đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș document âș paul-eltzbacher-anarchism captured on 2024-07-09 at 03:23:40. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âŹ ïž Previous capture (2023-07-10)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Anarchism Date: 1900 Source: Retrieved on 10/09/2021 from https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/36690 Notes: Translated from the original German by Steven T. Byington. Published by Benjamin R. Tucker in 1907. Authors: Paul Eltzbacher Topics: Max stirner, Pierre Joseph Proudhon, Mikhail bakunin, PĂ«tr kropotkin, Benjamin tucker, Introductory, Leo tolstoy, William godwin
Je ne propose rien, je ne suppose rien, jâexpose
<em>Gratefully dedicated to the memory of my father</em>
Dr. Salomon Eltzbacher
1832â1889
Every person who examines this book at all will speedily divide its contents into Eltzbacherâs own discussion and his seven chapters of classified quotations from Anarchist leaders; and, if he buys the book, he will buy it for the sake of the quotations. I do not mean that the book might not have a sale if it consisted exclusively of Eltzbacherâs own words, but simply that among ten thousand people who may value Eltzbacherâs discussion there will not be found ten who will not value still more highly the conveniently-arranged reprint of what the Anarchists themselves have said on the cardinal points of Anarchistic thought. Nor do I feel that I am saying anything uncomplimentary to Eltzbacher when I say that the part of his work to which he has devoted most of his space is the part that the public will value most.
And yet there is much to be valued in the chapters that are of Eltzbacherâs own writing,âeven if one is reminded of Sir Arthur Helpsâs satirical description of English lawyers as a class of men, found in a certain island, who make it their business to write highly important documents in closely-crowded lines on such excessively wide pages that the eye is bound to skip a line now and then, but who make up for this by invariably repeating in another part of the document whatever they have said, so that whatever the reader may miss in one place he will certainly catch in another. The fact is that Eltzbacherâs work is an admirable model of what should be the mental processes of an investigator trying to determine the definition of a term which he finds to be confusedly conceived. Not only is his method for determining the definition of Anarchism flawless, but his subsidiary investigation of the definitions of law, the State, and property is conducted as such things ought to be, and (a good test of clearness of thought) his illustrations are always so exactly pertinent that they go far to redeem his style from dullness, if one is reading for the sense and therefore cares for pertinence. The only weak point in this part of the book is that he thinks it necessary to repeat in print his previous statements wherever it is necessary to the investigation that the previous statement be mentally renewed. But, however tiresome this may be, one gets a steady progress of thought, and the introductory part of the book is not very long at worst.
The collection of quotations, which form three-fourths of the book both in bulk and in importance, is as much the best part as it is the biggest. Here the prime necessity is impartiality, and Eltzbacher has attained this as perfectly as can be expected of any man. Positively, one comes to the end of all this without feeling sure whether Eltzbacher is himself an Anarchist or not; it is not until we come to the last dozen pages of the book that he lets his opposition to Anarchism become evident. To be sure, one feels that he is more journalistic than scientific in selecting for special mention the more sensational points of the schemes proposed (the journalistic temper certainly shows itself in his habit of picking out for his German public the references to Germany in Anarchist writers). Yet it is hard to deny that there is legitimate scientific importance in ascertaining how much of the sensational is involved in Anarchism; and, on the other hand, Eltzbacher recognizes his duty to present the strongest points of the Anarchist side, and does this so faithfully that one often wonders if the man can repeat these words without feeling their cogency. So far as any bias is really felt in this part of the book it is the bias of over-methodicalness; now and then a quotation is made to go into the classification at a place where it will not go in without forcing, and perspective is distorted when some **obiter dictum** that had never seemed to its author to be worth repeating a second time is made to serve as illuminant now for this division of the âteaching,â now for that, till it seems to the reader like a favorite topic of the Anarchist. However, the bias of methodicalness is as nearly non-partisan as any bias can be, and its effect is to put the matter into a most convenient form for consultation and comparison.
Next to impartiality, if not even before it, we need intelligence in our compiler; and we have it. Few men, even inside the movement, would have been more successful than Eltzbacher in picking out the important parts of the Anarchist doctrines, and the quotations that will show these important parts as they are. I do not mean that this accuracy has not exceptionsâmany exceptions, if you count such things as the failure to give due weight to some clause which might restrict or modify the application of the words used; a few serious exceptions, of which we reap the fruit in his final summary. But in admitting these errors I do not retract my statement that Eltzbacher has made his compilation as accurate as any man could be expected to. More than this, it may well be said that he has, except in three or four points, made it as accurate as is even useful for ordinary reading; he has overlooked nothing but what his readers would have been sure to overlook if he had presented it. As a gun is advertised to shoot âas straight as any man can hold,â so Eltzbacher has, with three or four exceptions, told his story as straight as any man with ordinary attention can read. The net result is that we have here, without doubt, the most complete and accurate presentation of Anarchism that ever has been given or ever will be given in so short a space. If any one wants a fuller and more trustworthy account, he will positively have to go direct to the writings of the Anarchists themselves; nowhere else can he find anything so good as Eltzbacher. Withal, this main part of the book is decidedly readable. Eltzbacherâs repetitiousness has no opportunity to become prominent here, and the man is not at all dull in choosing and translating his quotations. On the contrary, his fondness for apt illustrations is a great help toward making the compilation constantly readable, as well as toward making the readerâs impressions of the Anarchistic teachings vivid and definite.
I do not mean to say that this book can take the place of a consultation of the original sources. For instance, the Bakunin chapter follows next after the Stirner chapter; but the exquisite contrariness of almost every word of Bakunin to Stirnerâs teaching can be appreciated only by those who have read Stirnerâs bookâEltzbacherâs quotations are on a different aspect of Stirnerâs teaching from that which applies against Bakunin. (Stirner and Bakunin, it will be noted, are the only Anarchist leaders against whom Eltzbacher permits himself a disrespectful word before he has presented their doctrines.) It is to be hoped that many who read this book will go on to examine the sources themselves. Meanwhile, here is an excellent introduction, and the chronological arrangement makes it easy to watch the historical development and see whether the later schools of Anarchism assail the State more effectively than the earlier.
I have not reserved any expressions of praise for the small part of the book which comes after the compiled chapters, because it calls for none. All Eltzbacherâs weak points come out in this concluding summary; the best that can be said for it is that it deserves careful attention, and that the author continues to be oftener right than wrong. But now that he has gathered all his knowledge he wants it to amount to omniscience, and most imprudently shuts his eyes to the places where there is nothing under his feet. He charges men with error for not using in his sense a term whose definition he has not undertaken to determine. He accepts all too unquestioningly such statements as fit most conveniently into his scheme of method. His most glaring offence in this direction is his classification of the Anarchist-Communist doctrines as mere prediction and not the expression of a will or demand or approval or disapproval of anything, simply because the fashionableness of evolutionism and of fatalism has led the leaders of that school to prefer to state their doctrine in terms of prediction. Eltzbacher has forgotten to compare his judgment with the actions of the men he judges; **solvitur ambulando**; if Kropotkinâs proposition were merely predictive and not pragmatic, it would have less trouble with the police than it has. Again, he does one of the most indiscreet things that are possible to a votary of strict method when he asserts repeatedly that he has listed not merely all that is to be found but all that could possibly exist under a certain category. For instance, he declares that every possible affirmative doctrine of property must be either private property, or common property in the wherewithal for production and private property in the wherewithal for consumption, or common property. Why should not a scheme of common property in the things that are wanted by all men and private property in the things that are wanted only by some men have as high a rank in the classification as has Eltzbacherâs second class? A look at the quotations from Kropotkin will show that I have not drawn much on my own ingenuity in conceiving such a scheme as supposable. He claims to have listed all the standpoints from which Anarchism has been or can be propounded or judged, yet he has omitted legitimism, the doctrine that a political authority which is to claim our respect and obedience must appear to have originated by a legitimate foundation and not by usurpation. The great part that legitimism has played in history is notorious; and it lends itself very readily to the Anarchistâs purpose, since some governments are so well known to have originated in usurpation and others are so easily suspected of it. Nay, legitimism is in fact a potent factor in shaping the most up-to-date Anarchism of our time; for it is largely concerned in Lysander Spoonerâs doctrine of juries, of which some slight account is given in Eltzbacherâs quotations from Tucker. And he claims to have recited all the important arguments that sustain Anarchism: where has he mentioned the argument from the evil that the State does in interfering with social and economic experimentation? or the argument from the fact that reforms in the State are necessarily in a democracy, and ordinarily in a monarchy, very slow in coming to pass, and when they do come to pass they necessarily come with all-disturbing suddenness? or the argument from the evil of separating people by the boundary lines which the State involves? or the fact that war would be almost inconceivable if the States were replaced by voluntary and non-monopolistic organizations, since such organizations could have no âjurisdictionâ or control of territory to fight for, and war for any other cause has long been unknown among civilized nations? By these and other such unwarranted claims of absolute completeness, and by the conclusions based on these pasteboard premises, Eltzbacher makes it necessary to read his final chapters with all possible independence of judgment.
It remains for me to say something of my own work on this book. I have consulted the originals of some of the works citedâsuch as circumstances have permittedâand given the quotations not by translation from Eltzbacherâs German but direct from the originals. The particulars are as follows:
Of Godwinâs âPolitical Justiceâ I used an American reprint of the second British edition. This second edition is greatly revised and altered from the first, which Eltzbacher used. Godwin calls our attention to this, and especially informs us that the first edition did not in some important respects represent the views which he held at the time of its publication, since the earlier pages were printed before the later were written, and during the writing of the book he changed his mind about some of the principles he had asserted in the earlier chapters. In the second edition, he says, the views presented in the first part of the book have been made consistent with those in the last part, and all parts have been thoroughly revised. It will astonish nobody, therefore, that I found it now and then impossible to identify in my copy the passages translated by Eltzbacher from the first edition. In particular, I got the impression that what Eltzbacher quotes about promises, from the first part of the book, is one of those sections which Godwin says he retracts and no longer believed in even at the time he wrote the later chapters of the first edition. If so, a bit of the foundation for Eltzbacherâs ultimate classification disappears. Besides giving the pages of the first edition as in Eltzbacher, I have added in brackets the page numbers of the copy I used, wherever I could identify them. Throughout the book brackets distinguish footnotes added by me from Eltzbacherâs own, and in a few places I have used them in the text to indicate Eltzbacherâs deviations from the wording of his original, of which matter I will speak again in a moment.
The passages from Proudhonâs works I translated from the original French as given in the collected edition of his â**Ćuvres complĂštes**.â In this edition some of the works differ only in pagination from the editions which Eltzbacher used, while others have been extensively revised. I know of no changes of essential doctrine.
Since in Stirnerâs case German is the original language, I have accepted as my original the quotations given by Eltzbacher. It is probable that they are occasionally condensed; but a fairly faithful memory, and the fact that it is less than a year since I was reading the proofs of my translation of Stirnerâs book, enable me to be confident that there is no change amounting to distortion. I have here made no use of that translation of mine[1] except from memory, because I well knew that in dealing with Stirner there is no assurance that the best possible translation of the continuous whole will be made up of the best possible translations of the individual parts. Neither have I used the extant English translations of Bakuninâs âGod and the State,â Kropotkinâs âConquest of Bread,â Tolstoiâs works, or any of the other books cited. I have not had at hand any originals of Bakunin or Tolstoi, nor any of Kropotkin except âAnarchist Communism.â Of this I had the first edition, and Eltzbacher, contrary to his habit, the second; but I judge that the two are from the same plates, for all the page-numbers cited agree.
Toward the Tucker chapter I have taken a special attitude. I am myself one of Tuckerâs followers and collaborators; I may claim to be an âauthorityâ on the exposition of his doctrineâ
<em>Nennt man die besten Namen,</em>
<em>So wird auch der meine genannt</em>â
and I have tried to have an eye to the precise correctness of everything in that chapter. That I used the original of âInstead of a Bookâ is a matter of course; and I have not only taken Tuckerâs words where Eltzbacher had translated the whole, but have had an eye to all points where Eltzbacher had condensed anything in a way that could affect the sense, and have restored the words that made the passage mean something a little bit different from what Eltzbacher made it mean. (I did about the same in this respect with Kropotkinâs âAnarchist Communismâ; and indeed something of the kind is inevitable if one is to consult originals at all.) On the other hand, I have not, in general, drawn attention to passages where Eltzbacher makes merely formal changes for the purpose of inserting in a sentence of a certain grammatical structure what Tucker had said in a sentence of different structure.
The renderings of Tolstoiâs biblical quotations are taken from the âCorrected English New Testament,â a conservative version which is now spoken of as the best English New Testament extant. It fits well into Tolstoi, at least so far as the present quotations go.
I have spoken above of Eltzbacherâs qualities as compiler; it here becomes necessary to say something of his work as translator. His translation is that of a very intelligent man, trusting to his intelligence to justify him in translating quite freely. He is confident that he knows what the idea to be presented is, and his main concern is to express that in the language best suited to the purpose. He even avows, as will be seen, that he has âcautiously revisedâ other peopleâs translations from the Russian, without himself claiming to be familiar with the Russian language. I would as soon entrust this extremely delicate task to Eltzbacher as to anybody I know, for he is in general remarkably correct in his re-wordings. The justification of his confidence in his knowledge of the authorâs thought may be seen in the fact that in passages which happen not to affect the main thought he makes a few such slips as **zahlen mit ihrer Vergiftung** for âpay to be poisoned,â **Willkuer** for âarbitrament,â and even **eine blutige Revolution ruecksichtslos niederwuerfe** for âwould do anything in his power to precipitate a bloody revolutionâ (can he have been misled by the chemistâs use of âprecipitateâ?), but in passages where these blunders would do real harm he keeps clear of them, being safeguarded by his knowledge of the sense. But it makes a difference whom you translate in this way. Tucker is a man who uses language with especial precision: every phrase in a sentence of his may be presumed to contribute something definite to the thought; and Eltzbacher treats him as if the less conspicuous phrases were merely ornamental work which might safely be omitted or amended when they seemed not to be advantageous for ornamental purposes. I must confess that I have little faith in the Eltzbacher method of translation for the rendering of any author; but it works especially ill with an author like Tucker.
Of course all defects of translation are cured, silently, by substituting the original English. Therefore, at the expense of slightly increasing the bulk of the Tucker chapter, this edition gives American readers a much more accurate presentation of the utterances of the American champion of Anarchism than can be had in Eltzbacherâs German; and, since I have the same advantage as regards Godwin, I think I may claim in general terms that mine is the best edition of Eltzbacher for those who read both English and German.
Besides looking out for the accurate presentation of the passages quoted from Tucker, I have kept watch of the correctness of the subject-matter. Whatever seemed to me to represent Tuckerâs book unfairly, either by misrepresenting his doctrine or by misapplying the quotations, has been corrected by a note. This will be useful to the reader not only by giving him a better Tucker, but also by giving a sample from which he may judge what amount of fault the followers of Kropotkin or Tolstoi or the rest would be likely to find with the chapters devoted to them. The merely popular reader will probably get the impression that Eltzbacher is really a rather unreliable man. The competent student, who knows what must be looked out for in all work of this sort, will have his confidence in Eltzbacher increased by seeing how little of serious fault appears in such a search.
The index is compiled independently for this translation. Omitting such entries as merely duplicate the utility of the table of contents, and making an effort to head every entry with the word under which the reader will actually seek it, I hope I have bettered Eltzbacherâs index; and I hope the index will be not only a place-finder but a help toward the appreciation of the Anarchistic teachings.
I have not in general undertaken to criticise those features of the book which embody Eltzbacherâs own opinions. Whether it was in fact right to select these seven men as the touchstone of Anarchism,âwhether Eltzbacher is right in discussing the definition of the State as he does, or whether he might better simply have taken as authoritative that definition which has legal force in international law,âwhether he ought to have added any other feature to his book,âare points on which the reader does not care for my judgment, nor am I eager to express a judgment. Having had to work over the book very carefully in detail, I have felt entitled to express an opinion as to how well Eltzbacher has done the work that he did choose to do; I have also told what work I as translator claim to have done; and it is time this preface ended.
Steven T. Byington.
<em>Ballardvale, Mass., August 28, 1907.</em>
[1] Entitled âThe Ego and His Own.â N. Y., Benj. R. Tucker, 1907
Adler, âHandwoerterbuchâ = Georg Adler, âAnarchismus,â in **Handwoerterbuch der Staatswissenschaften**, 2d ed. (Jena 1898), vol. 1 pp. 296â327.
Adler, âNord und Suedâ = Georg Adler, âDie Lehren der Anarchisten,â in **Nord und Sued** (Breslau) vol. 32 (1885) pp. 371â83.
Ba. âArticlesâ = âArticles Ă©crits par Bakounine dans lâEgalitĂ© de 1869,â in **MĂ©moire prĂ©sentĂ© par la fĂ©dĂ©ration jurassienne de lâAssociation internationale des travailleurs Ă toutes les fĂ©dĂ©rations de lâInternationale** (Sonvillier, n. d.), âPiĂšces justificativesâ pp. 68â114.
Ba. âBriefeâ = âBriefe Bakunins,â in Dragomanoff (see below) pp. 1â272.
Ba. âDieuâ = Michel Bakounine, **Dieu et lâEtat**, 2d ed. (Paris 1892).
Ba. âDieuâ Ćuvres = âDieu et lâEtat,â in Michel Bakounine, **Ćuvres**, 3d ed. (Paris 1895), pp. 261â326.
Ba. âDiscoursâ = âDiscours de Bakounine au congrĂšs de Berne,â in **MĂ©moire prĂ©sentĂ© par la fĂ©dĂ©ration jurassienne de lâAssociation internationale des travailleurs Ă toutes les fĂ©dĂ©rations de lâInternationale** (Sonvillier, n. d.), âPiĂšces justificativesâ pp. 20â38.
Ba. âProgrammeâ = Bakounine, âProgramme de la section slave Ă Zurich,â in Dragomanoff (see below) pp. 381â3.
Ba. âPropositionâ = âFĂ©dĂ©ralisme, socialisme et antithĂ©ologisme. Proposition motivĂ©e au ComitĂ© central de la Ligue de la paix et de la libertĂ©,â in Michel Bakounine, **Ćuvres**, 3d ed. (Paris 1895), pp. 1â205.
Ba. âStatutsâ = âStatuts secrets de lâAllianceâ and âProgramme et rĂšglement de lâAlliance publique,â in âLâAllianceâ (see below) pp. 118â35.
Ba. âVolkssacheâ = M. Bakunin, âDie Volkssache. Romanow, Pugatschew oder Pestel?â in Dragomanoff (see below) pp. 303â9.
Bernatzik = Bernatzik, âDer Anarchismus,â in **Jahrbuch fuer Gesetzgebung, Verwaltung und Volkswirtschaft im Deutschen Reich** (Leipzig) vol. 19 (1895) pp. 1â20.
Bernstein = Eduard Bernstein, âDie soziale Doktrin des Anarchismus,â in **Die Neue Zeit** (Stuttgart) year 10 (1891â2) vol. 1 pp. 358â65, 421â8; vol. 2 pp. 589â96, 618â26, 657â66, 772â8, 813â19.
Crispi = Francesco Crispi, âThe Antidote for Anarchy,â in **Daily Mail** (London) no. 807 (1898) p. 4.
âDer Anarchismus und seine Traegerâ = **Der Anarchismus und seine Traeger. Enthuellungen aus dem Lager der Anarchisten von** [symbol: circle in triangle], **Verfasser der Londoner Briefe in der Koelnischen Zeitung** (Berlin 1887).
âDie historische Entwickelung des Anarchismusâ = **Die historische Entwickelung des Anarchismus** (New York 1894).
Diehl = Karl Diehl, **P.-J. Proudhon**. **Seine Lehre und sein Leben.** (3 vol., Jena 1888â96.)
Dragomanoff = Michail Dragomanow, **Michail Bakunins sozial-politischer Briefwechsel mit Alexander Iw. Herzen und Ogarjow, deutsch von Boris MinzĂšs** (Stuttgart 1895).
Dubois = Felix Dubois, **Le PĂ©ril anarchiste** (Paris 1894).
Ferri = âDiscours de Ferriâ in **CongrĂšs international dâanthropologie criminelle, compte rendu des travaux de la quatriĂšme session, tenue Ă GenĂšve du 24 au 29 aoĂ»t 1896** (GenĂšve 1897) pp. 254â7.
Garraud = R. Garraud, **LâAnarchie et la RĂ©pression** (Paris 1895).
Godwin = William Godwin, **An Enquiry concerning Political Justice and its Influence on General Virtue and Happiness** (2 vol., London 1793). [Bracketed references are to the âFirst American from the second London edition, corrected,â Philadelphia, 1796.]
âHintermaennerâ = **Die Hintermaenner der Sozialdemokratie. Von einem Eingeweihten** (Berlin 1890).
Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ = Peter Kropotkine, **Anarchist Communism: its Basis and Principles**, 2d ed. (London 1895). [Reprinted from the **Nineteenth Century**.]
Kr. âConquĂȘteâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **La ConquĂȘte du pain**, 5th ed. (Paris 1895).
Kr. âLâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialisteâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste** (Paris 1892).
Kr. âLâAnarchie. Sa philosophieâson idĂ©alâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **LâAnarchie. Sa philosophieâson idĂ©al** (Paris 1896).
Kr. âMoraleâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **La Morale anarchiste** (Paris 1891).
Kr. âParolesâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **Paroles dâun rĂ©voltĂ©, ouvrage publiĂ© par ElisĂ©e RĂ©clus, nouv. Ă©d**. (Paris, n. d.)
Kr. âPrisonsâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **Les Prisons** (Paris 1890).
Kr. âSiĂšcleâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **Un siĂšcle dâattente. 1789â1889** (Paris 1893).
Kr. âStudiesâ = **Revolutionary Studies, translated from âLa RĂ©volteâ and reprinted from âThe Commonwealâ** (London 1892).
Kr. âTemps nouveauxâ = Pierre Kropotkine, **Les Temps nouveaux (confĂ©rence faite Ă Londres)** (Paris 1894).
âLâAllianceâ = **LâAlliance de la dĂ©mocratie socialiste et lâAssociation internationale des travailleurs** (Londres et Hambourg 1873).
Lenz = Adolf Lenz, **Der Anarchismus und das Strafrecht. Sonderabdruck aus der Zeitschrift fuer die gesamte Strafrechtswissenschaft, Bd. 16, Heft 1** (Berlin, n. d.).
Lombroso = C. Lombroso, **Gli Anarchici**, 2d ed. (Torino 1895).
Mackay, âAnarchistenâ = John Henry Mackay, **Die Anarchisten. Kulturgemaelde aus dem Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts**. Volksausgabe (Berlin 1893).
Mackay, âMagazinâ = John Henry Mackay, âDer individualistische Anarchismus: ein Gegner der Propaganda der That,â in **Das Magazin fuer Litteratur** (Berlin und Weimar) vol. 67 (1898) pp. 913â15.
Mackay, âStirnerâ = John Henry Mackay, **Max Stirner. Sein Leben und sein Werk** (Berlin 1898).
Merlino = F. S. Merlino, **LâIndividualismo nellâanarchismo** (Roma 1895).
Pfau = âProudhon und die Franzosen,â in Ludwig Pfau, **Kunst und Kritik**, vol. 6 of **Aesthetische Schriften**, 2d ed. (Stuttgart, Leipzig, Berlin, 1888), pp. 183â236.
Plechanow = Georg Plechanow, **Anarchismus und Sozialismus** (Berlin 1894).
Pr. âBanqueâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **Banque du peuple, suivie du rapport de la commission des dĂ©lĂ©guĂ©s du Luxembourg** (Paris 1849). (In Proudhonâs **Ćuvres complĂštes**, Paris 1866â83, this forms part of the volume âSolution.â)
Pr. âContradictionsâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **SystĂšme des contradictions Ă©conomiques, ou philosophie de la misĂšre** (2 vol., Paris 1846).
Pr. âConfessionsâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **Les Confessions dâun rĂ©volutionnaire, pour servir Ă lâhistoire de la rĂ©volution de fĂ©vrier** (Paris 1849).
Pr. âDroitâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **Le Droit au travail et le Droit de propriĂ©tĂ©** (Paris 1848). (In the **Ćuvres** this forms part of the volume âLa RĂ©volution sociale.â)
Pr. âIdĂ©eâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **IdĂ©e gĂ©nĂ©rate de la rĂ©volution au XIXe siĂšcle (choix dâĂ©tudes sur la pratique rĂ©volutionnaire et industrielle)** (Paris 1851).
Pr. âJusticeâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **De la justice dans la rĂ©volution et dans lâEglise. Nouveaux principes de philosophie pratique** (3 vol., Paris 1858).
Pr. âOrganisationâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **Organisation du crĂ©dit et de la circulation, et solution du problĂšme social** (Paris 1848). (In the **Ćuvres** this forms part of the volume âSolution.â)
Pr. âPrincipeâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **Du principe fĂ©dĂ©ratif et de la nĂ©cessitĂ© de reconstituer le parti de la rĂ©volution** (Paris 1863).
Pr. âPropriĂ©tĂ©â = P.-J. Proudhon, **Quâest-ce que la propriĂ©tĂ©? ou recherches sur le principe du droit et du gouvernement. Premier mĂ©moire** (Paris 1841).
Pr. âSolutionâ = P.-J. Proudhon, **Solution du problĂšme social** (Paris 1848).
Proal = Louis Proal, **La Criminalité politique** (Paris 1895).
Reichesberg = Naum Reichesberg, **Sozialismus und Anarchismus** (Bern und Leipzig 1895).
Rienzi = Rienzi, **LâAnarchisme, traduit du nĂ©erlandais par August Dewinne** (Bruxelles 1893).
Sernicoli = E. Sernicoli, **LâAnarchia e gli Anarchici. Studio storico e politico di E. Sernicoli** (2 vol., Milano 1894).
Shaw = George Bernard Shaw, **The Impossibilities of Anarchism** (London 1895).
Silio = Cesar Silio, âEl Anarquismo y la Defensa Social,â in **La Espana Moderna** (Madrid) vol. 61 (1894) pp. 141â8.
Stammler = Rudolf Stammler, **Die Theorie des Anarchismus** (Berlin 1894).
Stirner = Max Stirner, **Der Einzige und sein Eigentum** (Leipzig 1845).
Stirner âVierteljahrsschriftâ = M. St., âRezensenten Stirners,â in **Wigands Vierteljahrsschrift** (Leipzig) vol. 3 (1845) pp. 147â94.
