, p. 158)
[43] âIf freedom is the absence of obstacles in the way of satisfaction
of a personâs wishes⊠one way of achieving this freedom is to overcome
oneâs own desires⊠Rather than resisting the pressures crushing me or
removing them, I can âinteriorizeâ themâ (Berlin, op. cit., p. 37)
[44] Berlin, op. cit., p. 198.
[45] Bakunin, op. cit., p. 70 (my italics).
[46] It is, of course, possible to look for (and perhaps find) a neutral
definition of freedom, but only if we consider it to be a non-ethical
term â as Oppenheimer, for example, tries to do. But a definition of
this type has no sense and no usefulness in the context that interests
us. We are concerned with freedom as a value, and with one particular
conception of it.
[47] See N. Berti, LibertĂ dellâetica ed etica della libertĂ , âVolontĂ â,
5/87.
[48]
A. Bertolo, Gli ex, il buon senso e lâutopia, âVolontĂ â, 3/85.
[49] My italics are to highlight the internal contradiction (an
involuntary âslipâ â possibly a significant lapse, on libertarian
ground). Berlin in fact cites being oneâs own master as a category in
the order of âpositiveâ freedom and not in the ânegativeâ as in this
sentence.
[50] Both these quotations are found in Berlin, op. cit., p. 57.
[51] And then perhaps to its establishment (necessarily
traumatic/revolutionary, as it is incompatible with the principle of
domination) as a central element in the imaginary institution of
society.
[52] âAnyone who is for freedom must be for being governed as little as
possible and for having the least possible government, and so to moving
towards the absence of government, towards anarchismâ (Popper, SocietĂ
aperta, universo aperto, cit., p. 26) âParticipation in self-government
is, like justice, a fundamental human needâ (Berlin, op. cit., p. 55).