To. âConfessionâ = Graf Leo Tolstoj, **Bekenntnisse. Was sollen wir denn thun? deutsch von H. von Samson-Himmelstjerna** (Leipzig 1886), pp. 1â102.
To. âGospelâ = Graf Leo N. Tolstoj, **Kurze Darlegung des Evangeliums, deutsch von Paul Lauterbach** (Leipzig, n. d.).
To. âKernelâ = âDas Korn,â in Graf Leo N. Tolstoj, **Volkserzaehlungen, deutsch von Wilhelm Goldschmidt** (Leipzig, n. d.), pp. 87â9.
To. âKingdomâ = Leo N. Tolstoj, **Das Reich Gottes ist in** **euch, oder das Christentum als eine neue Lebensauffassung, nicht als mystische Lehre, deutsch von R. Loewenfeld** (Stuttgart, Leipzig, Berlin, Wien, 1894).
To. âLinen-Measurerâ = âLeinwandmesser. Die Geschichte eines Pferdes,â in **Leo N. Tolstoj**, **Gesammelte Werke, deutsch herausgegeben von Raphael Loewenfeld**, vol. 3 (Berlin 1893) pp. 573â631.
To. âMoneyâ = Graf Leo Tolstoj, **Geld! Soziale Betrachtungen, deutsch von August Scholz** (Berlin 1891).
To. âMorningâ = âDer Morgen des Gutsherrn,â in Leo N. Tolstoj, **Gesammelte Werke, deutsch herausgegeben von Raphael Loewenfeld**, vol. 2, 2d ed. (Leipzig, n. d.), pp. 1â81.
To. âOn Lifeâ = Graf Leo Tolstoj, **Ueber das Leben, deutsch von Sophie Behr** (Leipzig 1889).
To. âPatriotismâ = Graf Leo N. Tolstoj, **Christentum und Vaterlandsliebe, deutsch von L. A. Hauff** (Berlin n. d.).
To. âPersecutionsâ = **Russische Christenverfolgungen im Kaukasus. Mit einem Vor- und Nachwort von Leo Tolstoj** (Dresden und Leipzig 1896) pp. 7â8, 38â48.
To. âReason and Dogmaâ = Graf Leo N. Tolstoj, **Vernunft und Dogma. Eine Kritik der Glaubenslehre, deutsch von L. A. Hauff** (Berlin n. d.).
To. âReligion and Moralityâ = Graf Leo Tolstoj, **Religion und Moral. Antwort auf eine in der âEthischen Kulturâ gestellte Frage, deutsch von Sophie Behr** (Berlin 1894).
To. âWhat I Believeâ = Graf Leo Tolstoj, **Worin besteht mein Glaube? Eine Studie, deutsch von Sophie Behr** (Leipzig 1885).
To. âWhat Shall We Doâ = Graf Leo Tolstoj, **Was sollen wir also thun? deutsch von August Scholz** (Berlin 1891).
Tripels = âDiscours de Tripels,â in **CongrĂšs international dâanthropologie criminelle, compte rendu des travaux de la quatriĂšme session, tenue Ă GenĂšve du 24 au 29 aoĂ»t 1896** (GenĂšve 1897) pp. 253â4.
Tucker = Benj. R. Tucker, **Instead of a Book. By a Man Too Busy to Write One. A fragmentary exposition of philosophical Anarchism** (New York 1893).
Van Hamel = Van Hamel, âLâAnarchisme et le Combat contre lâanarchisme au point de vue de lâanthropologie criminelle,â in **CongrĂšs international dâanthropologie criminelle, compte rendu des travaux de la quatriĂšme session, tenue Ă GenĂšve du 24 au 29 aoĂ»t 1896** (GenĂšve 1897) pp. 254â7.
Zenker = E. V. Zenker, **Der Anarchismus. Kritische Geschichte der anarchistischen Theorie** (Jena 1895).
1. We want to know Anarchism scientifically, for reasons both personal and external.
We wish to penetrate the essence of a movement that dares to question what is undoubted and to deny what is venerable, and nevertheless takes hold of wider and wider circles.
Besides, we wish to make up our minds whether it is not necessary to meet such a movement with force, to protect the established order or at least its quiet progressive development, and, by ruthless measures, to guard against greater evils.
2. At present there is the greatest lack of clear ideas about Anarchism, and that not only among the masses but among scholars and statesmen.
Now it is a historic law of evolution[2] that is described as the supreme law of Anarchism, now it is the happiness of the individual,[3] now justice.[4]
Now they say that Anarchism culminates in the negation of every programme,[5] that it has only a negative aim;[6] now, again, that its negating and destroying side is balanced by a side that is affirmative and creative;[7] now, to conclude, that what is original in Anarchism is to be found exclusively in its utterances about the ideal society,[8] that its real, true essence consists in its positive efforts.[9]
Now it is said that Anarchism rejects law,[10] now that it rejects society,[11] now that it rejects only the State.[12]
Now it is declared that in the future society of Anarchism there is no tie of contract binding persons together;[13] now, again, that Anarchism aims to have all public affairs arranged for by contracts between federally constituted communes and societies.[14]
Now it is said in general that Anarchism rejects property,[15] or at least private property;[16] now a distinction is made between Communistic and Individualistic,[17] or even between Communistic, Collectivistic, and Individualistic Anarchism.[18]
Now it is asserted that Anarchism conceives of its realization as taking place through crime,[19] especially through a violent revolution[20] and by the help of the propaganda of deed;[21] now, again, that Anarchism rejects violent tactics and the propaganda of deed,[22] or that these are at least not necessary constituents of Anarchism.[23]
3. Two demands must be made of everybody who undertakes to produce a scientific work on Anarchism.
First, he must be acquainted with the most important Anarchistic writings. Here, to be sure, one meets great difficulties. Anarchistic writings are very scantily represented in our public libraries. They are in part so rare that it is extremely difficult for an individual to acquire even the most prominent of them. So it is not strange that of all works on Anarchism only one is based on a comprehensive knowledge of the sources. This is a pamphlet which appeared anonymously in New York in 1894, â**Die historische Entwickelung des Anarchismus**â which in sixteen pages gives a concise presentation that attests an astonishing acquaintance with the most various Anarchistic writings. The two large works, **âLâanarchia e gli anarchici, studio storico e politico di E. Sernicoli**â 2 vol., Milano, 1894, and â**Der Anarchismus, kritische Geschichte der anarchistischen Theorie von E. V. Zenker**,â Jena, 1895, are at least in part founded on a knowledge of Anarchistic writings.
Second, he who would produce a scientific work on Anarchism must be equally at home in jurisprudence, in economics, and in philosophy. Anarchism judges juridical institutions with reference to their economic effects, and from the standpoint of some philosophy or other. Therefore, to penetrate its essence and not fall a victim to all possible misunderstandings, one must be familiar with those concepts of philosophy, jurisprudence, and economics which it applies or has a relation to. This demand is best met, among all works on Anarchism, by Rudolf Stammlerâs pamphlet, â**Die Theorie des Anarchismus**,â Berlin, 1894.
[2] â**Der Anarchismus und seine Traeger**â pp. 124, 125, 127; Reichesberg p. 27.
[3] Lenz p. 3.
[4] Bernatzik pp. 2, 3.
[5] Lenz p. 5.
[6] Crispi.
[7] Van Hamel p. 112.
[8] Adler p. 321.
[9] Reichesberg p. 13.
[10] Stammler pp. 2, 4, 34, 36; Lenz pp. 1, 4.
[11] SiliĂł p. 145; Garraud p. 12; Reichesberg p. 16; Tripels p. 253.
[12] Bernstein p. 359; Bernatzik p. 3.
[13] Reichesberg p. 30.
[14] Lombroso p. 31.
[15] SiliĂł p. 145; Dubois p. 213.
[16] Lombroso p. 31; Proal p. 50.
[17] Rienzi p. 9; Stammler pp. 28â31; Merlino pp. 18, 27; Shaw p. 23.
[18] â**Die historische Entwickelung des Anarchismus**â p. 16; Zenker p. 161.
[19] Garraud p. 6; Lenz p. 5.
[20] Sernicoli vol. 2 p. 116; Garraud p. 2; Reichesberg p. 38; Van Hamel p. 113.
[21] Garraud pp. 10, 11; Lombroso p. 34; Ferri p. 257.
[22] Mackay â**Magazin**â pp. 913â915; â**Anarchisten**â pp. 239â243.
[23] Zenker pp. 203, 204.
The problem for our study is, to get determinate concepts of Anarchism and its species. As soon as such determinate concepts are attained, Anarchism is scientifically known. For their determination is not only conditioned on a comprehensive view of all the individual phenomena of Anarchism; it also brings together the results of this comprehensive view, and assigns to them a place in the totality of our knowledge.
The problem of getting determinate concepts of Anarchism and its species seems at a first glance perfectly clear. But the apparent clearness vanishes on closer examination.
For there rises first the question, what shall be the starting-point of our study? The answer will be given, âAnarchistic teachings.â But there is by no means an agreement as to what teachings are Anarchistic; one man designates as âAnarchisticâ these teachings, another those; and of the teachings themselves a part designate themselves as Anarchistic, a part do not. How can one take any of them as Anarchistic teachings for a starting-point, without applying that very concept of Anarchism which he has yet to determine?
Then rises the further question, what is the goal of the study? The answer will be given, âthe concepts of Anarchism and its species.â But we see daily that different men define in quite different ways the concept of an object which they yet conceive in the same way. One says that law is the general will; another, that it is a mass of precepts which limit a manâs natural liberty for other menâs sake; a third, that it is the ordering of the life of the nation (or of the community of nations) to maintain Godâs order of the world. They all know that a definition should state the proximate genus and the distinctive marks of the species, but this knowledge does them little good. So it seems that the goal of the study does still require elucidation.
Lastly rises the question, what is the way to this goal? Any one who has ever observed the conflict of opinions in the intellectual sciences knows well, on the one hand, how utterly we lack a recognized method for the solution of problems; and, on the other hand, how necessary it is in any study to get clearly in mind the method that is to be used.
2. Our study can come to a more precise specification of its problem. The problem is to put concepts in the place of non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species.
Every concept-determining study faces the problem of comprehending conceptually an object that was first comprehended non-conceptually, and therefore of putting a concept in the place of non-conceptual notions of an object. This problem finds a specially clear expression in the concept-determining judgment (the definition), which puts in immediate juxtaposition, in its subject some non-conceptual notion of an object, and in its predicate a conceptual notion of the same object.
Accordingly, the study that is to determine the concepts of Anarchism and its species has for its problem to comprehend conceptually objects that are first comprehended in non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species; and therefore, to put concepts in the place of these non-conceptual notions.
3. But our study may specify its problem still more precisely, though at first only on the negative side. The problem is not to put concepts in the place of all notions that appear as non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species.
Any concept can comprehend conceptually only one object, not another object together with this. The concept of health cannot be at the same time the concept of life, nor the concept of the horse that of the mammal.
But in the non-conceptual notions that appear as notions of Anarchism and its species there are comprehended very different objects. To be sure, the object of all these notions is on the one hand a genus that is formed by the common qualities of certain teachings, and on the other hand the species of this genus, which are formed by the addition of sundry peculiarities to these common qualities. But still these notions have in view very different groups of teachings with their common and special qualities, some perhaps only the teachings of Kropotkin and Most, others only the teachings of Stirner, Tucker, and Mackay, others again the teachings of both sets of authors.
If one proposed to put concepts in the place of all the non-conceptual notions which appear as notions of Anarchism and its species, these concepts would have to comprehend at once the common and special qualities of quite different groups of teachings, of which groups one might embrace only the teachings of Kropotkin and Most, another only those of Stirner, Tucker, and Mackay, a third both. But this is impossible: the concepts of Anarchism and its species can comprehend only the common and special qualities of a single group of teachings; therefore our study cannot put concepts in the place of all the notions that appear as notions of Anarchism and its species.
4. By completing on the affirmative side this negative specification of its problem, our study can arrive at a still more precise specification of this problem. The problem is to put concepts in the place of those non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species, having in view one and the same group of teachings, which are most widely diffused among the men who at present are scientifically concerned with Anarchism.
Because the only possible problem for our study is to put concepts in the place of part of the notions that appear as non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species,âto wit, only in the place of such notions as have in view one and the same group of teachings with its common and special qualities,âtherefore we must divide into classes, according to the groups of teachings that they severally have in view, the notions that appear as notions of Anarchism and its species, and we must choose the class whose notions are to be replaced by concepts.
The choice of the class must depend on the kind of men for whom the study is meant. For the study of a concept is of value only for those who non-conceptually apprehend the object of the concept, since the concept takes the place of their notions only. For those who form a non-conceptual notion of space, the concept of morality is so far meaningless; and just as meaningless, for those who mean by Anarchism what the teachings of Proudhon and Stirner have in common, is the concept of what is common to the teachings of Proudhon, Stirner, Bakunin, and Kropotkin.
But the men for whom this study is meant are those who at present are scientifically concerned with Anarchism. If all these, in their notions of Anarchism and its species, had in view one and the same group of teachings, then the problem for our study would be to put concepts in the place of this set of notions. Since this is not the case, the only possible problem for our study is to put concepts in the place of that set of notions which has in view a group of teachings that the greatest possible number of the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism have in view in their non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species.
In accordance with what has been said, the starting-point of our study must be those non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species, having in view one and the same group of teachings, which are most widely diffused among the men who at present are scientifically concerned with Anarchism.
1. How can it be known what group of teachings the non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species most widely diffused among the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism have in view?
First and foremost, this may be seen from utterances regarding particular Anarchistic teachings, and from lists and descriptions of such teachings.
We may assume that a man regards as Anarchistic those teachings which he designates as Anarchistic, and, further, those teachings which are likewise characterized by the common qualities of these. We may further assume that a man does not regard as Anarchistic those teachings which he in any form contrasts with the Anarchistic teachings, nor, if he undertakes to catalogue or describe the whole body of Anarchistic teachings, those teachings unknown to him which are not characterized by the common qualities of the teachings he catalogues or describes.
What group of teachings those non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species which are most widely diffused among the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism have in view, may be seen secondly from the definitions of Anarchism and from other utterances about it. We may doubtingly assume that a man regards as Anarchistic those teachings which come under his definition of Anarchism, or for which his utterances about Anarchism hold good; and, on the contrary, that he does not regard as Anarchistic those teachings which do not come under that definition, or for which these utterances do not hold good.
When these two means of knowledge lead to contradictions, the former must be decisive. For, if a man so defines Anarchism, or so speaks of Anarchism, that on this basis teachings which he declares non-Anarchistic manifest themselves to be Anarchistic,âand perhaps other teachings, which he counts among the Anarchistic, to be non-Anarchistic,âthis can be due only to his not being conscious of the scope of his general pronouncements; therefore it is only from his treatment of the individual teachings that one can find out his opinion of these.
2. These means of knowledge inform us what group of teachings the non-conceptual notions of Anarchism and its species most widely diffused among the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism have in view.
We learn, first, that the teachings of certain particular men are recognized as Anarchistic teachings by the greater part of those who at present are scientifically concerned with Anarchism.
We learn, second, that by the greater part of those who at present are scientifically concerned with Anarchism the teachings of these men are recognized as Anarchistic teachings only in so far as they relate to law, the State, and property; but not in so far as they may be concerned with the law, State, or property of a particular legal system or a particular group of legal systems, nor in so far as they regard other objects, such as religion, the family, art.
Among the recognized Anarchistic teachings seven are particularly prominent: to wit, the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, and Tolstoi. They all manifest themselves to be Anarchistic teachings according to the greater part of the definitions of Anarchism, and of other scientific utterances about it. They all display the qualities that are common to the doctrines treated of in most descriptions of Anarchism. Some of them, be it one or another, are put in the foreground in almost every work on Anarchism. Of no one of them is it denied, to an extent worth mentioning, that it is an Anarchistic teaching.
In accordance with what has been said, the goal of our study must be to determine, first, the concept of the genus which is constituted by the common qualities of those teachings which the greater part of the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism recognize as Anarchistic teachings; second, the concepts of the species of this genus, which are formed by the accession of any specialties to those common qualities.
1. The first thing toward a concept is that an object be apprehended as clearly and purely as possible.
In non-conceptual notions an object is not apprehended with all possible clearness. In our non-conceptual notions of gold we most commonly make clear to ourselves only a few qualities of gold; one of us, perhaps, thinks mainly of the color and the lustre, another of the color and malleability, a third of some other qualities. But in the concept of gold color, lustre, malleability, hardness, solubility, fusibility, specific gravity, atomic weight, and all other qualities of gold, must be apprehended as clearly as possible.
Nor is an object apprehended in all possible purity in our non-conceptual notions. We introduce into our non-conceptual notions of gold many things that do not belong among the qualities of gold; one, perhaps, thinks of the present value of gold, another of golden dishes, a third of some sort of gold coin. But all these alien adjuncts must be kept away from the concept of gold.
So the first goal of our study is to describe as clearly as possible on the one side, and as purely as possible on the other, the common qualities of those teachings which the greater part of the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism recognize as Anarchistic teachings, and the specialties of all the teachings which display these common qualities.
2. It is further requisite for a concept that an object should have its place assigned as well as possible in the total realm of our experience,âthat is, in a system of species and genera which embraces our total experience.
In non-conceptual notions an object does not have its place assigned in the total realm of our experience, but arbitrarily in one of the many genera in which it can be placed according to its various qualities. One of us, perhaps, thinks of gold as a species of the genus âyellow bodies,â another as a species of the genus âmalleable bodies,â a third as a species of some other genus. But the concept of gold must assign it a place in a system of species and genera that embraces our whole experience,âa place in the genus âmetals.â
So a further goal of our study is to assign a place as well as possible in the total realm of our experience (that is, in a system of species and genera which embraces our total experience) for the common qualities of those teachings which the greater part of the men at present scientifically concerned with Anarchism recognize as Anarchistic teachings, and for the specialties of all the teachings that display these common qualities.
In accordance with what has been said, the way that our study must take to go from its starting-point to its goal will be in three parts. First, the concepts of law, the State, and property must be determined. Next, it must be ascertained what the Anarchistic teachings assert about law, the State, and property. Finally, after removing some errors, we must get determinate concepts of Anarchism and its species.
1. First, we must get determinate concepts of law, the State, and property; and this must be of law, the State, and property in general, not of the law, State, or property of a particular legal system or a particular family of legal systems.
Law, the State, and property, in this sense, are the objects about which the doctrines which are to be examined in their common and special qualities make assertions. Before the fact of any assertions about an object can be ascertained,ânot to say, before the common and special qualities of these assertions can be brought out and assigned to a place in the total realm of our experience,âwe must get a determinate concept of this object itself. Hence the first thing that must be done is to determine the concepts of law, the State, and property (chapter II).
2. Next, it must be ascertained what the Anarchistic teachings assert about law, the State, and property;âthat is, the recognized Anarchistic teachings, and also those teachings which likewise display the qualities common to these.
What the recognized Anarchistic teachings say, must be ascertained in order to determine the concept of Anarchism. What all the teachings that display the common qualities of the recognized Anarchistic teachings say, must be ascertained in order that we may get determinate concepts of the species of Anarchism.
So each of these teachings must be questioned regarding its relation to law, the State, and property. These questions must be preceded by the question on what foundation the teaching rests, and must be followed by the question how it conceives the process of its realization.
It is impossible to present here all recognized Anarchistic teachings, not to say all Anarchistic teachings. Therefore our study limits itself to the presentation of seven especially prominent teachings (chapters III to IX), and then, from this standpoint, seeks to get a view of the totality of recognized Anarchistic teachings and of all Anarchistic teachings (chapter X).
The teachings presented are presented in their own words,[24] but according to a uniform system: the first, for security against the importation of alien thoughts; the second, to avoid the uncomparable juxtaposition of fundamentally different courses of thought. They have been compelled to give definite replies to definite questions; it was indeed necessary in many cases to bring the answers together in tiny fragments from the most various writings, to sift them so far as they contradicted each other, and to explain them so far as they deviated from ordinary language. Thus Tolstoiâs strictly logical structure of thought and Bakuninâs confused talk, Kropotkinâs discussions full of glowing philanthropy and Stirnerâs self-pleasing smartness, come before our eyes directly and yet in comparable form.
3. Finally, after removing widely diffused errors, we are to get determinate concepts of Anarchism and its species.
We must, therefore, on the basis of that knowledge of the Anarchistic teachings which we have acquired, clear away the most important errors about Anarchism and its species; and then we must determine what the Anarchistic teachings have in common, and what specialties are represented among them, and assign to both a place in the total realm of our experience. Then we have the concepts of Anarchism and its species (chapter XI).
[24] Russian writings are cited from translations, which are cautiously revised where they seem too harsh.
<em>In this discussion we are to get determinate concepts of law, the State, and property in general, not of the law, State, and property of a particular legal system or of a particular family of legal systems. The concepts of law, State, and property are therefore to be determined as concepts of general jurisprudence, not as concepts of any particular jurisprudence.</em>
1. By the concepts of law, State, and property one may understand, first, the concepts of law, State, and property in the science of a particular legal system.
These concepts of law, State, and property contain all the characteristics that belong to the substance of a particular legal system. They embrace only the substance of this system. They may, therefore, be called concepts of the science of this system. For we may designate as the science of a particular legal system that part of jurisprudence which concerns itself exclusively with the norms of a particular legal system.
The concepts of law, State, and property in the science of a legal system are distinguished from the concepts of law, State, and property in the sciences of other legal systems by this characteristic,âthat they are concepts of norms of this particular system. From this characteristic we may deduce all the characteristics that result from the special substance of this system of law in contrast to other such systems. The concepts of property in the present laws of the German empire, of France, and of England are distinguished by the fact that they are concepts of norms of these three different legal systems. Consequently they are as different as are the norms of the present imperial-German, French, and English law on the subject of property. The concepts of law, State, and property in different legal systems are to each other as species-concepts which are subordinate to one and the same generic concept.
2. Second, one may understand by the concepts of law, State, and property the concepts of law, State, and property in the science of a particular family of laws.
These concepts of law, State, and property contain all the characteristics that belong to the common substance of the different legal systems of this family. They embrace only the common substance of the different systems of this family. They may, therefore, be called concepts of the science of this family of laws. For we may designate as the science of a particular family of laws that part of jurisprudence which deals exclusively with the norms of a particular family of legal systems, so far as these are not already dealt with by the sciences of the particular legal systems of this family.
The concepts of law, State, and property in the science of a family of laws are distinguished from the concepts of law, State, and property in the sciences of the legal systems that form the family by lacking the characteristic of being concepts of norms of these systems, and consequently lacking also all the characteristics which may be deduced from this characteristic according to the special substance of one or another legal system. The concept of the State in the science of present European law is distinguished from the concepts of the State in the sciences of present German, Russian, and Belgian law by not being a concept of norms of any one of these systems, and consequently by lacking all the characteristics that result from the special substance of the constitutional norms in force in Germany, Russia, and Belgium. Its relation to the concepts of the State in the science of these systems is that of a generic concept to subordinate species-concepts.
The concepts of law, State, and property in the science of a family of laws are distinguished from the concepts of law, State, and property in the sciences of other such families by this characteristic,âthat they are concepts of norms of this particular family. From this characteristic we may deduce all the characteristics that are peculiar to the common substance of the different legal systems of this family in contrast to the common substance of the different legal systems of other families. The concept of the State in the science of present European law and the concept of the State in the science of European law in the year 1000 are distinguished by the fact that the one is a concept of constitutional norms that are in force in Europe to-day, the other of such as were in force in Europe then; consequently they are different in the same way as what the constitutional norms in force in Europe to-day have in common is different from what was common to the constitutional norms in force in Europe then. These concepts are to each other as species-concepts which are subordinate to one and the same generic concept.
3. Third, one may understand by the concepts of law, State, and property the concepts of law, State, and property in general jurisprudence.
These concepts of law, State, and property contain all the characteristics that belong to the common substance of the most different systems and families of laws. They embrace only what the norms of the most different systems and families of laws have in common. They may, therefore, be called concepts of general jurisprudence. For that part of jurisprudence which treats of legal norms without limitation to any particular system or family of laws, so far as these norms are not already treated by the sciences of the particular systems and families, may be designated as general jurisprudence.
The concepts of law, State, and property in general jurisprudence are distinguished from the concepts of law, State, and property in the particular jurisprudences by lacking the characteristic of being concepts of norms of one of these systems or at least one of these families of systems, and consequently lacking also all the characteristics which may be deduced from this characteristic according to the special substance of some system or family of laws. The concept of law **per se** is distinguished from the concept of law in present European law and from the concept of law in the present law of the German empire by not being a concept of norms of that family of laws, not to say that particular system, and consequently by lacking all the characteristics that might belong to any peculiarities which might be common to all legal norms at present in force in Europe or in Germany. Its relation to the concepts of law in these particular jurisprudences is that of a generic concept to subordinate species-concepts.
4. In which of the senses here distinguished the concepts of law, State, and property should be defined in a particular case, and what matters should accordingly be taken into consideration in defining them, depends on the purpose of oneâs study.
If, for example, the point is to describe scientifically the constitutional norms of the present law of the German empire, then the concept of the State as defined on this occasion must be a concept of the science of this particular legal system. For scientific work on the norms of a particular legal system requires that concepts be formed of the norms of just this system. Consequently the material to be taken into consideration will be only the constitutional norms of the present law of the German empire.âThat the concepts defined in the scientific description of a system of law are in fact concepts of the science of this system may indeed seem obscure. For every concept of the science of any particular system of law may be defined as the concept of a species under the corresponding generic concept of general jurisprudence. We define this generic concept, say the concept of the State in general jurisprudence, and add the distinctive characteristic of the species-concept, that it is a concept of norms of this particular system of law, say of the present law of the German empire. And then we often leave this additional characteristic unexpressed, where we think we may assume (as is the case in the scientific description of the norms of any particular system of law) that everybody will regard it as tacitly added. The consequence is that the definition given in the scientific description of a particular system of law looks, at a superficial glance, like the definition of a concept of general jurisprudence.
Or, if the point is to compare scientifically the norms of present European law regarding property, the concept of property as defined on this occasion must be a concept of the science of this particular family of laws. For the scientific comparison of norms of different legal systems demands that concepts of the sciences of these different legal systems be subordinately arranged under the corresponding concept of the science of the family of laws which is made up of these systems. Consequently the material to be taken into consideration will be only the norms of this family of laws.âHere again, indeed, it may seem obscure that the concepts defined are really concepts of the science of this family of laws. For the concepts that belong to the science of a family of laws may likewise be defined by defining the corresponding concepts of general jurisprudence and tacitly adding the characteristic of being concepts of norms of this particular family of laws.
Finally, if it comes to pass that the point is to compare scientifically what the norms of the most diverse systems of law have in common, the concept of law as defined on this occasion must be a concept of general jurisprudence. For the scientific comparison of norms of the most diverse systems and families of laws demands that concepts which belong to the sciences of the most diverse systems and families of laws be subordinately arranged under the corresponding concept of general jurisprudence. Consequently the material to be taken into consideration will be the norms of the most diverse systems and families of laws.
Here,âwhere the point is to take the first step toward a scientific comprehension of teachings which pass judgment on law, the State, and property in general, not only on the law, State, or property of a particular system or family of laws,âthe concepts of law, State, and property must necessarily be defined as concepts of general jurisprudence. For a scientific comprehension of teachings which deal with the common substance of the most diverse systems and families of laws demands that concepts of this common substanceâconsequently concepts belonging to general jurisprudenceâbe formed. Therefore we have to take into consideration, as our material, the norms (especially regarding the State and property) of the most diverse systems and families of laws.
<em>Law is the body of legal norms. A legal norm is a norm which is based on the fact that men have the will to see a certain procedure generally observed within a circle which includes themselves.</em>
1. A legal norm is a norm.
A norm is the idea of a correct procedure. A correct procedure means one that corresponds either to the final purpose of all human procedure (unconditionally correct procedure,âfor instance, respect for anotherâs life), or at any rate to some accidental purpose (conditionally correct procedure,âfor instance, the skilled handling of a picklock). And the idea of a correct procedure means that the unconditionally or conditionally correct procedure is to be thought of not as a fact but as a task, not as something real but as something to be realized; it does not mean that I shall in fact spare my enemyâs life, but that I am to spare itânot how the thief really did use the picklock, but how he should have used it. The idea of a correct procedure is what we designate as an âoughtâ: when I think of an âought,â I think of what has to be done in order to realize either the final purpose of all human procedure or some accidental personal purpose. All passing of judgment on past procedure is conditioned upon the idea of a correct procedureâonly with regard to this idea can past procedure be described as good or bad, expedient or inexpedient; and so is all deliberation on future procedureâonly with regard to this idea does one inquire whether it will be right, or at any rate expedient, to proceed in a given manner.
Every legal norm represents a procedure as correct, declares that it corresponds to a particular purpose. And it represents this correct procedure as an idea, designates it not as a fact but as a task, does not say that any one does proceed so but that one is to proceed so. Hence a legal norm is a norm.
2. A legal norm is a norm based on a human will.
A norm based on a human will is a norm by virtue of which one must proceed in a certain way in order that he may not put himself in opposition to the will of some particular men, and so be apprehended by the power which is at the service of these men. Such a norm, therefore, represents a procedure only as conditionally correct; to wit, as a means to the end (which we are perhaps pursuing or perhaps despising) of remaining in harmony with the will of certain men, and so being spared by the power which serves this will.
Every legal norm tells us that we must proceed in a certain way in order that we may not contravene the will of some particular men and then suffer under their power. Therefore it represents a procedure only as conditionally correct, and instructs us not as to what is good but only as to what is prescribed. Hence a legal norm is a norm based on a human will.
3. A legal norm is a norm based on the fact that men will to have a certain procedure for themselves and others.
A norm is based on the fact that men will to have a certain procedure for themselves and others when the will on which the norm is based has reference not only to others who do not will, but also, at the same time, to the willers themselves also; when, therefore, these not only will that others be subject to the norm but also will to be subject to it themselves.
Every legal norm, and of all norms only the legal norm, has the characteristic that the will on which it is based reaches beyond those whose will it is, and yet embraces them too. The rule, âWhoever takes from another a movable thing that is not his own, with the intent to appropriate it illegally, is punished with imprisonment for theft,â is not only based on the will of men, but each of these men is also conscious that, while on the one hand the rule applies to other men, on the other hand it applies to himself.
Here it might be alleged that, after all, the mere fact of menâs will to have a certain procedure for themselves and others does not always establish law; for example, the efforts of the Bonapartists do not establish the empire in France. But it is not when this bare will exists that law is established, but only when a norm is based on this will; that is, when it has in its service so great a power that it is competent to affect the behavior of the men to whom it relates. As soon as Bonapartism spreads so widely and in such circles that this takes place, the republic will fall and the empire will indeed become law in France.
One might further appeal to the fact that in unlimited monarchies (in Russia, for instance) the law is based solely on the will of one man, who is not himself subject to it. But Russian law is not based on the czarâs will at all; the czar is a weak individual man, and his will in itself is totally unqualified to affect many millions of Russians in their procedure. Russian law is based rather on the will of all those Russiansâpeasants, soldiers, officialsâwho, for the most various reasonsâpatriotism, self-interest, superstitionâwill that what the czar wills shall be law in Russia. Their will is qualified to affect the procedure of the Russians; and, if they should ever grow so few that it would no longer have this qualification, then the czarâs will would no longer be law in Russia, as the history of revolutions proves.
4. It has been asserted that legal norms have still other qualities.
It has been said, first, that it belongs to the essence of a legal norm to be enforceable, or even to be enforceable in a particular way, by judicial procedure, governmental force.
If by this we are to understand that conformity can always be enforced, we are met at once by the great number of cases in which this cannot be done. When a debtor is insolvent, or a murder has been committed, conformity to the violated legal norms cannot now be enforced after the fact, but their validity is not impaired by this.
If by enforceability we mean that conformity to a legal norm must be insured by other legal norms providing for the case of its violation, we need only go on from the insured to the insuring norms for a while, to come to norms for which conformity is not insured by any further legal norms. If one refuses to recognize these norms as legal norms, then neither can the norms which are insured by them rank as legal norms, and so, going back along the series, one has at last no legal norms left.
Only if one would understand by the enforceability of the legal norm that a will must have at its disposal a certain power in order that a legal norm may be based on it, one might certainly say in this sense that enforceability belongs to the essence of a legal norm. But this quality of the legal norm would be only such a quality as would be derivable from its quality of being a norm, and would therefore have no claim to be added as a further quality.
Again, it has been named an essential quality of a legal norm that it should be based on the will of a State. But even where we cannot speak of a State at all, among nomads for instance, there are yet legal norms. Besides, every State is itself a legal relation, established by legal norms, which consequently cannot be based on its will. And lastly, the norms of international law, which are intended to bind the will of States, cannot be based on the will of a State.
Finally, it has been asserted that it was essential to a legal norm that it should correspond to the moral law. If this were so, then among the different legal norms which to-day are in force one directly after the other in the same territory, or at the same time in different territories under the same circumstances, only one could in each case be regarded as a legal norm; for under the same circumstances there is only one moral right. Nor could one speak then of unrighteous legal norms, for if they were unrighteous they would not be legal norms. But in reality, even when legal norms determine conduct quite differently under the same circumstances, they are all nevertheless recognized as legal norms; nor is it doubted that there are bad legal norms as well as good.
5. As a norm based on the fact that men have the will to see a certain procedure generally observed within a circle which includes themselves, the legal norm is distinguished from all other objects, even from those that most resemble it.
By being based on the will of men it is distinguished from the moral law (the commandment of morality); this is not based on menâs willing a certain procedure, but on the fact that this procedure corresponds to the final purpose of all human procedure. The maxim, âLove your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, pray for those who abuse and persecute you,â is a moral law; so is the maxim, âAct so that the maxims of your will might at all times serve as the principles of a general legislation.â For the correctness of such a procedure is not founded on the fact that other men will have it, but on the fact that it corresponds to the final purpose of all human procedure.
By being based on the will of men the legal norm is distinguished also from good manners; these are not based on the fact that men will a certain procedure, but on the fact that they themselves proceed in a certain way. It is manners that one goes to a ball in a dress coat and white gloves, uses his knife at table only for cutting, begs the daughter of the house for a dance or at least one round, takes leave of the master and mistress of the house, and lastly presses a tip into the servantâs hand; for the correctness of such a behavior is not based on the fact that other men ask this of us,âto those who start a new fashion it is often actually unpleasant to find that the fashion is spreading to more extensive circles,âbut solely on the fact that other men themselves behave so, and that we want ânot to be peculiar,â ânot to make ourselves conspicuous,â âto do like the rest,â etc.
By being based on a will which relates at once to those whose will it is and to others whose will it is not, it is distinguished on the one hand from an arbitrary command, in which oneâs will applies only to others, and on the other from a resolution, in which it applies only to himself. It is an arbitrary command when Cortes with his Spaniards commands the Mexicans to bring out their gold, or when a band of robbers forbids a frightened peasantry to betray their hiding-place; here a human will decides, indeed, but a will that relates only to other men, and not at the same time to those whose will it is. A resolution is presented when I have decided to get up at six every morning, or to leave off smoking, or to finish a piece of work within a specified timeâhere a human will is indeed the standard, but it relates only to him whose will it is, not at all to others.
6. What is briefly summed up in the definition of the legal norm may, if one takes into account the explanations which have been given with this definition, be expanded as follows:
Men will that a given procedure be generally observed within a circle which includes themselves, and their power is so great that their will is competent to affect the men of this circle in their procedure. When such is the condition of things, a legal norm exists.
<em>The State is a legal relation by virtue of which a supreme authority exists in a certain territory.</em>
1. The State is a legal relation.
A legal relation is the relation, determined by legal norms, of an obligated party, one to whom a procedure is prescribed, to an entitled party, one for whose sake it is prescribed. Thus, for instance, the legal relation of a loan is a relation of the borrower, who is bound by the legal norms concerning loans, to the lender, for whose sake he is bound.
The State is the legal relation of all the men who by legal norms are subjected to a supreme territorial authority, to all those for whose sake they are subjected to it. Here the circle of the entitled and the obligated is one and the same; the State is a bond upon all in favor of all.
To this it might perhaps be objected that the State is not a legal relation but a person. But the two propositions, that an association of men is a person in the legal sense and that it is a legal relation, are quite compatible; nay, its attribute of personality is based mainly on its attribute of being a legal relation of a particular kind; law, in viewing the association in its outward relationships as a person, starts from the fact that men are bound together by a particular legal relation. A joint-stock corporation is a person not although, but because, it is a legal relation of a peculiar kind. And similarly, the fact that the State is a person is not only reconcilable with its being a legal relation, but is founded on its being a peculiar legal relation.
2. As to the conditions of its existence, this legal relation is involuntary.
A voluntary legal relation exists when legal norms make entrance into the relation conditional on actions of the obligated party, of which actions the purpose is to bring about the legal relation; for instance, entrance into the relation of tenancy is conditioned on agreeing to a lease. **Per contra**, an involuntary legal relation exists when legal norms do not make entrance into the relation conditional on any such actions of the obligated party, as, for instance, a patent is not conditioned on any action of those who are bound by it, and the sentence of a criminal is at least not conditioned on any action whereby he intended to bring it about.
If the State were a voluntary legal relation, a supreme authority could exist only for those inhabitants of a territory who had acknowledged it. But the supreme authority exists for all inhabitants of the territory, whether they have acknowledged it or not; the legal relation is therefore involuntary.
3. The substance of this legal relation is, that a supreme authority exists in a territory.
An authority exists in a territory by virtue of a legal relation when, according to the legal norms which found the relation, the will of some menâor even merely of a manâis regulative for the inhabitants of this territory. A supreme authority exists in a territory by virtue of a legal relation when according to those norms the will of some men is finally regulative for the inhabitants of the territory,âthat is, is decisive when authorities disagree. What we here designate as a supreme authority, therefore, is not the men on whose will the legal norms in force in a territory are based, but rather their highest agents, whose will they would have finally regulative within the territory.
What men it is whose will is finally regulative for the inhabitants of a territory by virtue of a legal relationâfor instance, members of a royal family according to a certain order of inheritance, or persons elected according to a certain election lawâdepends on the legal norms by which the legal relation is determined. On these legal norms, too, depends the question within what limits the will of these men is regulative. But this limited nature of the authority does not stand in the way of its being a supreme authority; the highest agent need not be an agent with unrestricted powers.
Here one might perhaps object that in federal States, in the German empire for instance, the individual States have not supreme authority. But in reality they have it. For, even if there are a multitude of subjects in reference to which the highest authority of the individual States of the German empire has to bow to the imperial authority, yet there are also subjects enough about which the highest authority of the individual States gives a final decision. As long as there are such subjects, a supreme authority exists in the individual States; if some day there should no longer be such, one could no longer speak of individual States.
4. As a legal relation, by virtue of which a supreme authority exists in a territory, the State is distinguished from all other objects, even from those that most resemble it.
By being a legal relation it is distinguished on the one hand from institutions such as would exist in a conceivable kingdom of God or of reason, on the basis of the moral law, and on the other hand from the dominion of a conqueror in the conquered country, which can never be anything but an arbitrary dominion.
Being an involuntary legal relation, the State is distinguished from a conceivable association of men who should set up a supreme authority among themselves by an agreement, as well as from leagues under international law, in which a supreme authority exists on the basis of an agreement.
The fact that by virtue of a legal relation an authority over a territory is given distinguishes the State from the tribal community of nomads and from the Church; for in the former there is given an authority over people of a certain descent, in the latter over people of a certain faith, but in neither over people of a certain territory. And finally, in the fact that this territorial authority is a supreme authority lies the difference between the State and towns, counties, or provinces; in the latter there is indeed a territorial authority instituted, but one that by the very intent of its institution must bow to a higher authority.
5. What is briefly summed up in the definition of the State may be expanded as follows, if one takes into consideration on the one hand the previous definition of a legal norm and on the other hand the above explanations of the definition of the State:
Some inhabitants of a territory are so powerful that their will is competent to affect the inhabitants of this territory in their procedure, and these men will have it that for all the inhabitants of the territory, for themselves as well as for the rest, the will of men picked out in a certain way shall within certain limits be finally regulative. When such is the condition of things, a State exists.
<em>Property is a legal relation, by virtue of which some one has, within a certain group of men, the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thing.</em>
1. Property is a legal relation.
As has already been stated, a legal relation is the relation of an obligated party, one to whom a procedure is prescribed by legal norms, to an entitled party, one for whose sake it is prescribed.
Property is the legal relation of all the members of a group of men who by legal norms are excluded from ultimately disposing of a thing, to himâor to thoseâfor whose sake they are excluded from it. Here the circle of the obligated is much broader than that of the entitled; the former embraces, say, all the inhabitants of a territory or all who belong to a tribe, the latter only those among them in whom certain further conditions (for instance, transfer, prescription, appropriation) are fulfilled.
2. As to the conditions of its existence, this legal relation is involuntary.
As discussion has already shown, a voluntary legal relation exists when legal norms make entrance into the relation conditional on actions of the obligated party, of which actions the purpose is to bring about the legal relation; **per contra**, an involuntary legal relation exists when legal norms do not make entrance into the relation conditional on any such actions of the obligated party.
If property were a voluntary legal relation, then there could be excluded from ultimately disposing of a thing only those members of a group of men who had consented to this exclusion. But all members of the groupâfor instance, all the inhabitants of a territory, all who belong to a tribeâare excluded, whether they have consented or not.
3. The substance of this legal relation consists in some oneâs having, within a certain group of men, the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thing.
Some oneâs having, within a certain group of men, the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thing means that this group is excluded from the thing in his favor; that is, they must not hinder him from dealing with the thing according to his will, nor may they themselves deal with it against his will. Now, the exclusive disposition of a thing within a certain group of men may by virtue of a legal relation belong to several, part by part, in this way: that someâor oneâof them have it in this or that particular respect (for instance, as to the usufruct), and oneâor someâin all other respects which are not individually alienated. Whoever thus has, within a group of men, the exclusive disposition of a thing in all those respects which are not individually alienated, to him belongs, within that group, the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of the thing.
To whom this belongs by virtue of the legal relationâwhether, for instance, it belongs among others to him who by labor has made a thing into some new thingâdepends on the legal norms by which the legal relation is determined. On them also depends the question, within what limits this belongs to him: the dispository authority of him to whom the exclusive disposition of a thing within a group of men ultimately belongs is limited not only by the dispository authority of those to whom the exclusive disposition within the group proximately belongs, but also by the limits within which such dispository authority is at all allowed to anybody in the group. Especially, it depends on these legal norms whether a privilege of exclusive ultimate disposition belongs to individuals as well as to corporations, or only to corporations, and whether it applies to every kind of things or only to one kind or another.
4. As a legal relation by virtue of which some one has, within a certain group of men, the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thing, property is distinguished from all other objects, even from those which most resemble it.
By being a legal relation it is distinguished from all the relations in which one has the exclusive ultimate disposition of a thing guaranteed to him solely by the reasonableness of the men who surround him, or solely by his own might, as might be the case in a conceivable kingdom of God or of reason, and as is often the case in a conquered country.
Being an involuntary legal relation, it is distinguished from those legal relations by virtue of which the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thing belongs to some one solely on the ground of a contract, and solely as against the other contracting parties.
That by virtue of this legal relation some one has, within a group of men, the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thing, distinguishes property from copyright, by virtue of which some one has exclusively, within a group of men, not the disposition of a thing, but somewhat else; and furthermore from rights in the property of others, by virtue of which some one has, within a group of men, the exclusive privilege of disposing of a thing, but not of ultimately disposing of it.
5. What is briefly summed up in the definition of property may be expanded as follows, if one takes into consideration on the one hand the previously given definition of a legal norm, and on the other the above explanations of the definition of property.
Some men are so powerful that their will is able to affect in its procedure a group of men which embraces them, and these men will have it that no member of this group shall, within certain limits, hinder a member picked out in a certain way from dealing with a thing according to his will, nor, within these limits, himself deal with the thing against the will of that member, so far as the will of another member is not already in particular respects regulative with respect to that thing equally with the will of that member. When such is the condition of things, property exists.
[Distinguishing the State from arbitrary dominion as he here does (p. 34), and then saying that Anarchism consists solely in the negation of the State, Eltzbacher implies the unsound conclusion that Anarchism does not involve the negation of arbitrary dominion. This is because he incautiously takes the word of the learned public that the only cardinal points of Anarchism are law, the State, and property, without making sure that those who say this are using the term âStateâ in the precise sense defined by him. But are not many of his âarbitrary commandsâ law and State by his definitions? Every robber in his band (p. 31) is as much required to keep the secret as are the peasantry, and under the same penalties. In restraining a subject population I restrict my liberty of emigration or investment, and forbid myself to be an accomplice in certain things.]
1. William Godwin was born in 1756 at Wisbeach, Cambridgeshire. He studied theology at Hoxton, beginning in 1773. In 1778 he became preacher at Ware, Hertfordshire; in 1780, preacher at Stowmarket, Suffolk. In 1782 he gave up this position. From this time on he lived in London as an author. He died there in 1836.
Godwin published numerous works in the departments of philosophy, economics, and history; also stories, tragedies, and juvenile books.
2. Godwinâs teaching about law, the State, and property is contained mainly in the two-volume work âAn Enquiry Concerning Political Justice and its Influence on General Virtue and Happinessâ (1793).
âThe printing of this treatise,â says Godwin himself, âwas commenced long before the composition was finished. The ideas of the author became more perspicuous and digested as his inquiries advanced. This circumstance has led him into some inaccuracies of language and reasoning, particularly in the earlier part of the work. He did not enter upon the subject without being aware that government by its very nature counteracts the improvement of individual intellect; but he understood the proposition more completely as he proceeded, and saw more distinctly into the nature of the remedy.â[25] Godwinâs teaching is here presented exclusively in the developed form which it shows in the second part of the work.
3. Godwin does not call his teaching about law, the State, and property âAnarchism.â Yet this word causes him no terror. âAnarchy is a horrible calamity, but it is less horrible than despotism. Where anarchy has slain its hundreds, despotism has sacrificed millions upon millions, with this only effect, to perpetuate the ignorance, the vices, and the misery of mankind. Anarchy is a short-lived mischief, while despotism is all but immortal. It is unquestionably a dreadful remedy, for the people to yield to all their furious passions, till the spectacle of their effects gives strength to recovering reason: but, though it be a dreadful remedy, it is a sure one.â[26]
<em>According to Godwin, our supreme law is the general welfare.</em>
What is the general welfare? âIts nature is defined by the nature of mind.â[27] It is unchangeable; as long as men are men it remains the same.[28] âThat will most contribute to it which expands the understanding, supplies incitements to virtue, fills us with a generous consciousness of our independence, and carefully removes whatever can impede our exertions.â[29]
The general welfare is our supreme law. âDuty is that mode of action on the part of the individual, which constitutes the best possible application of his capacity to the general benefit.â[30] âJustice is the sum of all moral duty;â[31] âif there be such a thing, I am bound to do for the general weal everything in my power.â[32] âVirtue is a desire to promote the benefit of intelligent beings in general, the quantity of virtue being as the quantity of desire;â[33] âthe last perfection of this feeling consists in that state of mind which bids us rejoice as fully in the good that is done by others, as if it were done by ourselves.â[34]
âThe truly wise manâ[35] strives only for the welfare of the whole. He is âactuated neither by interest nor ambition, the love of honor nor the love of fame. [He knows no jealousy. He is not disquieted by the comparison of what he has attained with what others have attained, but by the comparison with what ought to be attained.] He has a duty indeed obliging him to seek the good of the whole; but that good is his only object. If that good be effected by another hand, he feels no disappointment. All men are his fellow laborers, but he is the rival of no man.â[36]
I. **Looking to the general good, Godwin rejects law, not only for particular local and temporary conditions, but altogether.**
âLaw is an institution of the most pernicious tendency.â[37] âThe institution once begun, can never be brought to a close. No action of any man was ever the same as any other action, had ever the same degree of utility or injury. As new cases occur, the law is perpetually found deficient. It is therefore perpetually necessary to make new laws. The volume in which justice records her prescriptions is for ever increasing, and the world would not contain the books that might be written.â[38] âThe consequence of the infinitude of law is its uncertainty. Law was made that a plain man might know what he had to expect, and yet the most skilful practitioners differ about the event of my suit.â[39] âA farther consideration is that it is of the nature of prophecy. Its task is to describe what will be the actions of mankind, and to dictate decisions respecting them.â[40]
âLaw we sometimes call the wisdom of our ancestors. But this is a strange imposition. It was as frequently the dictate of their passion, of timidity, jealousy, a monopolizing spirit, and a lust of power that knew no bounds. Are we not obliged perpetually to revise and remodel this misnamed wisdom of our ancestors? to correct it by a detection of their ignorance, and a censure of their intolerance?â[41] âLegislation, as it has been usually understood, is not an affair of human competence. Reason is [our sole legislator, and her decrees are unchangeable and everywhere the same.]â[42] âMen cannot do more than declare and interpret law; nor can there be an authority so paramount, as to have the prerogative of making that to be law, which abstract and immutable justice had not made to be law previously to that interposition.â[43]
To be sure, âit must be admitted that we are imperfect, ignorant, and slaves of appearances.â[44] But âwhatever inconveniences may arise from the passions of men, the introduction of fixed laws cannot be the genuine remedy.â[45] âAs long as a man is held in the trammels of obedience, and habituated to look to some foreign guidance for the direction of his conduct, his understanding and the vigor of his mind will sleep. Do I desire to raise him to the energy of which he is capable? I must teach him to feel himself, to bow to no authority, to examine the principles he entertains, and render to his mind the reason of his conduct.â[46]
II. **The general welfare requires that in future it itself should be menâs rule of action in place of the law.**
âIf every shilling of our property, [every hour of our time,] and every faculty of our mind, have received their destination from the principles of unalterable justice,â[47] that is, of the general good,[48] then no other decree can any longer control it. âThe true principle which ought to be substituted in the room of law, is that of reason exercising an uncontrolled jurisdiction upon the circumstances of the case.â[49]
âTo this principle no objection can arise on the score of wisdom. It is not to be supposed that there are not men now existing, whose intellectual accomplishments rise to the level of law. But, if men can be found among us whose wisdom is equal to the wisdom of law, it will scarcely be maintained, that the truths they have to communicate will be the worse for having no authority, but that which they derive from the reasons that support them.â[50]
âThe juridical decisions that were made immediately after the abolition of law, would differ little from those during its empire. They would be the decisions of prejudice and habit. But habit, having lost the centre about which it revolved, would diminish in the regularity of its operations. Those to whom the arbitration of any question was entrusted would frequently recollect that the whole case was committed to their deliberation, and they could not fail occasionally to examine themselves, respecting the reason of those principles which had hitherto passed uncontroverted. Their understandings would grow enlarged, in proportion as they felt the importance of their trust, and the unbounded freedom of their investigation. Here then would commence an auspicious order of things, of which no understanding man at present in existence can foretell the result, the dethronement of implicit faith, and the inauguration of unclouded justice.â[51]
I. **Since Godwin unconditionally rejects law, he necessarily has to reject the State as unconditionally. Nay, he regards it as a legal institution peculiarly repugnant to the general welfare.**
Some base the State on force, others on divine right, others on contract.[52] But âthe hypothesis of force appears to proceed upon the total negation of abstract and immutable justice, affirming every government to be right, that is possessed of power sufficient to enforce its decrees. It puts a violent termination upon all political science, and is calculated for nothing farther than to persuade men, to sit down quietly under their present disadvantages, whatever they may be, and not exert themselves to discover a remedy for the evils they suffer. The second hypothesis is of an equivocal nature. It either coincides with the first, and affirms all existing power to be alike of divine derivation; or it must remain totally useless, till a criterion can be found, to distinguish those governments which are approved by God, from those which cannot lay claim to that sanction.â[53] The third hypothesis would mean that one âshould make over to another the control of his conscience and the judging of his duties.â[54] âBut we cannot renounce our moral independence; it is a property that we can neither sell nor give away; and consequently no government can derive its authority from an original contract.â[55]
âAll government corresponds in a certain degree to what the Greeks denominated a tyranny. The difference is, that in despotic countries mind is depressed by a uniform usurpation; while in republics it preserves a greater portion of its activity, and the usurpation more easily conforms itself to the fluctuations of opinion.â[56] âBy its very nature positive institution has a tendency to suspend the elasticity and progress of mind.â[57] âWe should not forget that government is, abstractedly taken, an evil, a usurpation upon the private judgment and individual conscience of mankind.â[58]
II. **The general welfare demands that a social human life based solely on its precepts should take the place of the State.**
1. Men are to live together in society even after the abolition of the State. âA fundamental distinction exists between society and government. Men associated at first for the sake of mutual assistance.â[59] It was not till later that restraint appeared in these associations, in consequence of the errors and perverseness of a few. âSociety and government are different in themselves, and have different origins. Society is produced by our wants, and government by our wickedness. Society is in every state a blessing; government even in its best state but a necessary evil.â[60]
But what is to hold men together in âsociety without governmentâ?[61] Not a promise,[62] at any rate. No promise can bind me; for either what I have promised is good, then I must do it even if there had been no promise; or it is bad, then not even the promise can make it my duty.[63] âThe fact that I have committed an error does not oblige me to make myself guilty of a second also.â[64] âSuppose I had promised a sum of money for a good and worthy object. In the interval between the promise and its fulfilment a greater and nobler object presents itself to me, and imperiously demands my co-operation. To which shall I give the preference? To the one that deserves it. My promise can make no difference. I must be guided by the value of things, not by an external and alien point of view. But the value of things is not affected by my having taken upon me an obligation.â[65]
âCommon deliberation regarding the general goodâ[66] is to hold men together in societies hereafter. This is highly in harmony with the general welfare. âThat a nation should exercise undiminished its function of common deliberation, is a step gained, and a step that inevitably leads to an improvement of the character of individuals. That men should agree in the assertion of truth, is no unpleasing evidence of their virtue. Lastly, that an individual, however great may be his imaginary elevation, should be obliged to yield his personal pretensions to the sense of the community, at least bears the appearance of a practical confirmation of the great principle, that all private considerations must yield to the general good.â[67]
2. The societies are to be small, and to have as little intercourse with each other as possible.
Small territories are everywhere to administer their affairs independently.[68] âNo association of men, so long as they adhered to the principles of reason, could possibly have any interest in extending their territory.â[69] âWhatever evils are included in the abstract idea of government, are all of them extremely aggravated by the extensiveness of its jurisdiction, and softened under circumstances of an opposite species. Ambition, which may be no less formidable than a pestilence in the former, has no room to unfold itself in the latter. Popular commotion is like the waves of the sea, capable where the surface is large of producing the most tragical effects, but mild and innocuous when confined within the circuit of a humble lake. Sobriety and equity are the obvious characteristics of a limited circle.â[70]ââThe desire to gain a more extensive territory, to conquer or to hold in awe our neighboring States, to surpass them in arts or arms, is a desire founded in prejudice and error. Power is not happiness. Security and peace are more to be desired than a name at which nations tremble. Mankind are brethren. We associate in a particular district or under a particular climate, because association is necessary to our internal tranquillity, or to defend us against the wanton attacks of a common enemy. But the rivalship of nations is a creature of the imagination.â[71]
The little independently-administered territories are to have as little to do with each other as possible. âIndividuals cannot have too frequent or unlimited intercourse with each other; but societies of men have no interests to explain and adjust, except so far as error and violence may render explanation necessary. This consideration annihilates at once the principal objects of that mysterious and crooked policy which has hitherto occupied the attention of governments. Before this principle officers of the army and the navy, ambassadors and negotiators, and all the train of artifices that has been invented to hold other nations at bay, to penetrate their secrets, to traverse their machinations, to form alliances and counter-alliances, sink into nothing.â[72]
3. But how are the functions that the State performs at present to be performed in the future societies? âGovernment can have no more than two legitimate purposes, the suppression of injustice against individuals within the communityâ (which includes the settling of controversies between different districts[73]), âand the common defence against external invasion.â[74]
âThe first of these purposes, which alone can have an uninterrupted claim upon us, is sufficiently answered by an association of such an extent as to afford room for the institution of a jury, to decide upon the offences of individuals within the community, and upon the questions and controversies respecting property which may chance to arise.â[75] This jury would decide not according to any system of law, but according to reason.[76]ââIt might be easy indeed for an offender to escape from the limits of so petty a jurisdiction; and it might seem necessary at first that the neighboring parishes or jurisdictions should be governed in a similar manner, or at least should be willing, whatever was their form of government, to co-operate with us in the removal or reformation of an offender whose present habits were alike injurious to us and to them. But there will be no need of any express compact, and still less of any common centre of authority, for this purpose. General justice and mutual interest are found more capable of binding men than signatures and seals.â[77]
The second function would present itself to us only from time to time. âHowever irrational might be the controversy of parish with parish in such a state of society, it would not be the less possible. Such emergencies can only be provided against by the concert of several districts, declaring and, if needful, enforcing the dictates of justice.â[78] Foreign invasions too would make such a concert necessary, and would to this extent resemble those controversies.[79] Therefore it would be ânecessary upon certain occasions to have recourse to national assemblies, or in other words assemblies instituted for the joint purpose of adjusting the differences between district and district, and of consulting respecting the best mode of repelling foreign invasion.â[80]âBut they âought to be employed as sparingly as the nature of the case will admit.â[81] For, in the first place, the decision is given by the number of votes, and âis determined, at best, by the weakest heads in the assembly, but, as it not less frequently happens, by the most corrupt and dishonorable intentions.â[82] In the second place, as a rule the members are guided in their decisions by all sorts of external reasons, and not solely by the results of their free reflection.[83] In the third place, they are forced to waste their strength on petty matters, while they cannot possibly let themselves be quietly influenced by argument.[84] Therefore national assemblies should âeither never be elected but upon extraordinary emergencies, like the dictator of the ancient Romans, or else sit periodically, one day for example in a year, with a power of continuing their sessions within a certain limit. The former is greatly to be preferred.â[85]
But what would be the authority of these national assemblies and those juries? Mankind is so corrupted by present institutions that at first the issuing of commands, and some degree of coercion, would be necessary; but later it would be sufficient for juries to recommend a certain mode of adjusting controversies, and for national assemblies to invite their constituencies to co-operate for the common advantage.[86] âIf juries might at length cease to decide and be contented to invite, if force might gradually be withdrawn and reason trusted alone, shall we not one day find that juries themselves, and every other species of public institution, may be laid aside as unnecessary? Will not the reasonings of one wise man be as effectual as those of twelve? Will not the competence of one individual to instruct his neighbors be a matter of sufficient notoriety, without the formality of an election? Will there be many vices to correct and much obstinacy to conquer? This is one of the most memorable stages of human improvement. With what delight must every well-informed friend of mankind look forward to the auspicious period, the dissolution of political government, of that brute engine, which has been the only perennial cause of the vices of mankind, and which has mischiefs of various sorts incorporated with its substance, and no otherwise to be removed than by its utter annihilation!â[87]
I. **In consequence of his unconditional rejection of law, Godwin necessarily has to reject property also without any limitation. Nay, property, or, as he expresses himself, âthe present system of property,â**[88]â**that is, the distribution of wealth at present established by law,âappears to him to be a legal institution that is peculiarly injurious to the general welfare.** âThe wisdom of law-makers and parliaments has been applied to creating the most wretched and senseless distribution of property, which mocks alike at human nature and at the principles of justice.â[89]
The present system of property distributes commodities in the most unequal and most arbitrary way. âOn account of the accident of birth, it piles upon a single man enormous wealth. If one who has been a beggar becomes a well-to-do man, we usually know that he has not precisely his honesty or usefulness to thank for this change. It is often hard enough for the most diligent and industrious member of society to preserve his family from starvation.â[90] âAnd if I receive the reward of my work, they give me a hundred times more food than I can eat, and a hundred times more clothes than I can wear. Where is the justice in this? If I am the greatest benefactor of the human race, is that a reason for giving me what I do not need, especially when my superfluity might be of the greatest use to thousands?â[91]
This unequal distribution of commodities is altogether opposed to the general welfare. It hampers intellectual progress. âAccumulated property treads the powers of thought in the dust, extinguishes the sparks of genius, and reduces the great mass of mankind to be immersed in sordid cares, beside depriving the rich of the most salubrious and effectual motives to activity.â[92] And the rich man can buy with his superfluity ânothing but glitter and envy, nothing but the dismal pleasure of restoring to the poor man as alms that to which reason gives him an undeniable right.â[93]
But the unequal distribution of commodities is also a hindrance to moral perfection. In the rich it produces ambition, vanity, and ostentation; in the poor, oppression, servility, and fraud, and, in consequence of these, envy, malice, and revenge.[94] âThe rich man stands forward as the principal object of general esteem and deference. In vain are sobriety, integrity, and industry, in vain the sublimest powers of mind and the most ardent benevolence, if their possessor be narrowed in his circumstances. To acquire wealth and to display it, is therefore the universal passion.â[95] âForce would have died away as reason and civilization advanced, but accumulated property has fixed its empire.â[96] âThe fruitful source of crimes consists in this circumstance, one manâs possessing in abundance that of which another man is destitute.â[97]
II. **The general welfare demands that a distribution of commodities based solely on its precepts should take the place of property.** When Godwin uses the expression âpropertyâ for that portion of commodities which is assigned to an individual by these precepts, he does so only in a transferred sense; only a portion assigned by law can be designated as property in the strict sense.
Now, according to the decrees of the general welfare, every man should have the means for a good life.
1. âHow is it to be decided whether an object that may be used for the benefit of man shall be my property or yours? There is only one answer; according to justice.â[98] âThe laws of different countries dispose of property in a thousand different ways; but only one of them can be most consonant with justice.â[99]
Justice demands in the first place that every man have the means for life. âOur animal needs, it is well known, consist in food, clothing, and shelter. If justice means anything, nothing can be more unjust than that any man lacks these and at the same time another has too much of them. But justice does not stop here. So far as the general stock of commodities holds out, every one has a claim not only to the means for life, but to the means for a good life. It is unjust that a man works to the point of destroying his health or his life, while another riots in superfluity. It is unjust that a man has not leisure to cultivate his mind, while another does not move a finger for the general welfare.â[100]
2. Such a âstate of equalityâ[101] would advance the general welfare in the highest degree. In it labor would become âso light, as rather to assume the appearance of agreeable relaxation, and gentle exercise.â[102] âEvery man would have a frugal, yet wholesome diet; every man would go forth to that moderate exercise of his corporal functions that would give hilarity to the spirits; none would be made torpid with fatigue, but all would have leisure to cultivate the kindly and philanthropical affections, and to let loose his faculties in the search of intellectual improvement.â[103]
âHow rapid would be the advances of intellect, if all men were admitted into the field of knowledge! It is to be presumed that the inequality of mind would in a certain degree be permanent; but it is reasonable to believe that the geniuses of such an age would far surpass the greatest exertions of intellect that are at present known.â[104]
And the moral progress would be as great as the intellectual. The vices which are inseparably joined to the present system of property âwould inevitably expire in a state of society where men lived in the midst of plenty, and where all shared alike the bounties of nature. The narrow principle of selfishness would vanish. No man being obliged to guard his little store, or provide with anxiety and pain for his restless wants, each would lose his individual existence in the thought of the general good. No man would be an enemy to his neighbor, for they would have no subject of contention; and of consequence philanthropy would resume the empire which reason assigns her.â[105]
3. But how could such a distribution of commodities be effected in a particular case?
âAs soon as law was abolished, men would begin to inquire after equity. In this situation let us suppose a litigated succession brought before them, to which there were five heirs, and that the sentence of their old legislation had directed the division of this property into five equal shares. They would begin to inquire into the wants and situation of the claimants. The first we will suppose to have a fair character and be prosperous in the world: he is a respectable member of society, but farther wealth would add little either to his usefulness or his enjoyments. The second is a miserable object, perishing with want, and overwhelmed with calamity. The third, though poor, is yet tranquil; but there is a situation to which his virtue leads him to aspire and in which he may be of uncommon service, but which he cannot with propriety accept, without a capital equal to two-fifths of the whole succession. One of the claimants is an unmarried woman past the age of child-bearing. Another is a widow, unprovided, and with a numerous family depending on her succor. The first question that would suggest itself to unprejudiced persons having the allotment of this succession referred to their unlimited decision, would be, what justice is there in the indiscriminate partition which has hitherto prevailed?â[106] And their answer could not be doubtful.
<em>The change which is called for by the general welfare should, according to Godwin, be effected by those who have recognized the truth persuading others how necessary the change is for the general welfare, so that law, the State, and property would spontaneously disappear and the new condition would take their place.</em>
I. The sole requirement is to convince men that the general welfare demands the change.
1. Every other way is to be rejected. âOur judgment will always suspect those weapons that can be used with equal prospect of success on both sides. Therefore we should regard all force with aversion. When we enter the lists of battle, we quit the sure domain of truth and leave the decision to the caprice of chance. The phalanx of reason is invulnerable; it moves forward with calm, sure step, and nothing can withstand it. But, when we lay aside arguments, and have recourse to the sword, the case is altered. Amidst the clamorous din of civil war, who shall tell whether the event will be prosperous or adverse? We must therefore distinguish carefully between instructing the people and exciting them. We must refuse indignation, rage, and passion, and desire only sober reflection, clear judgment, and fearless discussion.â[107]
2. The point is to convince men as generally as possible. Only when this is accomplished can acts of violence be avoided. âWhy did the revolution in France and America find all sorts and conditions of men almost unanimous, while the resistance to Charles the First divided our nation into two equal parties? Because the latter occurred in the seventeenth century, the former at the end of the eighteenth. Because at the time of the revolutions in France and America philosophy had already developed some of the great truths of political science, and under the influence of Sydney and Locke, of Montesquieu and Rousseau, a number of strong and thoughtful minds had perceived what an evil force is. If these revolutions had taken place still later, not a drop of civic blood would have been shed by civic hands, not in a single case would force have been used against persons or things.â[108]
3. The means to convince men as generally as possible of the necessity of a change consist in âproof and persuasion. The best warrant of a happy outcome lies in free, unrestricted discussion. In this arena truth must always be victor. If, therefore, we would improve the social institutions of mankind, we must seek to convince by spoken and written words. This activity has no limits; this endeavor admits of no interruption. Every means must be used, not so much to draw menâs attention and bring them over to our opinion by persuasion, as rather to remove every barrier to thought and to open to everybody the temple of science and the field of study.â[109]
âTherefore the man who has at heart the regeneration of his species should always bear in mind two principles, to regard hourly progress in the discovery and dissemination of truth as essential, and calmly to let years pass before he urges the carrying into effect of his teaching. With all his prudence, it may be that the boisterous multitude will hurry ahead of the calm, quiet progress of reason; then he will not condemn the revolution that takes place some years before the time set by wisdom. But if he is ruled by strict prudence he can without doubt frustrate many over-hasty attempts, and considerably prolong the general quietness.â[110]
âThis does not mean, as one might think, that the changing of our conditions lies at an immeasurable distance. It is the nature of human affairs that great alterations take place suddenly, and great discoveries are made unexpectedly, as it were accidentally. When I cultivate a young personâs mind, when I exert myself to influence that of an older person, it will long seem as if I had accomplished little, and the fruits will show themselves when I least expect them. The kingdom of truth comes quietly. The seed of virtue may spring up when it was fancied to be lost.â[111] âIf the true philanthropist but tirelessly proclaims the truth and vigilantly opposes all that hinders its progress, he may look forward, with heart at rest, to a speedy and favorable outcome.â[112]
II. As soon as the conviction that the general welfare demands a change in our condition has made itself generally felt, law, the State, and property will disappear spontaneously and give way to the new condition. âReform, under this meaning of the term, can scarcely be considered as of the nature of action. [It is a general enlightenment.] Men feel their situation; and the restraints that shackled them before, vanish like a deception. When such a crisis has arrived, not a sword will need to be drawn, not a finger to be lifted up in purposes of violence. The adversaries will be too few and too feeble, to be able to entertain a serious thought of resistance against the universal sense of mankind.â[113]
In what way may the change of our conditions take place?
1. âThe opinion most popular in France at the time that the national convention entered upon its functions, was that the business of the convention extended only to the presenting a draft of a constitution, to be submitted in the sequel to the approbation of the districts, and then only to be considered as law.â[114]
âThe first idea that suggests itself respecting this opinion is, that, if constitutional laws ought to be subjected to the revision of the districts, then all laws ought to undergo the same process. [But if the approbation of the districts to any declarations is not to be delusive, the discussion of these declarations in the districts must be unlimited. Then] a transaction will be begun to which it is not easy to foresee a termination. Some districts will object to certain articles; and, if these articles be modeled to obtain their approbation, it is possible that the very alteration introduced to please one part of the community may render the code less acceptable to another.â[115]
âThis principle of a consent of districts has an immediate tendency, by a salutary gradation perhaps, to lead to the dissolution of all government.â[116] It is indeed âdesirable that the most important acts of the national representatives should be subject to the approbation or rejection of the districts whose representatives they are, for exactly the same reason as it is desirable that the acts of the districts themselves should, as speedily as practicability will admit, be in force only so far as relates to the individuals by whom those acts are approved.â[117]
2. This system would have the effect, first, that the constitution would be very short. The impracticability of obtaining the free approbation of a great number of districts to an extensive code would speedily manifest itself; and the whole constitution might consist of a scheme for the division of the country into parts equal in their population, and the fixing of stated periods for the election of a national assembly, not to say that the latter of these articles may very probably be dispensed with.[118]
A second effect would be, that it would soon be found a proceeding unnecessarily circuitous to send laws to the districts for their revision, unless in cases essential to the general safety, and that in as many instances as possible the districts would be suffered to make laws for themselves. âThus, that which was at first a great empire with legislative unity would speedily be transformed into a confederacy of lesser republics, with a general congress or Amphictyonic council, answering the purpose of a point of co-operation upon extraordinary occasions.â[119]
A third effect would consist in the gradual cessation of legislation. âA great assembly collected from the different provinces of an extensive territory, and constituted the sole legislator of those by whom the territory is inhabited, immediately conjures up to itself an idea of the vast multitude of laws that are necessary. A large city, impelled by the principles of commercial jealousy, is not slow to digest the volume of its by-laws and exclusive privileges. But the inhabitants of a small parish, living with some degree of that simplicity which best corresponds with nature, would soon be led to suspect that general laws were unnecessary, and would adjudge the causes that came before them, not according to certain axioms previously written, but according to the circumstances and demands of each particular cause.â[120]
A fourth effect would be that the abrogation of property would be favored. âAll equalization of rank and station strongly tends toward an equalization of possessions.â[121] So not only the lower orders, but also the higher, would see the injustice of the present distribution of property.[122] âThe rich and great are far from callous to views of general felicity, when such views are brought before them with that evidence and attraction of which they are susceptible.â[123] But even so far as they might think only of their own emolument and ease, it would not be difficult to show them that it is in vain to fight against truth, and dangerous to bring upon themselves the hatred of the people, and that it might be to their own interest to make up their minds to concessions at least.[124]
[25] Godwin pp. IX-X [1. VI-VII].
[26] **Ib.** pp. 548â9 [2. 132â3].
[27] **Ib.** p. 90 [1, 120].
[28] **Ib.** p. 150 [1, 164].
[29] **Ib.** p. 90 [1, 120â21].
[30] Godwin p. 101 [1. 134].
[31] **Ib.** pp. 150, 80 [1. 120, 112].
[32] **Ib.** p. 81 [1. 117â18?].
[33] **Ib.** p. 254 [1. 253].
[34] **Ib.** pp. 360â61 [1.?42].
[35] **Ib.** p. 361. [Not in ed. 2.]
[36] **Ib.** p. 361 [1. 342; bracketed words omitted in ed. 2]
[37] **Ib.** p. 771 [2. 294].
[38] Godwin pp. 766â7 [2. 290â91].
[39] **Ib.** p. 768 [2. 291].
[40] **Ib.** p. 769 [2. 292].
[41] **Ib.** p. 773 [2. 295].
[42] **Ib.** p. 166 [1. 182, except bracketed words].
[43] **Ib.** p. 381 [2. 3]
[44] Godwin p. 774 [2. 296].
[45] **Ib.** p. 775 [2. 296].
[46] **Ib.** p. 776 [2. 297].
[47] **Ib.** p. 151 [1. 165, except bracketed words].
[48] **Ib.** pp. 121, 81 [1. 145, 118].
[49] **Ib.** p. 773 [2. 295].
[50] Godwin pp. 773â4 [2. 295].
[51] **Ib.** p. 778 [2. 298â9].
[52] **Ib.** p. 140â1 [1. 156].
[53] Godwin p. 141 [2. 156]
[54] **Ib.** p. 148. [Not in ed. 2.]
[55] **Ib.** p. 149. [Not in ed. 2.]
[56] **Ib.** p. 572 [2. 149â50].
[57] **Ib.** p. 185 [1. 200].
[58] Godwin p. 380 [2. 2].
[59] **Ib.** p. 79 [1. 111].
[60] **Ib.** p. 79 [1. 111; credited to Paineâs âCommon Sense,â p. 1].
[61] **Ib.** p. 788 [2. 305].
[62] **Ib.** p. 163 [1. 174â6? 180?].
[63] **Ib.** p. 151 [1. 164â5; but see **per contra** p. 170].
[64] **Ib.** p. 156. [Not in ed. 2.]
[65] Godwin p. 151. [Not in ed. 2.]
[66] **Ib.** pp. 161â2 [1. 179].
[67] **Ib.** 164â5 [1. 181].
[68] **Ib.** p. 561 [2. 142].
[69] **Ib.** 566 [2. 145].
[70] Godwin p. 562 [2. 142].
[71] **Ib.** 559 [2. 140].
[72] Godwin p. 561 [2. 141. Obviously Eltzbacher has misunderstood this passage. His German translation shows that he mistook âinterestsâ for âinterestâ in the sense of âincentive.â Note also that Godwin expressly restricts the application of this paragraph, even in its right sense, on pp. 111, 145].
[73] **Ib.** p. 566 [2. 145].
[74] **Ib.** p. 564 [2. 144].
[75] **Ib.** p. 564â5 [2. 144].
[76] **Ib.** pp. 773, 778, 779â80 [2. 295, 298â300].
[77] Godwin p. 565 [2. 144].
[78] **Ib.** p. 566 [2. 145].
[79] **Ib.** p. 566 [2. 145].
[80] **Ib.** pp. 573â4 [2. 150â51].
[81] **Ib.** pp. 573â4 [2. 150â51].
[82] **Ib.** pp. 568â9, 571â2 [2. 146, 149].
[83] Godwin pp. 569â70 [2. 148].
[84] **Ib.** pp. 570â71 [2. 148â49].
[85] **Ib.** p. 574 [2. 151]
[86] **Ib.** pp. 576â8 [2. 152â3].
[87] Godwin pp. 578â9 [2. 154]
[88] **Ib.** p. 794 [2. 326].
[89] **Ib.** p. 803. [Not in ed. 2.]
[90] **Ib.** p. 794. [Not in ed. 2.]
[91] Godwin p. 795. [Not in ed. 2; cf. 2. 312].
[92] **Ib.** p. 806 [2. 335].
[93] **Ib.** p. 795. [Not in ed. 2.]
[94] **Ib.** pp. 811, 810 [2. 339, 338âbut the words âin the poorâ seem to be added out of Eltzbacherâs head].
[95] Godwin p. 802 [2. 332].
[96] **Ib.** p. 809 [2. 338]
[97] **Ib.** p. 809 [2. 337]
[98] **Ib.** p. 789. [Not in ed. 2; cf. 2. 306â7.]
[99] **Ib.** p. 790. [Not in ed. 2.]
[100] Godwin pp. 790â91. [Not in ed. 2.]
[101] **Ib.** p. 821 [2. 351].
[102] **Ib.** p. 821 [2. 352]
[103] **Ib.** p. 806 [2. 335].
[104] **Ib.** p. 807 [2. 336].
[105] Godwin p. 810 [2. 338].
[106] Godwin pp. 779â80 [2. 299â300].
[107] Godwin p. 203 [1, 223, only the two sentences beginning at âButâ].
[108] **Ib.** pp. 203â4. [Not in ed. 2.]
[109] Godwin pp. 202â3. [Not in ed. 2.]
[110] **Ib.** p. 204. [Not in ed. 2.]
[111] **Ib.** p. 223. [Not in ed. 2; cf. 1. 226.]
[112] Godwin p. 225. [Not in ed. 2.]
[113] **Ib.** pp. 222â3 [1. 222, except bracketed words].
[114] **Ib.** pp. 657â8 [2. 210].
[115] Godwin pp. 658â9 [2. 211â12; bracketed words a paraphrase].
[116] **Ib.** pp. 659â60 [2. 212].
[117] **Ib.** p. 660 [2. 212].
[118] **Ib.** pp. 660â61 [2. 212â13].
[119] Godwin pp. 661â2 [2. 213â14].
[120] **Ib.** p. 662 [2. 214].
[121] Godwin p. 888 [cf. 2. 396].
[122] **Ib.** pp. 888â9 [2. 396].
[123] **Ib.** pp. 882â3 [2. 392].
[124] **Ib.** pp. 883â84 [2. 393].
1. Pierre-Joseph Proudhon was born at Besançon in 1809. At first he followed the occupation of a printer there and in other cities. In 1838 a stipend of the Academy of Besançon enabled him to go to Paris for scientific studies. In 1843 he took a mercantile position at Lyons. In 1847 he gave it up and moved to Paris.
Here, in the years from 1848 to 1850, Proudhon published several periodicals, one after the other. In 1848 he became a member of the National Assembly. In 1849 he founded a Peopleâs Bank. Soon after this he was condemned to three yearsâ imprisonment for an offence against the press laws, and served his time without having to interrupt his activity as an author.
In 1852 Proudhon was released from prison. He remained in Paris till, in 1858, he was again condemned to three yearsâ imprisonment for an offence against the press laws. He fled and settled in Brussels. In 1860 he was pardoned, and returned to France. Thenceforth he lived at Passy. He died there in 1865.
Proudhon published many books and other writings, especially in the fields of jurisprudence, political economy, and politics.
2. Of special importance for Proudhonâs teaching about law, the State, and property are, among the writings before 1848, the book â**Quâest-ce que la propriĂ©tĂ©? ou recherches sur le principe du droit et du gouvernement**â (1840) and the two-volume work â**SystĂšme des contradictions Ă©conomiques, ou philosophie de la misĂšre**â (1846); among the writings from 1848 to 1851 the â**Confessions dâun rĂ©volutionnaire**â (1849) and the â**IdĂ©e gĂ©nĂ©rale de la rĂ©volution au XIXe siĂšcle**â (1851); and lastly, among the writings after 1851, the three-volume work â**De la justice dans la rĂ©volution et dans lâEglise, nouveaux principes de philosophie pratique**â (1858) and the book â**Du principe fĂ©dĂ©ratif et de la nĂ©cessitĂ© de reconstituer le parti de la rĂ©volution**â (1863).[125]
Proudhonâs teaching regarding law, the State, and property underwent changes in minor points, but remained the same in its essentials; the opinion that it changed also in essentials is caused by Proudhonâs arbitrary and varying use of language. Since no history of the evolution of Proudhonâs teaching can be given here, I shall present, so far as concerns such minor points, only the teaching of 1848â51, in which years Proudhon developed his views with especial clearness and did especially forcible work for them.
3. Proudhon calls his teaching about law, the State, and property âAnarchism.â ââWhat form of government shall we prefer?â âCan you ask?â replies one of my younger readers without doubt; âyou are a Republican.â âRepublican, yes; but this word makes nothing definite. **Res publica** is âthe public thingâ; now, whoever wants the public thing, under whatever form of government, may call himself a Republican. Even kings are Republicans.â âWell, you are a Democrat.â âNo.â âWhat? can you be a Monarchist?â âNo.â âA Constitutionalist?â âI should hope not.â âYou are an Aristocrat then?â âNot a bit.â âYou want a mixed government, then?â âStill less.â âWhat are you then?â âI am an Anarchist.ââ[126]
<em>According to Proudhon the supreme law for us is justice.</em>
What is justice? âJustice is respect, spontaneously felt and mutually guaranteed, for human dignity, in whatever person and under whatever circumstances we find it compromised, and to whatever risk its defence may expose us.â[127]
âI ought to respect my neighbor, and make others respect him, as myself; such is the law of my conscience. In consideration of what do I owe him this respect? In consideration of his strength, his talent, his wealth? No, what chance gives is not what makes the human person worthy of respect. In consideration of the respect which he in turn pays to me? No, justice assumes reciprocity of respect, but does not wait for it. It asserts and wills respect for human dignity even in an enemy, which causes the existence of **laws of war**; even in the murderer whom we kill as having fallen from his manhood, which causes the existence of **penal laws**. It is not the gifts of nature or the advantages of fortune that make me respect my neighbor; it is not his ox, his ass, or his maid-servant, as the decalogue says; it is not even the welfare that he owes to me as I owe mine to him; it is his manhood.â[128]
âJustice is at once a reality and an idea.â[129] âJustice is a faculty of the soul, the foremost of all, that which constitutes a social being. But it is more than a faculty; it is an idea, it indicates a relation, an equation. As a faculty it may be developed; this development is what constitutes the education of humanity. As an equation it presents nothing antinomic; it is absolute and immutable like every law, and, like every law, very intelligible.â[130]
Justice is for us the supreme law. âJustice is the inviolable yardstick of all human actions.â[131] âBy it the facts of social life, by nature indeterminate and contradictory, become susceptible of definition and arrangement.â[132]
âJustice is the central star which governs societies, the pole about which the political world revolves, the principle and rule of all transactions. Nothing is done among men that is not in the name of **right**; nothing without invoking justice. Justice is not the work of the law; on the contrary, the law is never anything but a declaration and application of what is **just**.â[132] âSuppose a society where justice is outranked, however little, by another principle, say religion; or in which certain individuals are regarded more highly, by however little, than others; I say that, justice being virtually annulled, it is inevitable that the society will perish sooner or later.[133]
âIt is the privilege of justice that the faith which it inspires is unshakable, and that it cannot be dogmatically denied or rejected. All peoples invoke it; reasons of State, even while they violate it, profess to be based on it; religion exists only for it; skepticism dissembles before it; irony has power only in its name; crime and hypocrisy do it homage. [If liberty is not an empty phrase, it acts only in the service of right; even when it rebels against right, at bottom it does not curse it.]â[134] âAll the most rational teachings of human wisdom about justice are summed up in this famous adage: **Do to others what you would have done to you; Do not to others what you would not have done to you.**â[135]
I. **In the name of justice Proudhon rejects, not law indeed, but almost all individual legal norms, and the State laws in particular.**
The State makes laws, and âas many laws as the interests which it meets with; and, since interests are innumerable, the legislation-machine must work uninterruptedly. Laws and ordinances fall like hail on the poor populace. After a while the political soil will be covered with a layer of paper, and all the geologists will have to do will be to list it, under the name of **papyraceous formation**, among the epochs of the earthâs history. The Convention, in three years one month and four days, issued eleven thousand six hundred laws and decrees; the Constituent and Legislative Assemblies had produced hardly less; the empire and the later governments have wrought as industriously. At present the â**Bulletin des Lois**â contains, they say, more than fifty thousand; if our representatives did their duty this enormous figure would soon be doubled. Do you believe that the populace, or the government itself, can keep its sanity in this labyrinth?â[136]
âBut what am I saying? Laws for him who thinks for himself, and is responsible only for his own acts! laws for him who would be free, and feels himself destined to become free! I am ready to make terms, but I will have no laws; I acknowledge none; I protest against every order which an ostensibly necessary authority shall please to impose on my free will. Laws! we know what they are and what they are worth. Cobwebs for the powerful and the rich, chains which no steel can break for the little and the poor, fishersâ nets in the hands of the government.â[137]
âYou say they shall make **few** laws, make them **simple**, make them **good**. But it is impossible. Must not government adjust all interests, decide all disputes? Now interests are by the nature of society innumerable, relationships infinitely variable and mobile; how is it possible that only a few laws should be made? how can they be simple? how can the best law escape soon being detestable?â[138]
II. **Justice requires that only one legal norm be in force: to wit, the norm that contracts must be lived up to.**
âWhat do we mean by a **contract**? A contract, says the civil code, art. 1101, is an agreement whereby one or more persons bind themselves to one or more others to do or not to do something.â[139] âThat I may remain free, that I may be subjected to no law but my own, and that I may govern myself, the edifice of society must be rebuilt upon the idea of Contract.â[140] âWe must start with the idea of contract as the dominant idea of politics.â[141] This norm, that contracts must be lived up to, is to be based not only on its justice, but at the same time on the fact that among men who live together there prevails a will to enforce the keeping of contracts, if necessary, with violence;[142] so it is to be not only a commandment of morality, but also a legal norm.
âSeveral of your fellow-men have agreed to treat each other with good faith and fair play,âthat is, to respect those rules of action which the nature of things points out to them as being alone capable of assuring to them, in the fullest measure, prosperity, safety, and peace. Are you willing to join their league? to form a part of their society? Do you promise to respect the honor, the liberty, the goods, of your brothers? Do you promise never to appropriate to yourself, neither by violence, by fraud, by usury, nor by speculation, anotherâs product or possession? Do you promise never to lie and deceive, neither in court, in trade, nor in any of your dealings? You are free to accept or to refuse.
âIf you refuse, you form a part of the society of savages. Having left the fellowship of the human race, you come under suspicion. Nothing protects you. At the least insult anybody you meet may knock you down, without incurring any other charge than that of cruelty to animals.
âIf you swear to the league, on the contrary, you form a part of the society of free men. All your brothers enter into an engagement with you, promising you fidelity, friendship, help, service, commerce. In case of infraction on their part or on yours, through negligence, hot blood, or evil intent, you are responsible to one another, for the damage and also for the scandal and insecurity which you have caused; this responsibility may extend, according to the seriousness of the perjury or the repetition of the crime, as far as to excommunication and death.â[143]
I. Since Proudhon approves only the single legal norm that contracts must be lived up to, he can sanction only a single legal relation, that of parties to a contract. Hence he must necessarily reject the State; for it is established by particular legal norms, and, as an involuntary legal relation, it binds even those who have not entered into any contract at all. **Proudhon does accordingly reject the State absolutely, without any spatial or temporal limitation; he even regards it as a legal relation which offends against justice to an unusual degree.**
âThe government of man by man is slavery.â[144] âWhoever lays his hand on me to govern me is a usurper and a tyrant; I declare him my enemy.â[145] âIn a given society the authority of man over man is in inverse ratio to the intellectual development which this society has attained, and the probable duration of this authority may be calculated from the more or less general desire for a trueâthat is, a scientificâgovernment.â[146]
âRoyalty is never legitimate. Neither heredity, election, universal suffrage, the excellence of the sovereign, nor the consecration of religion and time, makes royalty legitimate. In whatever form it may appear, monarchical, oligarchic, democratic,âroyalty, or the government of man by man, is illegal and absurd.â[147] Democracy in particular âis nothing but a constitutional arbitrary power succeeding another constitutional arbitrary power; it has no scientific value, and we must see in it only a preparation for the Republic, one and indivisible.â[148]
âAuthority was no sooner begun on earth than it became the object of universal competition. Authority, Government, Power, State,âthese words all denote the same thing,âeach man sees in it the means of oppressing and exploiting his fellows. Absolutists, doctrinaires, demagogues, and socialists, turned their eyes incessantly to authority as their sole cynosure.â[149] âAll parties without exception, in so far as they seek for power, are varieties of absolutism; and there will be no liberty for citizens, no order for societies, no union among workingmen, till in the political catechism the renunciation of authority shall have replaced faith in authority. **No more parties, no more authority, absolute liberty of man and citizen**,âthere, in three words, is my political and social confession of faith.â[150]
II. **Justice demands, in place of the State, a social human life on the basis of the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to.** Proudhon calls this social life âanarchyâ[151] and later âfederationâ[152] also.
1. After the abrogation of the State, men are still to live together in society. As early as 1841 Proudhon says that the point is âto discover a system of absolute equality, in which all present institutions, minus property or the sum of the abuses of property, might not only find a place, but be themselves means to equality; individual liberty, the division of powers, the cabinet, the jury, the administrative and judiciary organization.â[153]
But men are not to be kept together in society by any supreme authority, but only by the legally binding force of contract. âWhen I bargain for any object with one or more of my fellow-citizens, it is clear that then my will alone is my law; it is I myself who, in fulfilling my obligation, am my government. If then I could make that contract with all, which I do make with some; if all could renew it with each other; if every group of citizens, commune, canton, department, corporation, company, etc., formed by such a contract and considered as a moral person, could then, always on the same terms, treat with each of the other groups and with all, it would be exactly as if my will was repeated **ad infinitum**. I should be sure that the law thus made on all points that concern the republic, on the various motions of millions of persons, would never be anything but my law; and, if this new order of things was called government, that this government would be mine. The **rĂ©gime of contracts**, substituted for the **rĂ©gime of laws**, would constitute the true government of man and of the citizen, the true sovereignty of the people, the Republic.â[154]
âThe Republic is the organization by which, all opinions and all activities remaining free, the People, by the very divergence of opinions and of wills, thinks and acts as a single man. In the Republic every citizen, in doing what he wishes and nothing but what he wishes, participates directly in legislation and government, just as he participates in the production and circulation of wealth. There every citizen is king; for he has plenary power, he reigns and governs. The Republic is a positive anarchy. It is neither liberty subjected TO order, as in the constitutional monarchy, nor liberty imprisoned IN order, as the provisional government would have it. It is liberty delivered from all its hobbles, superstition, prejudice, sophism, speculation, authority; it is mutual liberty, not self-limiting liberty; liberty, not the daughter but the MOTHER of order.â[155]
2. Anarchy may easily seem to us âthe acme of disorder and the expression of chaos. They say that when a Parisian burgher of the seventeenth century once heard that in Venice there was no king, the good man could not get over his astonishment, and thought he should die of laughing. Such is our prejudice.â[156] As against this, Proudhon draws a picture of how menâs life in society under anarchy might perhaps shape itself in detail, to execute the functions now belonging to the State.
He begins with an example. âFor many centuries the spiritual power has been separated, within traditional limits, from the temporal power. [But there has never been a complete separation, and therefore, to the great detriment of the churchâs authority and of believers, centralization has never been sufficient.] There would be a complete separation if the temporal power not only did not concern itself with the celebration of mysteries, the administration of sacraments, the government of parishes, etc., but did not intervene in the nomination of bishops either. There would ensue a greater centralization, and consequently a more regular government, if in each parish the people had the right to choose for themselves their vicars and curates, or to have none at all; if in each diocese the priests elected their bishop; if the assembly of bishops, or a primate of the Gauls, had sole charge of the regulation of religious affairs, theological instruction, and worship. By this separation the clergy would cease to be, in the hands of political power, an instrument of tyranny over the people; and by this application of universal suffrage the ecclesiastical government, centralized in itself, receiving its inspirations from the people and not from the government or the pope, would be in constant harmony with the needs of society and with the moral and intellectual condition of the citizens. We must, then, in order to return to truth, organic, political, economic, or social (for here all these are one), first, abolish the constitutional cumulation by taking from the State the nomination of the bishops, and definitively separating the spiritual from the temporal; second, centralize the church in itself by a system of graded elections; third, give to the ecclesiastical power, as we do to all the other powers in the State, the vote of the citizens as a basis. By this system what to-day is GOVERNMENT will no longer be anything but **administration**; all France is centralized, so far as concerns ecclesiastical functions; the country, by the mere fact of its electoral initiative, governs itself in matters of eternal life as well as in those of this world. And one may already see that if it were possible to organize the entire country in temporal matters on the same bases, the most perfect order and the most vigorous centralization would exist without there being anything of what we to-day call constituted authority or government.â[157]
Proudhon gives a second example in judicial authority. âThe judicial functions, by their different specialties, their hierarchy, [their permanent tenure of office,] their convergence under a single departmental head, show an unequivocal tendency to separation and centralization. But they are in no way dependent on those who are under their jurisdiction; they are all at the disposal of the executive power, which is appointed by the people once in four years with authority that cannot be diminished; they are subordinated not to the country by election, but to the government, president or prince, by appointment. It follows that those who are under the jurisdiction of a court are given over to their ânaturalâ judges just as are parishioners to their vicars; that the people belong to the magistrate like an inheritance; that the litigant is the judgeâs, not the judge the litigantâs. Apply universal suffrage and graded election to the judicial as well as the ecclesiastical functions; suppress the permanent tenure of office, which is an alienation of the electoral right; take away from the State all action, all influence, on the judicial body; let this body, separately centralized in itself, no longer depend on any but the people,âand, in the first place, you will have deprived power of its mightiest instrument of tyranny; you will have made justice a principle of liberty as well as of order. And, unless you suppose that the people, from whom all powers should spring by universal suffrage, is in contradiction with itself,âthat what it wants in religion it does not want in justice,âyou are assured that the separation of powers can beget no conflict; you may boldly lay it down as a principle that **separation** and **equilibrium** are henceforth synonymous.â[158]
Then Proudhon goes on to the army, the customhouses, the public departments of agriculture and commerce, public works, public education, and finance; for each of these administrations he demands independence and centralization on the basis of general suffrage.[159]
âThat a nation may manifest itself in its unity, it must be centralized in its religion, centralized in its justice, centralized in its army, centralized in its agriculture, industry, and commerce, centralized in its finances,âin a word, centralized in all its functions and faculties; the centralization must work from the bottom to the top, from the circumference to the centre; all the functions must be independent and severally self-governing.
âWould you then make this invisible unity perceptible by a special organ, preserve the image of the old government? Group these different administrations by their heads; you have your cabinet, your **executive**, which can then very well do without a Council of State.
âSet up above all this a grand jury, legislature, or national assembly, appointed directly by the whole country, and charged not with appointing the cabinet officers,âthey have their investiture from their particular constituents,âbut with auditing the accounts, making the laws, settling the budget, deciding controversies between the administrations, all after having heard the reports of the Public Department, or Department of the Interior, to which the whole government will thenceforth be reduced; and you will have a centralization the stronger the more you multiply its foci, a responsibility the more real the more clear-cut is the separation between the powers; you have a constitution at once political and social.â[160]
I. Since Proudhon sanctions only the one legal norm that contracts must be kept, he can approve only one legal relation, that between contracting parties. Hence he must necessarily reject property as well as the State, since it is established by particular legal norms, and, as an involuntary legal relation, binds even such as have in no way entered into a contract. **And he does reject property[161] absolutely, without any spatial or temporal limitation; nay, it even appears to him to be a legal relation which is particularly repugnant to justice.**
âAccording to its definition, property is the right of using and abusing; that is to say, it is the absolute, irresponsible domain of man over his person and his goods. If property ceased to be the right to abuse, it would cease to be property. Has not the proprietor the right to give his goods to whomever he will, to let his neighbor burn without crying fire, to oppose the public good, to squander his patrimony, to exploit the laborer and hold him to ransom, to produce bad goods and sell them badly? Can he be judicially constrained to use his property well? can he be disturbed in the abuse of it? What am I saying? Is not property, precisely because it is full of abuse, the most sacred thing in the world for the legislator? Can one conceive of a property whose use the police power should determine, whose abuse it should repress? Is it not clear, in fine, that if one undertook to introduce justice into property, one would destroy property, just as the law, by introducing propriety into concubinage, destroyed concubinage?â[162]
âMen steal: first, by violence on the highway; second, alone or in a band; third, by burglary; fourth, by embezzlement; fifth, by fraudulent bankruptcy; sixth, by forgery; seventh, by counterfeiting. Eighth, by pocket-picking; ninth, by swindling; tenth, by breach of trust; eleventh, by gambling and lotteries.âTwelfth, by usury. Thirteenth, by rent-taking.âFourteenth, by commerce, when the profits are more than fair wages for the traderâs work.âFifteenth, by selling oneâs own product at a profit, and by accepting a sinecure or a fat salary.â[163] âIn theft such as the laws forbid, force and fraud are employed alone and openly; in authorized theft they are disguised under a produced utility, which they use as a device for plundering their victim. The direct use of violence and force was early and unanimously rejected; no nation has yet reached the point of delivering itself from theft when united with talent, labor, and possession.â[164] In this sense property is âtheft,â[165] âthe exploitation of the weak by the strong,â[166] âcontrary to right,â[167] âthe suicide of society.â[168]
II. **Justice demands, in place of property, a distribution of goods based on the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to.**
Proudhon calls that portion of goods which is assigned to the individual by contract, âproperty.â In 1840 he had demanded that individual possession be substituted for property; with this one change evil would disappear from the earth.[169] But in 1841 he is already explaining that by property he means only its abuses;[170] nay, he even then describes as necessary the creation of an immediately applicable social system in which the rights of barter and sale, of direct and collateral inheritance, of primogeniture and bequest, should find their place.[171] In 1846 he says, âSome day transformed property will be an idea positive, complete, social, and true; a property which will abolish the old property and will become equally effective and beneficent for all.â[172] In 1848 he is declaring that âproperty, as to its principle or substance, which is human personality, must never perish; it must remain in manâs heart as a perpetual stimulus to labor, as the antagonist whose absence would cause labor to fall into idleness and death.â[173]
And in 1850 he announces: âWhat I sought for as far back as 1840, in defining property, what I am wanting now, is not a destruction; I have said it till I am tired. That would have been to fall with Rousseau, Plato, Louis Blanc himself, and all the adversaries of property, into **Communism**, against which I protest with all my might; what I ask for property is a BALANCE,â[174]âthat is, âjustice.â[175]
In all these pronouncements property means nothing else than that portion of goods which falls to the individual on the basis of contracts, on which society is to be built up.[176] The property which Proudhon sanctions cannot be a special legal relation, but only a possible part of the substance of the one legal relation which he approves, the relation of contract. It can afford no protection against a group of men whose extent is determined by legal norms, but only against a group of men who have mutually secured a certain portion of goods to each other by contract. Proudhon, therefore, is here using the word âpropertyâ in an inexact sense; in the strict sense it can denote only a portion of goods set apart in an involuntary legal relation by particular legal norms.
Accordingly, when in the name of justice Proudhon demands a certain distribution of property, this means nothing more than that the contracts on which society is to be built should make a certain sort of provision with respect to the distribution of goods. And the way in which they should determine it is this: that every man is to have the product of his labor.
âLet us conceive of wealth as a mass whose elements are held together permanently by a chemical force, and into which new elements incessantly enter and combine in different proportions, but according to a definite law: value is the proportion (the measure) in which each of these elements forms a part of the whole.â[177] âI suppose, therefore, a force which combines the elements of wealth in definite proportions and makes of them a homogeneous whole.â[178] âThis force is LABOR. It is labor, labor alone, that produces all the elements of wealth and combines them, to the last molecule, according to a variable but definite law of proportionality.â[179] âEvery product is a representative sign of labor.â[180]
âEvery product can consequently be exchanged for another.â[181] âIf then the tailor, in return for furnishing the value of one day of his work, consumes ten times the weaverâs day, it is as if the weaver gave ten days of his life for one day of the tailorâs. This is precisely what occurs when a peasant pays a lawyer twelve francs for a document that it costs one hour to draw up; and this inequality, this iniquity in exchange, is the mightiest cause of poverty. Every error in commutative justice is an immolation of the laborer, a transfusion of a manâs blood into another manâs body.â[182]
âWhat I demand with respect to property is a BALANCE. It is not for nothing that the genius of nations has equipped Justice with this instrument of precision. Justice applied to economy is in fact nothing but a perpetual balance; or, to express myself still more precisely, justice as regards the distribution of goods is nothing but the obligation which rests upon every citizen and every State, in their business relations, to conform to that law of equilibrium which manifests itself everywhere in economy, and whose violation, accidental or voluntary, is the fundamental principle of poverty.â[183]
2. That every man should enjoy the product of his labor is possible only through reciprocity, according to Proudhon; therefore he calls his doctrine âthe theory of **mutuality** or of the **mutuum**.â[184] âReciprocity is expressed in the precept, âDo to others what you would have done to you,â a precept which political economy has translated into its celebrated formula, âProducts exchange for products.â Now the evil which is devouring us results from the fact that the law of reciprocity is unrecognized, violated. The remedy consists altogether in the promulgation of this law. The organization of our mutual and reciprocal relations is the whole of social science.â[185]
And so Proudhon, in the solemn declaration which he prefixed to the constitution of the Peopleâs Bank when he first published it, gives the following assurance: âI protest that in criticising property, or rather the whole body of institutions of which property is the pivot, I never meant either to attack the individual rights recognized by previous laws, or to dispute the legitimacy of acquired possessions, or to instigate an arbitrary distribution of goods, or to put an obstacle in the way of the free and regular acquisition of properties by bargain and sale; or even to prohibit or suppress by sovereign decree land-rent and interest on capital. I think that all these manifestations of human activity should remain free and optional for all; I would admit no other modifications, restrictions, or suppressions of them than naturally and necessarily result from the universalization of the principle of reciprocity and of the law of synthesis which I propound. This is my last will and testament. I allow only him to suspect its sincerity, who could tell a lie in the moment of death.â[186]
<em>The change which justice calls for is to come about in this way, that those men who have recognized the truth are to convince others how necessary the change is for the sake of justice, and that hereby, spontaneously, law is to transform itself, the State and property to drop away, and the new condition to appear.</em> The new condition will appear âas soon as the idea is popularizedâ;[187] that it may appear, we must âpopularize the idea.â[188]
I. Nothing is requisite but to convince men that justice commands the change.
1. Proudhon rejects all other methods. His doctrine is âin accord with the constitution and the laws.â[189] âAccomplish the Revolution, they say, and after this everything will be cleared up. As if the Revolution itself could be accomplished without a leading idea!â[190] âTo secure justice to oneâs self by bloodshed is an extremity to which the Californians, gathered since yesterday to seek for gold, may be reduced; but may the luck of France preserve us from it!â[191]
âDespite the violence which we witness, I do not believe that hereafter liberty will need to use force to claim its rights and avenge its wrongs. Reason will serve us better; and patience, like the Revolution, is invincible.â[192]
2. But how shall we convince men, âhow popularize the idea, if the **bourgeoisie** remains hostile; if the populace, brutalized by servitude, full of prejudices and bad instincts, remains plunged in indifference; if the professors, the academicians, the press, are calumniating you; if the courts are truculent; if the powers that be muffle your voice? Donât worry. Just as the lack of ideas makes one lose the most promising games, war against ideas can only push forward the Revolution. Do you not see already that the **rĂ©gime** of authority, of inequality, of predestination, of eternal salvation, and of reasons of State, is daily becoming still more intolerable for the well-to-do classes, whose conscience and reason it tortures, than for the mass, whose stomach cries out against it?â[193]
3. The most effective means for convincing men, according to Proudhon, is to present to the people, within the State and without violating its law, âan example of centralization spontaneous, independent, and social,â thus applying even now the principles of the future constitution of society.[194] âRouse that collective action without which the condition of the people will forever be unhappy and its efforts powerless. Teach it to produce wealth and order with its own hands, without the help of the authorities.â[195]
Proudhon sought to give such an example by the founding of the Peopleâs Bank.[196]
The Peopleâs Bank was to âinsure work and prosperity to all producers by organizing them as beginning and end of production with regard to one another,âthat is, as capitalists and as consumers.â[197]
âThe Peopleâs Bank was to be the property of all the citizens who accepted its services, who for this purpose furnished money to it if they thought that it could not yet for some time do without a metallic basis, and who, in every case, promised it their preference in discounting paper, and received its notes as cash. Accordingly the Peopleâs Bank, working for the profit of its customers themselves, had no occasion to take interest for its loans nor to charge a discount on commercial paper; it had only to take a very slight allowance to cover salaries and expenses. So credit was GRATUITOUS!âThe principle being realized, the consequences unfolded themselves ad **infinitum**.â[198]
âSo the Peopleâs Bank, giving an example of popular initiative alike in government and in public economy, which thenceforth were to be identified in a single synthesis, was becoming for the **prolĂ©tariat** at once the principle and the instrument of their emancipation; it was creating political and industrial liberty. And, as every philosophy and every religion is the metaphysical or symbolic expression of social economy, the Peopleâs Bank, changing the material basis of society, was ushering in the revolution of philosophy and religion; it was thus, at least, that its founders had conceived of it.â[199]
All this can best be made clear by reproducing some provisions from the constitution of the Peopleâs Bank.
Art. 1. By these presents a commercial company is founded under the name of **Société de la Banque du Peuple**, consisting of Citizen Proudhon, here present, and the persons who shall give their assent to this constitution by becoming stockholders.
Art. 3.... For the present the company will exist as a partnership in which Citizen Proudhon shall be general partner, and the other parties concerned shall be limited partners who shall in no case be responsible for more than the value of their shares.
Art. 5.... The firm name shall be P. J. Proudhon & Co.
Art. 6. Besides the members of the company proper, every citizen is invited to form a part of the Peopleâs Bank as a co-operator. For this it suffices to assent to the bankâs constitution and to accept its paper.
Art. 7. The Peopleâs Bank Company being capable of indefinite extension, its virtual duration is endless. However, to conform to the requirements of the law, it fixes its duration at ninety-nine years, which shall commence on the day of its definitive organization.
Art. 9.... The Peopleâs Bank, having as its **basis** the essential gratuitousness of credit and exchange, as its **object** the circulation, not the production, of values, and as its **means** the mutual consent of producers and consumers, can and should work without capital.
This end will be reached when the entire mass of producers and consumers shall have assented to the constitution of the company.
Till then the Peopleâs Bank Company, having to conform to established custom and the requirements of law, and especially in order more effectively to invite citizens to join it, will provide itself with capital.
Art. 10. The capital of the Peopleâs Bank shall be five million francs, divided into shares of five francs each.
... The company shall be definitively organized, and its business shall begin, when ten thousand shares are taken.
Art. 12. Stock shall be issued only at par. It shall bear no interest.
Art. 15. The principal businesses of the Peopleâs Bank are, 1, to increase its cash on hand by issuing notes; 2, discounting endorsed commercial paper; 3, discounting accepted orders (**commandes**) and bills (**factures**); 4, loans on personal property; 5, loans on personal security; 6, advances on annuities and collateral security; 7, payments and collections; 8, advances to productive and industrial enterprises (**la commande**).
To these departments the Peopleâs Bank will add: 9, the functions of a savings bank and endowment insurance; 10, insurance; 11, safe deposit vaults; 12, the service of the budget.[200]
Art. 18. In distinction from ordinary bank notes, payable in **specie** to some oneâs **order**, the paper of the Peopleâs Bank is an order for goods, vested with a social character, rendered perpetual, and is payable at sight by every stockholder and co-operator in the **products** or **services** of his industry or profession.
Art. 21. Every co-operator agrees to trade by preference, for all goods which the company can offer him, with the co-operators of the bank, and to reserve his orders exclusively for his fellow stockholders and fellow co-operators.
In return, every producer or tradesman co-operating with the bank agrees to furnish his goods to the other co-operators at a reduced price.
Art. 62. The Peopleâs Bank has its headquarters in Paris.
<br>
Its aim is, in the course of time, to establish a branch in every **arrondissement** and a correspondent in every commune.
Art. 63. As soon as circumstances permit, the present company shall be converted into a corporation, since this form allows us to realize, according to the wish of the founders, the threefold principle, first, of election; second, of the separation and the independence of the branches of work; third, of the personal responsibility of every employee.[201]
II. If once men are convinced that justice commands the change, then will âdespotism fall of itself by its very uselessness.â[202] The State and property disappear, law is transformed, and the new condition of things begins.
âThe Revolution does not act after the fashion of the old governmental, aristocratic, or dynastic principle. It is Right, the balance of forces, equality. It has no conquests to pursue, no nations to reduce to servitude, no frontiers to defend, no fortresses to build, no armies to feed, no laurels to pluck, no preponderance to maintain. The might of its economic institutions, the gratuitousness of its credit, the brilliancy of its thought, are its sufficient means for converting the universe.â[203] âThe Revolution has for allies all who suffer oppression and exploitation; let it appear, and the universe stretches its arms to it.â[204]
âI want the peaceable revolution. I want you to make the very institutions which I charge you to abolish, and the principles of law which you will have to complete, serve toward the realization of my wishes, so that the new society shall appear as the spontaneous, natural, and necessary development of the old, and that the Revolution, while abrogating the old order of things, shall nevertheless be the progress of that order.â[205] âWhen the people, once enlightened regarding its true interests, declares its will not to reform the government but to revolutionize society,â[206] then âthe dissolution of government in the economic organismâ[207] will follow in a way about which one can at present only make guesses.[208]
[125] Not (as stated by Diehl vol. 2 p. 116, Zenker p. 61) 1852.
[126] Proudhon â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â p. 295 [212. Bracketed references under Proudhon are to the collected edition of his â**Ćuvres complĂštes**,â Paris, 1866â83.âThe passage quoted above is probably the first case in history where anybody called himself an Anarchist, though the word had long been in use as a term of reproach for enemies].
[127] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 182â3 [1. 224â5].
[128] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 184â5 [1. 227].
[129] **Ib.** 1. 73 [132? but there he says **must be**, not **is**].
[130] **Ib.** 1. 185 [1. 228].
[131] **Ib.** 1. 195 [1. 235].
[132] **Ib.** 1. 185 [1. 228].
[133] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 195 [1. 235].
[134] **Ib.** 3. 45 [3. 276, but with the bracketed sentence much abridged. For the phrase ârebel against right,â remember that in French **right** and **common law** are one and the same word].
[135] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â p. 18 [24â5].
[136] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â 147â8 [136â7]
[137] **Ib.** 149 [138].
[138] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â pp. 149â50 [138].
[139] Pr. â**Principe**â p. 64 [44].
[140] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â p. 235 [215].
[141] Pr. â**Principe**â p. 64 [44].
[142] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â p. 343 [312].
[143] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â pp. 342â3 [311â12].
[144] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 8 [29].
[145] **Ib.** p. 6 [23].
[146] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â p. 301 [216].
[147] **Ib.** pp. 298â9 [214].
[148] Pr. â**Solution**â p. 54 [39].
[149] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 7 [24].
[150] **Ib.** p. 7 [25â6].
[151] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â p. 301 [216], â**Confessions**â p. 68 [192], â**Solution**â p. 119 [87].
[152] Pr. â**Principe**â p. 67 [46].âProudhonâs teaching was not, as asserted by Diehl vol. 2 p. 116, vol. 3 pp. 166â7, and Zenker p. 61, Anarchism till 1852 and Federalism thenceforward; his Anarchism was Federalism from the start, only he later gave it the additional name of Federalism.
[153] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â pp. XIX-XX [10â11].
[154] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â pp. 235â6 [215â16].
[155] Pr. â**Solution**â p. 119 [87].
[156] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â pp. 301â2 [216].
[157] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 65 [180â3; bracketed words a paraphrase.]
[158] Pr. â**Confessions**â pp. 65â6 [183â4, except bracketed words].
[159] **Ib.** pp. 66â8 [185â9].
[160] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 68 [191â2].
[161] Pfau pp. 227â31, Adler p. 372, Zenker pp. 26, 41, fail to see this, being influenced by the improper sense in which Proudhon uses the word âpropertyâ for a contractually guaranteed share of goods. [Eltzbacherâs statement, on the other hand, is not so much drawn from Proudhon himself as deduced from a comparison of Eltzbacherâs definition of property with the statement that Proudhon admits no law but the law of contract. I do not think this last statement is correct; I think Proudhon would have his voluntary contractual associations protect their members in certain definable respectsâamong others, in the possession of goodsâagainst those who stood outside the contract as well as against those within. Then this would be, by Eltzbacherâs definitions, both law and property.]
[162] Pr. â**Contradictions**â 2. 303â4 [2. 237â8].
[163] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â pp. 285â90 [205â9].
[164] Pr. â**PropriĂ©tĂ©**â p. 293 [211].
[165] **Ib.** pp. 1â2 [13].
[166] **Ib.** p. 283 [204].
[167] **Ib.** p. 311 [223].
[168] **Ib.** p. 311 [223].
[169] **Ib.** p. 311 [223].
[170] **Ib.** pp. XVIII-XIX [10; consult the passage].
[171] **Ib.** pp. XIX-XX [11].
[172] Pr. â**Contradictions**â 2. 234â5 [2. 184].
[173] Pr. â**Droit**â p. 50 [230].
[174] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 302â3 [1. 324â5].
[175] **Ib.** 303 [1. 325].
[176] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â p. 235 [215]; â**Principe**â p. 64 [44].
[177] Pr. â**Contradictions**â 1. 51 [1. 74].
[178] **Ib.** 1. 53 [1. 75].
[179] **Ib.** 1. 55. [1. 76â7].
[180] **Ib.** 1. 68 [1. 87].
[181] **Ib.** 1. 68 [1. 87].
[182] **Ib.** 1. 83 [1. 98â9].
[183] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 302â3 [1. 325].
[184] Pr. â**Contradictions**â 2. 528 [2. 414].
[185] Pr. â**Organisation**â p. 5 [93].
[186] Pr. â**Banque**â pp. 3â4 [260].
[187] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 515 [2. 133].
[188] **Ib.** 1. 515 [2. 133].
[189] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 71 [201].
[190] Pr. â**Justice**â 1, 515 [2, 133. Eltzbacher finds the sense âall will be enlightenedâ where I translate âeverything will be cleared up.â Eltzbacherâs view of the senseâthat to those who say âEnlightenment must come by the Revolutionâ Proudhon replies, âNo, the Revolution must come by enlightenmentââcorrectly gives the thought brought out in the context].
[191] Pr. â**Justice**ïżœïżœïżœ 1. 466 [2. 90].
[192] **Ib.** 1. 470â71 [2. 94].
[193] **Ib.** 1. 515 [2. 133â4].
[194] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 69 [196].
[195] **Ib.** p. 72 [203].
[196] **Ib.** p. 69 [196].
[197] **Ib.** p. 69 [196].
[198] **Ib.** pp. 69â70 [197].
[199] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 70 [197â8].
[200] [French dictionaries leave us somewhat in the lurch as to commercial usages which differ from the English. Eltzbacher translates 8, âinvestment as silent partnerâ; 12, âbalancing accounts.â]
[201] Pr. â**Banque**â pp. 5â20 [261â77].
[202] Pr. â**Confessions**â p. 72 [202â3].
[203] Pr. â**Justice**â 1. 509 [2. 128â9].
[204] **Ib.** 1. 510 [2. 129].
[205] Pr. â**IdĂ©e**â pp. 196â7 [181].
[206] **Ib.** p. 197 [181].
[207] **Ib.** p. 277 [253].
[208] **Ib.** pp. 195, 197 [180â81].
1. Johann Kaspar Schmidt was born in 1806, at Bayreuth in Bavaria. He studied philosophy and theology at Berlin from 1826 to 1828, at Erlangen from 1828 to 1829. In 1829 he interrupted his studies, made a prolonged tour through Germany, and then lived alternately at Koenigsberg and Kulm till 1832. From 1832 to 1834 he studied at Berlin again; in 1835 he passed his tests there as **Gymnasiallehrer**. He received no government appointment, however, and in 1839 became teacher in a young ladiesâ seminary in Berlin. He gave up this place in 1844, but continued to live in Berlin, and died there in 1856.
In part under the pseudonym Max Stirner, in part anonymously, Schmidt published a small number of works, mostly of a philosophical nature.
2. Stirnerâs teaching about law, the State, and property is contained chiefly in his book â**Der Einzige und sein Eigentum**â (1845).
âBut here arises the question, Can we speak of such a thing as a âteachingâ of Stirnerâs?
Stirner recognizes no **ought**. âMen are such as they should beâcan be. What should they be? Surely not more than they can be! And what can they be? Not more, again, than theyâcan, **i. e.** than they have the ability, the strength, to be.â[209] âA man is âcalledâ to nothing, and has no âproper business,â no âfunction,â as little as a plant or beast has a âvocation.â He has not a vocation; but he has powers, which express themselves where they are, because their being consists only in their expression, and which can remain idle as little as life, which would no longer be life if it âstood stillâ but for a second. Now one might cry to man, âUse your power.â But this imperative would be given the meaning that it was manâs proper business to use his power. It is not so. Rather, every one really does use his power, without first regarding this as his vocation; every one uses in every moment as much power as he possesses.â[210]
Nay, Stirner acknowledges no such thing as truth. âTruths are phrases, ways of speaking, words (**logos**); brought into connection, or arranged by ranks and files, they form logic, science, philosophy.â[211] âNor is there a truth,ânot right, not liberty, humanity, etc.,âwhich could subsist before me, and to which I would submit.â[212] âIf there is a single truth to which man must consecrate his life and his powers because he is man, then he is subjected to a rule, dominion, law, etc.; he is a man in service.â[213] âAs long as you believe in truth, you do not believe in yourself; you are aâservant, aâreligious man. You alone are truth; or rather, you are more than truth, which is nothing at all before you.â[214]
If one chose to draw the extreme inference from this, Stirnerâs book would be only a self-avowal, an expression of thoughts without any claim to general validity; in it Stirner would not be informing us what he thinks to be true, or what in his opinion we ought to do, but only giving us an opportunity to observe the play of his ideas. Stirner did not draw this inference,[215] and one should not let the style of the book, which speaks mostly of Stirnerâs âI,â lead him to think that Stirner did draw it. He calls that man âblinded, who wants to be only âManâ.â[216] He takes the floor against âthe erroneous consciousness of not being able to entitle myself to as much as I want.â[217] He mocks at our grandmothersâ belief in ghosts.[218] He declares that âpenalty must make room for satisfaction,â[219] that man âshould defend himself against man.â[220] And he asserts that âover the door of our time stands not Apolloâs âKnow thyself,â but a âTurn yourself to account!ââ[221] So Stirner intends not only to give us information about his inward condition at the time he composed his book, but to tell us what he thinks to be true and what we ought to do; his book is not a mere self-avowal, but a scientific teaching.
3. Stirner does not call his teaching about law, the State, and property âAnarchism.â He prefers to use the epithet âanarchicâ to designate political liberalism, which he combats.[222]
<em>According to Stirner the supreme law for each one of us is his own welfare.</em>
What does oneâs own welfare mean? âLet us seek out the enjoyment of life!â[223] âHenceforth the question is not how one can acquire life, but how he can expend it, enjoy it; not how one is to produce in himself the true ego, but how he is to dissolve himself, to live himself out.â[224] âIf the enjoyment of life is to triumph over the longing or hope for life, it must overcome it in its double significance which Schiller brings out in âThe Ideal and Lifeâ; it must crush spiritual and temporal poverty, abolish the ideal andâthe want of daily bread. He who must lay out his life in prolonging life cannot enjoy it, and he who is still seeking his life does not have it, and can as little enjoy it; both are poor.â[225]
Our own welfare is our supreme law. Stirner recognizes no duty.[226] âWhether what I think and do is Christian, what do I care? Whether it is human, humane, liberal, or unhuman, inhumane, illiberal, what do I ask about that? If only it aims at what I would have, if only I satisfy myself in it, then fit it with predicates as you like; it is all one to me.â[227] âSo then my relation to the world is this: I no longer do anything for it âfor Godâs sakeâ, I do nothing âfor manâs sakeâ, but what I do I do âfor my sakeâ.â[228] âWhere the world comes in my wayâand it comes in my way everywhereâI devour it to appease the hunger of my egoism. You are to me nothing butâmy food, just as I also am fed upon and used up by you. We have only one relation to each other, that of utility, of usableness, of use.â[229] âI too love men, not merely individuals, but every one. But I love them with the consciousness of egoism; I love them because love makes me happy, I love because love is natural to me, because it pleases me. I know no âcommandment of loveâ.â[230]
I. **Looking to each oneâs own welfare, Stirner rejects law, and that without any limitation to particular spatial or temporal conditions.**
Law[231] exists not by the individualâs recognizing it as favorable to his interests, but by his holding it sacred. âWho can ask about ârightâ if he is not occupying the religious standpoint just like other people? Is not ârightâ a religious concept, **i. e.** something sacred?â[232] âWhen the Revolution stamped liberty as a ârightâ it took refuge in the religious sphere, in the region of the sacred, the ideal.â[233] âI am to revere the sultanic law in a sultanate, the popular law in republics, the canon law in Catholic communities, etc. I am to subordinate myself to these laws, I am to count them sacred.â[234] âThe law is sacred, and he who outrages it is a criminal.â[235] âThere are no criminals except against something sacredâ;[236] crime falls when the sacred disappears.[237] Punishment has a meaning only in relation to something sacred.[238] âWhat does the priest who admonishes the criminal do? He sets forth to him the great wrong of having by his act desecrated that which was hallowed by the State, its property (in which, you will see, the lives of those who belong to the State must be included).â[239]
But law is no more sacred than it is favorable to the individualâs welfare. âRightâis a delusion, bestowed by a ghost.â[240] Men have ânot recovered the mastery over the thought of âright,â which they themselves created; their creature is running away with them.â[241] âLet the individual man claim ever so many rights; what do I care for his right and his claim?â[242] I do not respect them.ââWhat you have the might to be you have the right to be. I deduce all right and all entitlement from myself; I am entitled to everything that I have might over. I am entitled to overthrow Zeus, Jehovah, God, etc., if I can; if I cannot, then these gods will always remain in the right and in the might as against me.â[243]
âRight crumbles into its nothingness when it is swallowed up by force,â[244] âbut with the concept the word too loses its meaning.â[245] âThe people will perhaps be against the blasphemer; hence a law against blasphemy. Shall I therefore not blaspheme? Is this law to be more to me than an order?â[246] âHe who has might âstands above the lawâ.â[247] âThe earth belongs to him who knows how to take it, or who does not let it be taken from him, does not let himself be deprived of it. If he appropriates it, then not merely the earth, but also the right to it, belongs to him. This is egoistic right; **i. e.**, it suits me, therefore it is right.â[248]
II. **Self-welfare commands that in future it itself should be menâs rule of action in place of the law.**
Each of us is âunique,â[249] âa worldâs history for himself,â[250] and, when he âknows himself as unique,â[251] he is a âself-owner.â[252] âGod and mankind have made nothing their object, nothing but themselves. Let me then likewise make myself my object, who am, as well as God, the nothing of all else, who am my all, who am the Unique.â[253] âAway then with every business that is not altogether my business! You think at least the âgood causeâ must be my business? What good, what bad? Why, I myself am my business, and I am neither good nor bad. Neither has meaning for me. What is divine is Godâs business, what is human âManâs.â My business is neither what is divine nor what is human, it is not what is true, good, right, free, etc., but only what is mine; and it is no general business, but isâunique, as I am unique. Nothing is more to me than myself!â[254]
âWhat a difference between freedom and self-ownership! I am free from what I am rid of; I am owner of what I have in my power.â[255] âMy freedom becomes complete only when it is myâmight; but by this I cease to be a mere freeman and become a self-owner.â[256] âEach must say to himself, I am all to myself and I do all for my sake. If it ever became clear to you that God, the commandments, etc., do you only harm, that they encroach on you and ruin you, you would certainly cast them from you just as the Christians once condemned Apollo or Minerva or heathen morality.â[257] âHow one acts only from himself, and asks no questions about anything further, the Christians have made concrete in the idea of âGod.â He acts âas pleases himâ.â[258]
âMight is a fine thing and useful for many things; for âone gets farther with a handful of might than with a bagful of right.â You long for freedom? You fools! If you took might, freedom would come of itself. See, he who has might âstands above the law.â How does this prospect taste to you, you âlaw-abidingâ people? But you have no taste!â[259]
I. **Together with law Stirner necessarily has to reject also, just as unconditionally, the legal institution** **which is called State.** Without law the State is not possible. ââRespect for the statutes!â By this cement the whole fabric of the State is held together.â[260]
The State as well as the law, then, exists, not by the individualâs recognizing it as favorable to his welfare, but rather by his counting it sacred, by âour being entangled in the error that it is an I, as which it applies to itself the name of a âmoral, mystical, or political person.â I, who really am I, must pull off this lionâs skin of the I from the parading thistle-eater.â[261] The same holds good of the State as of the family. âIf each one who belongs to the family is to recognize and maintain that family in its permanent existence, then to each the tie of blood must be sacred, and his feeling for it must be that of family piety, of respect for the ties of blood, whereby every blood-relative becomes hallowed to him. So, also, to every member of the State-community this community must be sacred, and the concept which is supreme to the State must be supreme to him too.â[262] The State is ânot only entitled, but compelled, to demandâ this.[263]
But the State is not sacred. âThe Stateâs behavior is violence, and it calls its violence âlawâ, but that of the individual âcrimeâ.â[264] If I do not do what it wishes, âthen the State turns against me with all the force of its lion-paws and eagle-talons; for it is the king of beasts, it is lion and eagle.â[265] âEven if you do overpower your opponent as a power, it does not follow that you are to him a hallowed authority, unless he is a degenerate. He does not owe you respect, and reverence, even if he will be wary of your might.â[266]
Nor is the State favorable to the individualâs welfare. âI am the mortal enemy of the State.â[267] âThe general welfare as such is not my welfare, but only the extremity of self-denial. The general welfare may exult aloud while I must lie like a hushed dog; the State may be in splendor while I starve.â[268] âEvery State is a despotism, whether the despot be one or many, or whether, as people usually conceive to be the case in a republic, all are masters, **i. e.** each tyrannizes over the others.â[269] âDoubtless the State leaves the individuals as free play as possible, only they must not turn the play to earnest, must not forget it. The State has never any object but to limit the individual, to tame him, to subordinate him, to subject him to something general; it lasts only so long as the individual is not all in all, and is only the clear-cut limitation of me, my limitedness, my slavery.â[270]
âA State never aims to bring about the free activity of individuals, but only that activity which is bound to the Stateâs purpose.â[271] âThe State seeks to hinder every free activity by its censorship, its oversight, its police, and counts this hindering as its duty, because it is in truth a duty of self-preservation.â[272] âI am not allowed to do all the work I can, but only so much as the State permits; I must not turn my thoughts to account, nor my work, nor, in general, anything that is mine.â[273] âPauperism is the valuelessness of Me, the phenomenon of my being unable to turn myself to account. Therefore State and pauperism are one and the same. The State does not let me attain my value, and exists only by my valuelessness; its goal is always to get some benefit out of me, **i. e.** to exploit me, to use me up, even if this using consisted only in my providing a **proles** (**prolĂ©tariat**); it wants me to be âits creatureâ.â[274]
âThe State cannot brook manâs standing in a direct relation to man; it must come between as aâmediator, it mustâintervene. It tears man from man, to put itself as âspiritâ in the middle. The laborers who demand a higher wage are treated as criminals so soon as they want to get it by compulsion. What are they to do? Without compulsion they donât get it, and in compulsion the State sees a self-help, a price fixed by the ego, a real, free turning to account of oneâs property, which it cannot permit.â[275]
II. **Every manâs own welfare demands that a social human life solely on the basis of its precepts should take the place of the State.** Stirner calls this sort of social life âthe union of egoists.â[276]
1. Even after the State is abolished men are to live together in society. âSelf-owners will fight for the unity which is their own will, for union.â[277] But what is to keep men together in the union?
Not a promise, at any rate, âIf I were bound to-day and hereafter to my will of yesterday,â my will would âbe benumbed. My creature, **viz.**, a particular expression of will, would have become my dominator. Because I was a fool yesterday I must remain such all my life.â[278] âThe union is my own creation, my creature, not sacred, not a spiritual power above my spirit, as little as any association of whatever sort. As I am not willing to be a slave to my maxims, but lay them bare to my constant criticism without any warrant, and admit no bail whatever for their continuance, so still less do I pledge myself to the union for my future and swear away my soul to it as men are said to do with the devil, and as is really the case with the State and all intellectual authority; but I am and remain more to myself than State, Church, God, and the like, and, consequently, also infinitely more than the union.â[279]
Rather, men are to be held together in the union by the advantage which each individual has from the union at every moment. If I can âuseâ my fellow-men, âthen I am likely to come to an understanding and unite myself with them, in order to strengthen my power by the agreement, and to do more by joint force than individual force could accomplish. In this joinder I see nothing at all else than a multiplication of my strength, and only so long as it is my multiplied strength do I retain it.â[280]
Hence the union is something quite different from âthat society which Communism means to found.â[281] âYou bring into the union your whole power, your ability, and assert yourself; in society you with your labor-strength are spent. In the former you live egoistically, in the latter humanly, **i. e.** religiously, as a âmember in the body of this Lordâ. You owe to society what you have, and are in duty bound to it, areâpossessed by âsocial dutiesâ; you utilize the union, and, undutiful and unfaithful, give it up when you are no longer able to get any use out of it. If society is more than you, then it is of more consequence to you than yourself; the union is only your tool, or the sword with which you sharpen and enlarge your natural strength; the union exists for you and by you, society contrariwise claims you for itself and exists even without you; in short, society is sacred, the union is your own; society uses you up, you use up the union.â[282]
2. But what form may such a social life take in detail? In reply to his critic, Moses Hess, Stirner gives some examples of unions that already exist.
âPerhaps at this moment children are running together under his window for a comradeship of play; let him look at them, and he will espy merry egoistic unions. Perhaps Hess has a friend or a sweetheart; then he may know how heart joins itself to heart, how two of them unite egoistically in order to have the enjoyment of each other, and how neither âgets the worst of the bargain.â Perhaps he meets a few pleasant acquaintances on the street and is invited to accompany them into a wine-shop; does he go with them in order to do an act of kindness to them, or does he âuniteâ with them because he promises himself enjoyment from it? Do they have to give him their best thanks for his âself-sacrificeâ or do they know that for an hour they formed an âegoistic unionâ together?â[283] Stirner even thinks of a âGerman Union.â[284]
I. **Together with law Stirner necessarily has to reject also, and just as unconditionally, the legal institution of property.** This âlives by grace of the law. It has its guarantee only in the law; it is not a fact, but a fiction, a thought. This is law-property, legal property, warranted property. It is mine not by me, but byâlaw.â[285]
Property in this sense, as well as the law and the State, is based not on the individualâs recognizing it as favorable to his welfare, but on his counting it sacred. âProperty in the civil sense means sacred property, in such a way that I must respect your property. âHave respect for property!â Therefore the political liberals would like every one to have his bit of property, and have in part brought about an incredible parcellation by their efforts in this direction. Every one must have his bone, on which he may find something to bite.â[286]
But property is not sacred. âI do not step timidly back from your property, be you one or many, but look upon it always as my property, in which I have no need to ârespectâ anything. Now do the like with what you call my property!â[287]
Nor is property favorable to the individualâs welfare. âProperty, as the civic liberals understand it, is untenable, because the civic proprietor is really nothing but a propertyless man, a man everywhere excluded. Instead of the worldâs belonging to him, as it might, there belongs to him not even the paltry point on which he turns around.â[288]
II. **Every oneâs own welfare commands that a distribution of commodities based solely on its precepts should take the place of property.** When Stirner designates as âpropertyâ the share of commodities assigned to the individual by these precepts, it is in the improper sense in which he constantly uses the word property: in the proper sense only a share of commodities assigned by law can be called property.[289]
Now, according to the decrees of his own welfare, every man should have all that he is powerful enough to obtain.
âWhat they are not competent to tear from me the power over, that remains my property: all right, then let power decide about property, and I will expect everything from my power! Alien power, power that I leave to another, makes me a slave; then let own power make me an owner.â[290] âTo what property am I entitled? To any to which Iâempower myself. I give myself the right of property in taking property to myself, or giving myself the proprietorâs power, plenary power, empowerment.â[291] âWhat I am competent to have is my âcompetence.ââ[292] âThe sick, children, the aged, are still competent for a great deal; **e. g.** to receive their living instead of taking it. If they are competent to control you to the extent of having you desire their continued existence, then they have a power over you.â[293] âWhat competence the child possesses in its smile, its play, its crying,âin short, in its mere existence! Are you capable of resisting its demand? or do you not hold out to it, as a mother, your breast,âas a father, so much of your belongings as it needs? It puts you under constraint, and therefore possesses what you call yours.â[294]
âProperty, therefore, should not and cannot be done away with; rather, it must be torn from ghostly hands and become my property; then will the erroneous consciousness that I cannot entitle myself to as much as I want vanish.ââBut what cannot a man want?â Well, he who wants much, and knows how to get it, has in all times taken it to him, as Napoleon did the continent, and the French Algeria. Therefore the only point is just that the respectful âlower classesâ should at length learn to take to themselves what they want. If they reach their hands too far for you, why, defend yourselves.â[295] âWhat âmanâ wants does not by any means furnish a scale for me and my needs; for I may have a use for more, or for less. Rather, I must have as much as I am competent to appropriate to myself.â[296]
2. âIn this matter, as well as in others, unions will multiply the individualâs means and make secure his assailed property.â[297] âWhen it is our will no longer to leave the land to the land-owners, but to appropriate it to ourselves, we unite ourselves for this purpose; we form a union, a **sociĂ©tĂ©**, which makes itself owner; if we are successful, they cease to be land-owners. And, as we chase them out from land and soil, so we can also from many another property, to make it our own, the property of theâconquerors. The conquerors form a society, which one may conceive of as so great that by degrees it embraces all mankind; but so-called mankind is also, as such, only a thought (ghost); its reality is the individuals. And these individuals as a collective mass will deal not less arbitrarily with land and soil than does an isolated individual.â[298]
âWhat all want to have a share in will be withdrawn from that individual who wants to have it for himself alone; it is made a common possession. As a common possession every one has a share in it, and this share is his property. Just so, even in our old relations, a house which belongs to five heirs is their common possession; but the fifth part of the proceeds is each oneâs property. The property which for the present is still withheld from us can be better made use of when it is in the hands of us all. Let us therefore associate ourselves for the purpose of this robbery.â[299]
<em>According to Stirner the change which every oneâs own welfare requires is to come about in this way,âthat men in sufficient number first undergo an inward change and recognize their own welfare as their highest law, and that these men then bring to pass by force the outward change also: to wit, the abrogation of</em> <em>law, State, and property, and the introduction of the new condition.</em>
I. The first and most important thing is the inward change of men.
âRevolution and insurrection must not be regarded as synonymous. The former consists in an overturning of conditions, of the existing condition or state, the State or society, and so is a political or social act; the latter has indeed a transformation of conditions as its inevitable consequence, but starts not from this but from menâs discontent with themselves, is not a lifting of shields but a lifting of individuals, a coming up, without regard to the arrangements that spring from it. The Revolution aimed at new arrangements: the Insurrection leads to no longer having ourselves arranged but arranging ourselves, and sets no brilliant hope on âinstitutions.â It is not a fight against the existing order, since, if it prospers, the existing order collapses of itself; it is only a working my way out of the existing order. If I leave the existing order, it is dead and passes into decay. Now, since my purpose is not the upsetting of an existing order but the lifting of myself above it, my aim and act are not political or social, but, as directed upon myself and my ownness alone, egoistic.â[300]
Why was the founder of Christianity ânot a revolutionist, not a demagogue as the Jews would have liked to see him; why was he not a Liberal? Because he expected no salvation from a change of **conditions**, and this whole business was indifferent to him. He was not a revolutionist, like CĂŠsar for instance, but an insurgent; not an overturner of the State, but one who straightened **himself** up. He waged no Liberal or political war against the existing authorities, but wanted to go his own way regardless of these authorities and undisturbed by them.â[301]
âEverything sacred is a bond, a fetter. Everything sacred will be, must be, perverted by perverters of law; therefore our present time has such perverters by the quantity in all spheres. They are preparing for the break of the law, for lawlessness.â[302] âRegard yourself as more powerful than they allege you to be, and you have more power; regard yourself as more, and you are more.â[303] âThe poor become free and proprietors only when theyââriseâ.â[304] âOnly from egoism can the lower classes get help, and this help they must give to themselves andâwill give to themselves. If they do not let themselves be constrained into fear, they are a power.â[305]
II. Furthermore, in order to bring about the âtransformation of conditionsâ[306] and put the new condition in the place of law, State, and property, violent insurrection against the condition that has hitherto existed is requisite.
1. âThe State can be overcome only by a violent arbitrariness.â[307] âThe individualâs violence [**Gewalt**] is called crime [**Verbrechen**], and only by crime does he break [**brechen**] the Stateâs authority [**Gewalt**] when he opines that the State is not above him, but he above the State.â[308] âHere too the result is that the thinkersâ combat against the government is wrong, **viz.** in impotence, so far as it cannot bring into the field anything but thoughts against a personal power (the egoistic power stops the mouths of the thinkers). The theoretical combat cannot complete the victory, and the sacred power of thought succumbs to the might of egoism. It is only the egoistic combat, the combat of egoists on both sides, that clears up everything.â[309]
âThe property question cannot be solved so gently as the Socialists, even the Communists, dream. It is solved only by the war of all against all.â[310] âLet me then retract the might which I have conceded to others out of ignorance regarding the strength of my own might! Let me say to myself, âWhatever my might reaches to is my property,â and then claim as property all that I feel myself strong enough to attain; and let me make my real property extend as far as I entitle (**i. e.** empower) myself to take.â[311] âIn order to extirpate the unpossessing rabble, egoism does not say, âWait and see what the Board of Equity willâdonate to you in the name of the collectivityâ, but âPut your hand to it and take what you need!ââ[312]
In this combat Stirner agrees to all methods. âI will not draw back with a shudder from any act because there dwells in it a spirit of godlessness, immorality, wrongfulness, as little as St. Boniface was disposed to abstain from chopping down the heathensâ sacred oak on account of religious scruples.â[313] âThe power over life and death, which Church and State reserved to themselves, this too I callâmine.â[314] âThe life of the individual man I rate only at what it is worth. His goods, the material and the spiritual alike, are mine, and I dispose of them as proprietor to the extent of myâmight.â[315]
2. Stirner depicts for us a single event in this violent transformation of conditions. He assumes that certain men come to realize that they occupy a disproportionately unfavorable position in the State as compared with others who receive the preference.
âThose who are in the unfavorable position take courage to ask the question, âBy what, then, is your property secure, you favored ones?â and give themselves the answer, âBy our refraining from interference! By our protection, therefore! And what do you give us for it? Kicks and contempt you give the âcommon peopleâ; police oversight, and a catechism with the chief sentence âRespect what is not yours, what belongs to others! respect others, and especially superiors!â But we reply, âIf you want our respect, buy it for a price that shall be acceptable to us.â We will leave you your property, if you pay duly for this leaving. With what, indeed, does the general in time of peace pay for the many thousands of his yearly income? or Another for the sheer hundred-thousands and millions? With what do you pay us for chewing potatoes and looking quietly on while you swallow oysters? Only buy the oysters from us as dear as we have to buy the potatoes from you, and you may go on eating them. Or do you suppose the oysters do not belong to us as much as to you? You will make an outcry about violence if we take hold and help eat them, and you are right. Without violence we do not get them, as you no less have them by doing violence to us.
ââBut take the oysters and done with it, and let us come to what is in a closer way our property (for this other is only possession)âto labor. We toil twelve hours in the sweat of our foreheads, and you offer us a few groschen for it. Then take the like for your labor too. We will come to terms all right if only we have first agreed on the point that neither any longer needs toâdonate anything to the other. For centuries we have offered you alms in our kindlyâstupidity, have given the mite of the poor and rendered to the masters what isânot the mastersâ; now just open your bags, for henceforth there is a tremendous rise in the price of our ware. We will take nothing away from you, nothing at all, only you shall pay better for what you want to have. What have you then? âI have an estate of a thousand acres.â And I am your plowman, and will hereafter do your plowing only for a thaler a day wages. âThen Iâll get another.â You will not find one, for we plowmen are no longer doing anything different, and if one presents himself who takes less, let him beware of us.ââ[316]
[209] Stirner p. 439. [The page-numbers of Stirnerâs first edition, here cited, agree almost exactly with those of the English translation under the title âThe Ego and His Own.â Any passage quoted here will in general be found in the English translation either on the page whose number is given or on the preceding page; for the early pages, subtract two or three from the number.]
[210] **Ib.** pp. 435â6.
[211] **Ib.** p. 465.
[212] **Ib.** p. 464.
[213] **Ib.** p. 466.
[214] Stirner p. 473.
[215] No more do his adherents, **e. g.** Mackay, âStirnerâ pp. 164â5.
[216] Stirner p. 322.
[217] **Ib.** p. 343.
[218] **Ib.** p. 45.
[219] **Ib.** p. 318.
[220] **Ib.** p. 318.
[221] **Ib.** p. 420.
[222] **Ib.** pp. 189â90.
[223] Stirner p. 427.
[224] **Ib.** p. 428.
[225] **Ib.** p. 429.
[226] **Ib.** p. 258.
[227] **Ib.** p. 478.
[228] **Ib.** p. 426.
[229] Stirner p. 395.
[230] **Ib.** p. 387.
[231] [To understand some of the following citations it is necessary to remember that in German âlawâ (in the sense of common law, or including this) and ârightâ are one and the same word.âWhile it is probably not fair to say that these assaults of Stirner are directed only against some laws, it does seem fair to say that they deny to the laws only some sorts of validity. We have very little material for compiling the constructive side of Stirnerâs teaching, for he avoided specifying what things the Egoists or their unions were to do in his future social order; he said explicitly that the only way to know what a slave will do when he breaks his fetters is to wait and see. But, while he may nowhere have stated a law which is to obtain in the good time coming, neither has he said anything which authorizes us to declare that none of his unions will ever make laws on such a basis as (for instance) the rules of the Stock Exchange. On page 114 below is quoted a passage where he distinctly and approvingly contemplates the possibility that a union of his followers may fix a minimum wage, and may threaten violence to any person who consents to work below the scale. This would be law, and might easily be the germ of a State. On pages 108 and page 109 are quoted passages which strongly suggest that the Egoistic union would undertake to defend its member against all interference with his possession of certain goods; this would be both law and property.]
[232] Stirner p. 247.
[233] Stirner p. 248.
[234] **Ib.** p. 246.
[235] **Ib.** p. 314.
[236] **Ib.** p. 268.
[237] **Ib.** p. 317.
[238] **Ib.** pp. 317, 316.
[239] **Ib.** pp. 265â6.
[240] **Ib.** p. 276.
[241] **Ib.** p. 270.
[242] **Ib.** pp. 326â7.
[243] **Ib.** pp. 248â9.
[244] Stirner p. 275.
[245] **Ib.** p. 275.
[246] **Ib.** pp. 259, 256.
[247] **Ib.** p. 220.
[248] **Ib.** p. 251. [The German idiom for âit suits meâ is âit is right to meâ].
[249] **Ib.** p. 8.
[250] **Ib.** p. 490.
[251] **Ib.** p. 491.
[252] **Ib.** p. 491.
[253] **Ib.** p. 7.
[254] Stirner p. 8.
[255] **Ib.** p. 207.
[256] **Ib.** p. 219.
[257] **Ib.** p. 214.
[258] **Ib.** p. 212.
[259] **Ib.** p. 220.
[260] Stirner p. 314.
[261] **Ib.** p. 295.
[262] **Ib.** pp. 231â2.
[263] **Ib.** p. 231.
[264] **Ib.** p. 259.
[265] **Ib.** p. 337.
[266] Stirner p. 258.
[267] **Ib.** p. 339.
[268] **Ib.** p. 280.
[269] **Ib.** p. 257.
[270] **Ib.** p. 298.
[271] **Ib.** p. 298.
[272] **Ib.** p. 299.
[273] Stirner p. 298.
[274] **Ib.** p. 336.
[275] **Ib.** pp. 337â8.
[276] **Ib.** p. 235; Stirner â**Vierteljahrsschrift**â p. 192.
[277] Stirner p. 304.
[278] Stirner p. 258.
[279] **Ib.** p 411.
[280] **Ib.** p. 416.
[281] **Ib.** p. 411.
[282] Stirner pp. 417â18.
[283] Stirner â**Vierteljahrsschrift**â pp. 193â4.
[284] Stirner p. 305.
[285] **Ib.** p. 332.
[286] **Ib.** pp. 327â8.
[287] **Ib.** pp. 328, 326.
[288] Stirner pp. 328â9.
[289] Zenker fails to recognize this when he asserts (p. 80) that Stirner demands property based on the right of occupation
[290] Stirner p. 340.
[291] **Ib.** p. 339.
[292] **Ib.** p. 351.
[293] Stirner p. 351.
[294] **Ib.** pp. 351â2.
[295] **Ib.** pp. 343â4.
[296] **Ib.** p. 349.
[297] **Ib.** p. 342.
[298] Stirner pp. 329â30. [See footnote on page 97.]
[299] **Ib.** p. 330.
[300] Stirner pp. 421â2.
[301] Stirner p. 423.
[302] **Ib.** p. 284.
[303] **Ib.** p. 483.
[304] **Ib.** p. 344.
[305] **Ib.** p. 343.
[306] **Ib.** p. 422.
[307] **Ib.** p. 199.
[308] **Ib.** 259.
[309] Stirner pp. 198â9.
[310] **Ib.** p. 344. [But Stirner does not mean that all are to fight against all; they are merely to declare themselves no longer bound by the obligations of peace, and then those who are able to agree with each other can at once make terms to suit themselves.]
[311] **Ib.** p. 340.
[312] **Ib.** p. 341.
[313] Stirner p. 479.
[314] **Ib.** p. 424.
[315] **Ib.** pp. 326â7.
[316] Stirner pp. 359â60.
1. Mikhail Alexandrovitch Bakunin was born in 1814 at Pryamukhino, district of Torshok, government of Tver. In 1834 he entered the Artillery School at St. Petersburg; in 1835 he became an officer, but resigned his commission in the same year. He then lived alternately in Pryamukhino and in Moscow.
In 1840 Bakunin left Russia. In the following years revolutionary plans took him now to this part of Europe, now to that; in Paris he associated much with Proudhon. In 1849 he was condemned to death in Saxony, but was pardoned; in 1850 he was handed over to Austria and was condemned to death there also; in 1851 he was handed over to Russia and was there kept a prisoner first at St. Petersburg, then at Schluesselburg; in 1857 he was sent to Siberia.
From Siberia Bakunin escaped to London in 1865, by way of Japan and California. He took up his revolutionary activities again at once, and thereafter lived by turns in the most various parts of Europe. In 1868 he became a member of the **Association internationale des travailleurs**, and soon afterward he founded the **Alliance internationale de la démocratie socialiste**. In 1869 he came into intimate relations with the fanatic Nechayeff, but broke away from him in the next year. In 1872 he was expelled from the **Association internationale des travailleurs** on the ground that his aims were different from those of the Association. He died at Berne in 1876.
Bakunin wrote a number of works of a philosophical and political nature.
2. Bakuninâs teaching about law, the State, and property finds its expression especially in the â**Proposition motivĂ©e au comitĂ© central de la Ligue de la paix et de la libertĂ©**â[317] offered by him in 1868; in the principles[318] of the **Alliance internationale de la dĂ©mocratie socialiste**, drawn up by him in 1868; and in his work â**Dieu et lâEtat**â[319] (1871).
Writings which cannot with certainty be assigned to Bakunin are here disregarded. Among such we may name especially the two works âThe Principles of the Revolutionâ[320] and âCatechism of the Revolution,â[321] in which Nechayeffâs views are set forth. They are indeed ascribed to Bakunin by some,[322] but their matter is in contradiction to his other utterances as well as to his deeds; he even used vehement language on several occasions against Nechayeffâs âMachiavellianism and Jesuitism.â[323] Even on the assumption that they are by Bakunin, they would at any rate express only a very insignificant chapter in his development.
3. Bakunin designates his teaching about law, the State, and property as âAnarchism.â âIn a word, we reject all legislation, all authority, all privileged, chartered, official, and legal influence,âeven if it were created by universal suffrage,âin the conviction that such things can but redound always to the advantage of a ruling minority of exploiters and to the disadvantage of the vast enslaved majority. In this sense we are in truth Anarchists.â[324]
<em>Bakunin regards the evolutionary law of the progress of mankind from a less perfect existence to the most perfect possible existence as the law which has supreme validity for man.</em>
âScience has no other task than the careful intellectual reproduction, in the most systematic form possible, of the natural laws of corporeal, mental, and moral life, alike in the physical and in the social world, which two worlds constitute in fact only a single natural world.â[325]
Now âscienceâthat is, true, unselfish scienceâ[326]âteaches us the following: âEvery evolution signifies the negation of its starting-point. Since according to the materialists the basis or starting-point is material, the negation must necessarily be ideal.â[327] That is, âeverything that lives makes the effort to perfect itself as fully as possible.â[328]
Thus, âaccording to the conception of materialists, manâs historical evolution also moves in a constantly ascending line.â[329] âIt is an altogether natural movement from the simple to the compound, from down to up, from the lower to the higher.â[330] âHistory consists in the progressive negation of manâs original bestiality by the evolution of his humanity.â[331]
âMan is originally a wild beast, a cousin of the gorilla. But he has already come out of the deep night of bestial impulses to make his way to the light of the mind. This explains all his former missteps in the most natural way, and comforts us somewhat with regard to his present aberrations. He has turned his back on bestial slavery, and is now moving toward freedom through the realm of slavery to God, which lies between his bestial and his human existence. Behind us, therefore, lies our bestial existence, before us our human; the light of humanity, which alone can light us and warm us, deliver us and exalt us, make us free, happy, and brothers, stands never at the beginning of history, but always only at its end.â[332]
This âhistorical negation of the past takes place now slowly, sluggishly, sleepily, but now again passionately and violently.â[333] It always takes place with the inevitable certainty of natural law: âwe believe in the final triumph of humanity on earth.â[G] âWe yearn for the coming of this triumph, and seek to hasten it with united effortâ;[334] âwe must never look back, always forward alone; before us is our sun, before us our bliss.â[335]
I. **In the progress of mankind from its bestial existence to a human existence, one of the next steps, according to Bakunin, will be the disappearanceânot indeed of law, butâof enacted law.**
Enacted law belongs to a low stage of evolution. âA political legislation, whether it is based on a rulerâs will or on the votes of representatives chosen by universal suffrage, can never correspond to the laws of nature, and is always baleful, hostile to the liberty of the masses, if only because it forces upon them a system of external and consequently despotic laws.â[336] No legislation has ever âhad another aim than that of confirming, and exalting into a system, the exploitation of the laboring populace by the ruling classes.â[337] Thus every legislation âhas for its consequence at once the enslavement of society and the depravation of the legislators.â[338]
But mankind will soon leave behind it the stage of evolution to which law belongs. Enacted law is indissolubly connected with the State: âthe State is a historically necessary evil,â[339] âa transitory form of societyâ;[340] âwith the State, law in the juristsâ sense, the so-called legal regulation of popular life from above downward by legislation, must necessarily fall.â[341] Everybody feels already that this moment is approaching,[342] the transformation is at hand,[343] it is to be expected within the nineteenth century.[344]
II. **In the next stage of evolution, which mankind must speedily reach, there will be no enacted law to be sure, but there will be law even there.** What Bakunin predicts with regard to this next stage of evolution enables us to perceive that according to his expectation norms will then prevail which âare based on a general will,â[345] and which even secure obedience by forcible compulsion if necessary,[346] so that they are legal norms.
Among such legal norms of our next stage of evolution Bakunin mentions that by virtue of which there exists a âright to independence.â[347] For me as an individual this means âthat I as a man am entitled to obey no other man, and to act only in accordance with my own judgment.â[348] But, furthermore, âevery nation, every province, and every commune has the unlimited right to complete independence, provided that its internal constitution does not threaten the independence and liberty of the adjoining territories.â[349]
Likewise Bakunin regards it as a legal norm of the next stage of evolution that contracts must be lived up to. To be sure, the obligation of contracts has its limits. âHuman justice cannot recognize anything as creating an obligation in perpetuity. All rights and duties are founded on liberty. The right of freely uniting and separating is the first and most important of all political rights.â[350]
Another legal norm mentioned by Bakunin as belonging to the next stage of evolution is that by virtue of which âthe land, the instruments of labor, and all other capital, as the collective property of the whole of society, will exclusively serve for the use of the agricultural and industrial associations.â[351]
I. **In the progress of mankind from its bestial existence to a human existence the State will shortly, according to Bakunin, disappear.** âThe State is a historically temporary arrangement, a transitory form of society.â[352]
1. The State belongs to a low stage of evolution.
âMan takes the first step from his bestial existence to a human existence by religion; but so long as he remains religious he will never reach his goal; for every religion condemns him to absurdity, guides him into a wrong course, and makes him seek the divine in place of the human.â[353] âAll religions, with their gods, demigods, and prophets, their Messiahs and saints, are products of the credulous fancy of men who had not yet come to the full development and entire possession of their intellectual powers.â[354] This holds good also, and particularly, of Christianity: it is âthe complete inversion of common-sense and reason.â[355]
The State is a product of religion. âIn all lands it is born of a marriage of violence, robbery, spoliation,âin short, of war and conquest,âwith the gods whom the religious enthusiasm of the nations had gradually created.â[356] âHe who speaks of revelation speaks thereby of revealers enlightened by God, of Messiahs, prophets, priests, and lawgivers; and, if once these are recognized on earth as representatives of the Deity, as sacred teachers of mankind chosen by God himself, then of course they have unlimited authority. All men owe them blind obedience; for no human reason, no human justice, is valid against the divine reason and justice. As slaves of God, men must be also slaves of the Church, and of the State so far as the Church hallows the State.â[357]
âNo State is without religion, and none can be without religion. Take the freest States in the world,âfor instance, the United States of America or the Swiss Confederacy,âand see what an important part divine providence plays in all public utterances there.â[358] âIt is not without good reason that governments hold the belief in God to be an essential condition of their power.â[359] âThere is a class of people who, even if they do not believe, must necessarily act as if they believed. This class embraces all mankindâs tormentors, oppressors, and exploiters. Priests, monarchs, statesmen, soldiers, financiers, office-holders of all sorts; policemen, **gendarmes**, jailers, and executioners; capitalists, usurers, heads of business, and house-owners; lawyers, economists, politicians of all shades,âall of them, down to the smallest grocer, will always repeat in chorus the words of Voltaire, that, if there were no God, it would be necessary to invent him; âfor must not the populace have its religion?â It is the very safety-valve.â[360]
2. The characteristics of the State correspond to the low stage of evolution to which it belongs.
The State enslaves the governed. âThe State is force; nay, it is the silly parading of force. It does not propose to win love or to make converts; if it puts its finger into anything, it does so only in an unfriendly way; for its essence consists not in persuasion, but in command and compulsion. However much pains it may take, it cannot conceal the fact that it is the legal maimer of our will, the constant negation of our liberty. Even when it commands the good, it makes this valueless by commanding it; for every command slaps liberty in the face; as soon as the good is commanded, it is transformed into the evil in the eyes of true (that is, human, by no means divine) morality, of the dignity of man, of liberty; for manâs liberty, morality, and dignity consist precisely in doing the good not because he is commanded to but because he recognizes it, wills it, and loves it.â[361]
At the same time the State depraves those who govern. âIt is characteristic of privilege, and of every privileged position, that they poison the minds and hearts of men. He who is politically or economically privileged has his mind and heart depraved. This is a law of social life, which admits of no exceptions and is applicable to entire nations as well as to classes, corporations, and individuals. It is the law of equality, the foremost of the conditions of liberty and humanity.â[362]
âPowerful States can maintain themselves only by crime, little States are virtuous only from weakness.â[363] âWe abhor monarchy with all our hearts; but at the same time we are convinced that a great republic too, with army, bureaucracy, and political centralization, will make a business of conquest without and oppression within, and will be incapable of guaranteeing happiness and liberty to its subjects even if it calls them citizens.â[364] âEven in the purest democracies, such as the United States and Switzerland, a privileged minority faces the vast enslaved majority.â[365]
3. But the stage of mankindâs evolution to which the State belongs will soon be left behind.
âFrom the beginning of historic society to this day, there has always been oppression of the nations by the State. Is it to be inferred that this oppression is inseparably connected with the existence of human society?â[366] Certainly not! âThe great, true goal of history, the only one for which there is justification, is our humanization and deliverance, the genuine liberty and prosperity of all socially-living men.â[367] âIn the triumph of humanity is at the same time the goal and the essential meaning of history, and this triumph can be brought about only by liberty.â[368] âAs in the past the State was historically necessary evil, it must just as necessarily, sooner or later, disappear altogether.â[369] Everybody feels already that this moment is approaching,[370] the transformation is at hand,[371] it is to be expected within the nineteenth century.[372]
II. **In the next stage of evolution, which mankind must speedily reach, the place of the State will be taken by a social human life on the basis of the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to.**
1. Even after the State is done away, men will live together socially. The goal of human evolution, âcomplete humanity,â[373] can be attained only in a society. âMan becomes man, and his humanity becomes conscious and real, only in society and by the joint activity of society. He frees himself from the yoke of external nature only by jointâthat is, societaryâlabor: it alone is capable of making the surface of the earth fit for the evolution of mankind; but without such external liberation neither intellectual nor moral liberation is possible. Furthermore, man gets free from the yoke of his own nature only by education and instruction: they alone make it possible for him to subordinate the impulses and motions of his body to the guidance of his more and more developed mind; but education and instruction are of an exclusively societary nature. Outside of society man would have remained forever a wild beast, or, what comes to about the same thing, a saint. Finally, in his isolation man cannot have the consciousness of liberty. What liberty means for man is that he is recognized as free, and treated as free, by those who surround him; liberty is not a matter of isolation, therefore, but of mutualityânot of separateness, but of combination; for every man it is only the mirroring of his humanity (that is, of his human rights) in the consciousness of his brothers.â[374]
But men will be held together in society no longer by a supreme authority, but by the legally binding force of contract. Complete humanity can be attained only in a free society. âMy liberty, or, what means the same, my human dignity, consists in my being entitled, as man, to obey no other man and to act only on my own judgment.â[375] âI myself am a free man only so far as I recognize the humanity and liberty of all the men who surround me. In respecting their humanity I respect my own. A cannibal, who treats his prisoner as a wild beast and eats him, is himself not a man, but a beast. A slaveholder is not a man, but a master.â[376] âThe more free men surround me, and the deeper and broader their freedom is, so much deeper, broader, and more powerful is my freedom too. On the other hand, every enslavement of men is at the same time a limitation of my freedom, or, what is the same thing, a negation of my human existence by its bestial existence.â[377] But a free society cannot be held together by authority,[378] but only by contract.[379]
2. How will the future society shape itself in detail?
âUnity is the goal toward which mankind ceaselessly moves.â[380] Therefore men will unite with the utmost amplitude. But âthe place of the old organization, built from above downward upon force and authority, will be taken by a new one which has no other basis than the natural needs, inclinations, and endeavors of men.â[381] Thus we come to a âfree union of individuals into communes, of communes into provinces, of provinces into nations, and finally of nations into the United States of Europe and later of the whole world.â[382]
âEvery nation,âbe it great or small, strong or weak,âevery province, and every commune has the unlimited right to complete independence, provided that its internal constitution does not threaten the independence and liberty of the adjoining territories.â[383]
âAll of what are known as the historic rights of nations are totally done away; all questions regarding natural, political, strategic, and economic boundaries are henceforth to be classed as ancient history and resolutely disallowed.â[384]
âBy the fact that a territory has once belonged to a State, even by a voluntary adhesion, it is in no wise bound to remain always united with this State. Human justice, the only justice that means anything to us, cannot recognize anything as creating an obligation in perpetuity. All rights and duties are founded on liberty. The right of freely uniting and separating is the first and most important of all political rights. Without this right the League would be merely a concealed centralization still.â[385]
I. **In the progress of mankind from its bestial** **existence to a human existence, according to Bakunin, we must shortly come to the disappearanceânot indeed of property, butâof propertyâs present form, unlimited private property.**
1. Private property, so far as it fastens upon all things without distinction, belongs to the same low stage of evolution as the State.
âPrivate property is at once the consequence and the basis of the State.â[386] âEvery government is necessarily based on exploitation on the one hand, and on the other hand has exploitation for its goal and bestows upon exploitation protection and legality.â[387] In every State there exist âtwo kinds of relationship,âto wit, government and exploitation. If really governing means sacrificing oneâs self for the good of the governed, then indeed the second relationship is in direct contradiction to the first. But let us only understand our point rightly! From the ideal standpoint, be it theological or metaphysical, the good of the masses can of course not mean their temporal welfare: what are a few decades of earthly life in comparison to eternity? Hence one must govern the masses with regard not to this coarse earthly happiness, but to their eternal good. Outward sufferings and privations may even be welcomed from the educatorâs standpoint, since an excess of sensual enjoyment kills the immortal soul. But now the contradiction disappears. Exploiting and governing mean the same; the one completes the other, and serves as its means and its end.â[388]
2. Private property, when it exists in all things without distinction, has such characteristics as correspond to the low stage of evolution to which it belongs.
âOn the privileged representatives of head-work (who at present are called to be the representatives of society, not because they have more sense, but only because they were born in the privileged class) such property bestows all the blessings and also all the debasement of our civilization: wealth, luxury, profuse expenditure, comfort, the pleasures of family life, the exclusive enjoyment of political liberty, and hence the possibility of exploiting millions of laborers and governing them at discretion in oneâs own interest. What is there left for the representatives of handwork, these numberless millions of proletarians or of small farmers? Hopeless misery, not even the joys of the family (for the family soon becomes a burden to the poor man), ignorance, barbarism, an almost bestial existence, and this for consolation with it all, that they are serving as pedestal for the culture, liberty, and depravity of a minority.â[389]
The freer and more highly developed trade and industry are in any place, âthe more complete is the demoralization of the privileged few on the one hand, and the greater are the misery, the complaints, and the just indignation of the laboring masses on the other. England, Belgium, France, Germany, are certainly the countries of Europe in which trade and industry enjoy greatest freedom and have made most progress. In these very countries the most cruel pauperism prevails, the gulf between capitalists and landlords on the one hand and the laboring class on the other is greater than in any other country. In Russia, in the Scandinavian countries, in Italy, in Spain, where trade and industry are still embryonic, people but seldom die of hunger except on extraordinary occasions. In England starvation is an every-day thing. And not only individuals starve, but thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands.â[390]
3. But mankind will soon have passed the low stage of evolution to which private property belongs.
As there has at all times been oppression of the nations by the State, so has there also always been âexploitation of the masses of slaves, serfs, wage-workers, by a ruling minority.â[391] But this exploitation is no more âinseparably united with the existence of human societyâ[392] than is that oppression. âBy the force of things themselvesâ[393] unlimited private property will be done away. Everybody feels already that this moment is approaching,[394] the transformation is already at hand,[395] it is to be expected within the nineteenth century.[396]
II. **In the next stage of evolution, which mankind must speedily reach, property will be so constituted that there will indeed be private property in the objects of consumption, but in land, instruments of labor, and all other capital, there will be only social property. The future society will be collectivist.**
In this way every laborer has the product of his labor guaranteed to him.
1. âJustice must serve as basis for the new world: without it, no liberty, no living together, no prosperity, no peace.â[397] âJustice, not that of jurists, nor yet that of theologians, nor yet that of metaphysicians, but simple human justice, commandsâ[398] that âin future every manâs enjoyment corresponds to the quantity of goods produced by him.â[399] The thing is, then, to find a means âwhich makes it impossible for any one, whoever he may be, to exploit the labor of another, and permits each to share in the enjoyment of societyâs stock of goods (which is solely a product of labor) only so far as he has, by his labor, directly contributed to the production of this stock of goods.â[400]
This means consists in the principle âthat the land, the instruments of labor, and all other capital, as the collective property of the whole of society, shall exclusively serve for the use of the laborers,âthat is, of their agricultural and industrial associations.â[401] âI am not a Communist, but a Collectivist.â[402]
2. The collectivism of the future society âby no means demands the setting up of any supreme authority. In the name of liberty, on which alone an economic or a political organization can be founded, we shall always protest against everything that looks even remotely similar to Communism or State Socialism.â[403] âI would have the organization of society, and of the collective or social property, from below upward by the voice of free union, not from above downward by means of any authority.â[404]
<em>The change that is promptly to be expected in the course of mankindâs progress from its bestial existence to a human existence,âthe disappearance of the State, the transformation of law and property, and the appearance of the new condition,âwill come to pass, according to Bakunin, by a social revolution; that is, by a violent subversion of the old order, which will be automatically brought about by the power of things, but which those who foresee the course of evolution have the task of hastening and facilitating.</em>
I. âTo escape its wretched lot the populace has three ways, two imaginary and one real. The two first are the rum-shop and the church, the third is the social revolution.â[405] âA cure is possible only through the social revolution,â[406]âthat is, through âthe destruction of all institutions of inequality, and the establishment of economic and social equality.â[407] The revolution will not be made by anybody. âRevolutions are never made, neither by individuals nor yet by secret societies. They come about automatically, in a measure; the power of things, the current of events and facts, produces them. They are long preparing in the depth of the obscure consciousness of the massesâthen they break out suddenly, not seldom on apparently slight occasion.â[408] The revolution is already at hand to-day;[409] everybody feels its approach;[410] we are to expect it within the nineteenth century.[411]
1. ïżœïżœïżœBy the revolution we understand the unchaining of everything that is to-day called âevil passions,â and the destruction of everything that in the same language is called âpublic orderâ.â[412]
The revolution will rage not against men, but against relations and things.[413] âBloody revolutions are often necessary, thanks to human stupidity; yet they are always an evil, a monstrous evil and a great disaster, not only with regard to the victims, but also for the sake of the purity and perfection of the purpose in whose name they take place.â[414] âOne must not wonder if in the first moment of their uprising the people kill many oppressors and exploitersâthis misfortune, which is of no more importance anyhow than the damage done by a thunderstorm, can perhaps not be avoided. But this natural fact will be neither moral nor even useful. Political massacres have never killed parties; particularly have they always shown themselves impotent against the privileged classes; for authority is vested far less in men than in the position which the privileged acquire by any institutions, particularly by the State and private property. If one would make a thorough revolution, therefore, one must attack things and relationships, destroy property and the State: then there is no need of destroying men and exposing oneâs self to the inevitable reaction which the slaughtering of men always has provoked and always will provoke in every society. But, in order to have the right to deal humanely with men without danger to the revolution, one must be inexorable toward things and relationships, destroy everything, and first and foremost property and its inevitable consequence the State. This is the whole secret of the revolution.â[415]
âThe revolution, as the power of things to-day necessarily presents it before us, will not be national, but international,âthat is, universal. In view of the threatened league of all privileged interests and all reactionary powers in Europe, in view of the terrible instrumentalities that a shrewd organization puts at their disposal, in view of the deep chasm that to-day yawns between the **bourgeoisie** and the laborers everywhere, no revolution can count on success if it does not speedily extend itself beyond the individual nation to all other nations. But the revolution can never cross the frontiers and become general unless it has in it the foundations for this generality; that is, unless it is pronouncedly socialistic, and, by equality and justice, destroys the State and establishes liberty. For nothing can better inspire and uplift the sole true power of the century, the laborers, than the complete liberation of labor and the shattering of all institutions for the protection of hereditary property and of capital.â[416] âA political and national revolution cannot win, therefore, unless the political revolution becomes social, and the national revolution, by the very fact of its fundamentally socialistic and State-destroying character, becomes a universal revolution.â[417]
2. âThe revolution, as we understand it, must on its very first day completely and fundamentally destroy the State and all State institutions. This destruction will have the following natural and necessary effects. (a) The bankruptcy of the State. (b) The cessation of State collection of private debts, whose payment is thenceforth left to the debtorâs pleasure. (c) The cessation of the payment of taxes, and of the levying of direct or indirect imposts. (d) The dissolution of the army, the courts, the corps of office-holders, the police, and the clergy. (e) The stoppage of the official administration of justice, the abolition of all that is called juristic law and of its exercise. Hence, the valuelessness, and the consignment to an **auto-da-fe**, of all titles to property, testamentary dispositions, bills of sale, deeds of gift, judgments of courtsâin short, of the whole mass of papers relating to private law. Everywhere, and in regard to everything, the revolutionary fact in place of the law created and guaranteed by the State. (f) The confiscation of all productive capital and instruments of labor in favor of the associations of laborers, which will use them for collective production. (g) The confiscation of all Church and State property, as well as of the bullion in private hands, for the benefit of the commune formed by the league of the associations of laborers. In return for the confiscated goods, those who are affected by the confiscation receive from the commune their absolute necessities; they are free to acquire more afterward by their labor.â[418]
The destruction will be followed by the reshaping. Hence, (h) âThe organization of the commune by the permanent association of the barricades and by its organ, the council of the revolutionary commune, to which every barricade, every street, every quarter, sends one or two responsible and revocable representatives with binding instructions. The council of the commune can appoint executive committees out of its membership for the various branches of the revolutionary administration. (i) The declaration of the capital, insurgent and organized as a commune, that, after the righteous destruction of the State of authority and guardianship, it renounces the right (or rather the usurpation) of governing the provinces and setting a standard for them. (k) The summons to all provinces, communities, and associations, to follow the example given by the capital, first to organize themselves in revolutionary form, then to send to a specified meeting-place responsible and revocable representatives with binding instructions, and so to constitute the league of the insurgent associations, communities, and provinces, and to organize a revolutionary power capable of defeating the reaction. The sending, not of official commissioners of the revolution with some sort of badges, but of agitators for the revolution, to all the provinces and communitiesâespecially to the peasants, who cannot be revolutionized by scientific principles nor yet by the edicts of any dictatorship, but only by the revolutionary fact itself: that is, by the inevitable effects of the complete cessation of official State activity in all the communities. The abolition of the national State, not only in other senses, but in this,âthat all foreign countries, provinces, communities, associations, nay, all individuals who have risen in the name of the same principles, without regard to the present State boundaries, are accepted as part of the new political system and nationality; and that, on the other hand, it shall exclude from membership those provinces, communities, associations, or personages, of the same country, who take the side of the reaction. Thus must the universal revolution, by the very fact of its binding the insurgent countries together for joint defence, march on unchecked over the abolished boundaries and the ruins of the formerly existing States to its triumph.â[419]
II. âTo serve, to organize, and to hastenâ[420] âthe revolution, which must everywhere be the work of the peopleâ[421]âthis alone is the task of those who foresee the course of evolution. We have to perform âmidwifeâs servicesâ[422] for the new time, âto help on the birth of the revolution.â[423]
To this end we must, âfirst, spread among the masses thoughts that correspond to the instincts of the masses.â[424] âWhat keeps the salvation-bringing thought from going through the laboring masses with a rush? Their ignorance; and particularly the political and religious prejudices which, thanks to the exertions of the ruling classes, to this day obscure the laborerâs natural thought and healthy feelings.â[425] âHence the aim must consist in making him completely conscious of what he wants, evoking in him the thought that corresponds to his impulses. If once the thoughts of the laboring masses have mounted to the level of their impulses, then will their will be soon determined and their power irresistible.â[426]
Furthermore, we must âform, not indeed the army of the revolution,âthe army can never be anything but the people,âbut yet a sort of staff for the revolutionary army. These must be devoted, energetic, talented men, who, above all, love the people without ambition and vanity, and who have the faculty of mediating between the revolutionary thought and the instincts of the people. No very great number of such men is requisite. A hundred revolutionists firmly and seriously bound together are enough for the international organization of all Europe. Two or three hundred revolutionists are enough for the organization of the largest country.â[427]
Here, especially, is the field for the activity of secret societies.[428] âIn order to serve, organize, and hasten the general revolutionâ[429] Bakunin founded the **Alliance internationale de la dĂ©mocratie socialiste**. It was to pursue a double purpose: â(a) The spreading of correct views about politics, economics, and philosophical questions of every kind, among the masses in all countries; an active propaganda by newspapers, pamphlets, and books, as well as by the founding of public associations. (b) The winning of all wise, energetic, silent, well-disposed men who are sincerely devoted to the idea; the covering of Europe, and America too so far as possible, with a network of self-sacrificing revolutionists, strong by unity.â[430]
[317] Printed in â**Ćuvres de Michel Bakounine**â (1895) pp. 1â205, under the title â**FĂ©dĂ©ralisme, socialisme et antithĂ©ologisme**.â
[318] Printed in â**LâAlliance de la dĂ©mocratie socialiste et lâAssociation internationale des travailleurs**â (1873) pp. 118â35.
[319] Only fragments have been printed: one under the title â**LâEmpire knoutogermanique et la RĂ©volution sociale**â (1871), a second under the title â**Dieu et lâEtat**â (1882), a third under the same title in â**Ćuvres de Michel Bakounine**â (1895) pp. 261â326.
[320] Printed in Dragomanoff, â**Michail Bakunins sozial-politischer Briefwechsel mit Alexander Iw. Herzen und Ogarjow**,â German translation by MinzĂšs (1895) pp. 358â64.
[321] A part is printed in French translation, in â**LâAlliance de la dĂ©mocratie socialiste et lâAssociation internationale des travailleurs**â (1873) pp. 90â95, the rest in Dragomanoff pp. 371â83.
[322] â**LâAlliance de la dĂ©mocratie socialiste et lâAssociation internationale des travailleurs**â p. 89; Dragomanoff p. IX.
[323] Ba. â**Briefe**â pp. 223, 233, 266, 272.
[324] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 34.
[325] **Ib.** p. 33.
[326] **Ib.** p. 3.
[327] **Ib.** p. 52.
[328] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 104.
[329] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 52.
[330] **Ib.** p. 7.
[331] **Ib.** p. 16.
[332] **Ib.** p. 16.
[333] **Ib.** p. 16.
[334] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 155.
[335] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 16.
[336] **Ib.** pp. 27â8.
[337] Ba. â**Programme**â p. 382.
[338] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 30.
[339] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 287.
[340] **Ib.** p. 285.
[341] Ba. â**Programme**â p. 382.
[342] Ba. â**Articles**â p. 113.
[343] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 125.
[344] **Ib.** p. 125.
[345] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 281.
[346] Ba. â**Statuts**â pp. 129â31.
[347] Ba. â**Proposition**â pp. 17â18.
[348] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 281.
[349] Ba. â**Proposition**â pp. 17â18.
[350] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 18.
[351] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 133.
[352] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 285.
[353] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 134.
[354] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 19.
[355] **Ib.** p. 87.
[356] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 287.
[357] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 20.
[358] **Ib.** p. 97.
[359] **Ib.** p. 9.
[360] **Ib.** p. 11.
[361] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 288.
[362] Ba. â**Dieu**â pp. 29â30.
[363] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 154
[364] **Ib.** p. 10.
[365] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** pp. 287â8.
[366] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 14.
[367] **Ib.** p. 65.
[368] **Ib.** p. 53
[369] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 287.
[370] Ba. â**Articles**â p. 113.
[371] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 125.
[372] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 125.
[373] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 11.
[374] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** pp. 277â8.
[375] **Ib.** p. 281.
[376] **Ib.** p. 279.
[377] **Ib.** p. 281.
[378] **Ib.** p. 283.
[379] Ba. â**Proposition**â pp. 16â18.
[380] **Ib.** p. 20.
[381] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 16.
[382] **Ib.** pp. 16â17.
[383] **Ib.** pp. 17â18.
[384] **Ib.** p. 17.
[385] **Ib.** p. 18.
[386] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 128.
[387] Ba. â**Dieu**â **Ćuvres** p. 324.
[388] **Ib.** pp. 323â4.
[389] Ba. â**Proposition**â pp. 32â3.
[390] Ba. â**Proposition**â pp. 26â7.
[391] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 14.
[392] **Ib.** p. 14.
[393] Ba. â**Programme**â p. 382.
[394] Ba. â**Articles**â p. 113.
[395] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 125.
[396] **Ib.** p. 125.
[397] Ba. â**Proposition**â pp. 54â5.
[398] **Ib.** p. 59.
[399] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 133.
[400] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 55.
[401] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 133.
[402] Ba. â**Discours**â p. 27.
[403] Ba. â**Proposition**â p. 56.
[404] Ba. â**Discours**â p. 28.
[405] Ba. â**Dieu**â p. 10.
[406] **Ib.** p. 18.
[407] **Ib.** p. 45.
[408] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 132.
[409] **Ib.** p. 125.
[410] Ba. â**Articles**â p. 113.
[411] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 125.
[412] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 129.
[413] **Ib.** p. 126.
[414] Ba. â**Volkssache**â p. 309.
[415] Ba. â**Statuts**â pp. 127â8.
[416] **Ib.** p. 125.
[417] **Ib.** p. 131.
[418] Ba. â**Statuts**â pp. 129â30. [Bakunin is writing in a world where the Church is everywhere part of the State machine. Would his words about Church property apply equally, according to him, in the United States, where the Church property is in general made up of the free gifts of individual believers? Perhaps; for he would have no love for the Church even here, and he is obviously hostile to anything in the nature of mortmain. If so, how about college property?]
[419] Ba. â**Statuts**â pp. 130â31.
[420] **Ib.** p. 125.
[421] **Ib.** p. 131.
[422] Ba. â**Volkssache**â p. 309.
[423] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 132.
[424] **Ib.** p. 132.
[425] Ba. â**Articles**â p. 103.
[426] Ba. â**Articles**â p. 103.
[427] Ba. â**Statuts**â p. 132.
[428] **Ib.** p. 132.
[429] **Ib.** p. 125.
[430] **Ib.** pp. 125â6.
1. Prince Peter Alexeyevitch Kropotkin was born at Moscow in 1842. From 1862 to 1867 he was an officer of the Cossacks of the Amur; during this time he traveled over a great part of Siberia and Manchuria. From 1867 to 1871 he studied mathematics at St. Petersburg; at this time he was also secretary of the Geographical Society; under its commission he explored the glaciers of Finland and Sweden in 1871.
In 1872 Kropotkin visited Belgium and Switzerland, where he joined the **Association internationale des travailleurs**. In the same year he returned to St. Petersburg and became a prominent member of the Tchaikoffski secret society. This was found out in 1874. He was arrested and kept in prison until in 1876 he succeeded in escaping to England.
From England Kropotkin went to Switzerland in 1877, but was expelled from that country in 1881. Thenceforth he resided alternately in England and France. In France, in 1883, he was condemned to five yearsâ imprisonment for membership in a prohibited association; he was kept in prison till 1886, and then pardoned. Since then he has lived in England.
Kropotkin has published geographical works and accounts of travel, and also writings in the spheres of economics, politics, and the philosophy of law.
2. For Kropotkinâs teaching about law, the State, and property, the most important sources are his many short works, newspaper articles, and lectures. The articles that he published from 1879 to 1882 in â**Le RĂ©voltĂ©**â of Geneva, appeared in 1885 as a book under the title â**Paroles dâun rĂ©voltĂ©**.â The only large work in which he develops his teaching is â**La conquĂȘte du pain**â (1892).
3. Kropotkin calls his teaching âAnarchism.â âWhen in the bosom of the International there was formed a party which no more acknowledged an authority inside that association than any other authority, this party called itself at first federalist, then anti-authoritarian or hostile to the State. At that time it avoided describing itself as Anarchistic. The word **an-archie** (it was so written at that time) seemed to identify the party too much with the adherents of Proudhon, whose reform ideas the International was opposing. But for this very reason its opponents delighted in using this designation in order to produce confusion; besides, the name made the assertion possible that from the very name of the Anarchists it was evident that they aimed merely at disorder and chaos, without thinking any farther. The Anarchistic party was not slow to adopt the designation that was given to it. At first it still insisted on the hyphen between **an** and **archie**, with the explanation that in this form the word **an-archie**, being of Greek origin, denoted absence of dominion and not âdisorderâ; but it soon decided to spare the proof-reader his useless trouble and the reader his lesson in Greek, and used the name as it stood.â[431] And in fact âthe word **anarchie**, which negates the whole of this so-called order and reminds us of the fairest moments in the lives of the nations, is well chosen for a party that looks forward to conquering a better future.â[432]
<em>According to Kropotkin, the law which has supreme validity for man is the evolutionary law of the progress of mankind from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible; from this law he derives the commandment of justice and the commandment of energy.</em>
1. The supreme law for man is the evolutionary law of the progress of mankind from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible.
There is âonly one scientific method, the method of the natural sciences,â[433] and we apply this method also âin the sciences that relate to man,â[434] particularly in the âscience of society.â[435] Now, a mighty revolution is at present taking place[436] in the entire realm of science; it is the result of the âphilosophy of evolution.â[437] âThe idea hitherto prevalent, that everything in nature stands fast, is fallen, destroyed, annihilated. Everything in nature changes; nothing remains: neither the rock which appears to us to be immovable and the continent which we call **terra firma**, nor the inhabitants, their customs, habits, and thoughts. All that we see about us is a transitory phenomenon, and must change, because motionlessness would be death.â[438] In the case of organisms this evolution is progress, in consequence of âtheir admirable adaptivity to their conditions of life. They develop such faculties as render more complete both the adaptations of the aggregates to their surroundings and those of each of the constituent parts of the aggregate to the needs of free co-operation.â[439] âThis is the âstruggle for existence,â which, therefore, must not be conceived merely in its restricted sense of a struggle between individuals for the means of subsistence.â[440]
âEvolution never advances so slowly and evenly as has been asserted. Evolution and revolution alternate, and the revolutionsâthat is, the times of accelerated evolutionâbelong to the unity of nature just as much as do the times in which evolution takes place more slowly.â[441] âOrder is the free equilibrium of all forces that operate upon the same point; if any of these forces are interfered with in their operation by a human will, they operate none the less, but their effects accumulate till some day they break the artificial dam and provoke a revolution.â[442]
Kropotkin applies these general propositions to the social life of men.[443] âA society is an aggregation of organisms trying to combine the wants of the individual with those of co-operation for the welfare of the speciesâ;[444] it is âa whole which serves toward the purpose of attaining the largest possible amount of happiness at the least possible expense of human force.â[445] Now human societies evolve,[446] and one may try to determine the direction of this evolution.[447] Societies advance from lower to higher forms of organization;[448] but the goal of this evolutionâthat is, the point towards which it directs itselfâconsists in âestablishing the best conditions for realizing the greatest happiness of humanity.â[449] What we call progress is the right path to this goal;[450] humanity may for the time err from this path, but will always be brought back to it at last.[451]
But not even here does evolution take place without revolutions. What is true of a manâs views, of the climate of a country, of the characteristics of a species, is true also of societies: âthey evolve slowly, but there are also times of the quickest transformation.â[452] For circumstances of many kinds may oppose themselves to the effort of human associations to attain to the greatest possible measure of happiness.[453] âNew thoughts germinate everywhere, try to get to the light, try to get themselves applied in life; but they are kept back by the inertia of those who have an interest in keeping up the old conditions, they are stifled under long-established prejudices and traditions.â[454] âPolitical, economic, and social institutions fall in ruins, and the building which has become uninhabitable hinders the development of what is sprouting in its crevices and around it.â[455] Then there is need of âgreat events which rudely break the thread of history and hurl mankind out of its ruts into new roadsâ;[456] âthe Revolution becomes a peremptory necessity.â[457]ââMan has recognized his place in nature; he has recognized that his institutions are his work and can be refashioned by him alone.â[458] âWhat has not the engineerâs art dared, and what do not literature, painting, music, the drama dare to-day?â[459] Thus must we also, where any institutions hinder the progress of society, âdare the fight, to make a rich and overflowing life possible to all.â[460]
2. From the evolutionary law of the progress of mankind from a less happy existence to the happiest existence possible Kropotkin derives the commandment of justice and the commandment of energy.
In the struggle for existence human societies evolve toward a condition in which there are given the best conditions for the attainment of the greatest happiness of mankind.[461] When we describe anything as âgood,â we mean by this that it favors the attainment of the goal; that is, it is beneficial to the society in which we live; and we call that âevilâ which in our opinion hinders the attainment of the goal, that is, is harmful to the society we live in.[462]
Now, menâs views as to what favors and what hinders the establishment of the best conditions for the attainment of mankindâs greatest happiness, and hence as to what is beneficial or harmful to society, may certainly change.[463] But one fundamental requisite for the attainment of the goal will always have to be recognized as such, whatever the diversity of opinions. It âmay be summed up in the sentence âDo to others as you would have it done to you in the like caseâ.â[464] But this sentence âis nothing else than the principle of equalityâ;[465] and equality, in turn, âmeans the same as equity,â[466] âsolidarity,â[467] âjustice.â[468]
But there is indisputably yet another fundamental requisite for the attainment of the goal. This is âsomething greater, finer, and mightier than mere equalityâ;[469] it may be expressed in the sentence âBe strong; overflow with the passion of thought and action: so shall your understanding, your love, your energy, pour itself into others.â[470]
I. **In mankindâs progress from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible, one of the next steps, according to Kropotkin, will be the disappearanceânot indeed of law, butâof enacted law.**
1. Enacted law has become a hindrance to mankindâs progress toward an existence as happy as possible.
âFor thousands of years those who govern have been repeating again and again, âRespect the law!ââ;[471] âin the States of to-day a new law is regarded as the cure for all evils.â[472] But âthe law has no claim to menâs respect.â[473] âIt is an adroit mixture of such customs as are beneficial to society, and would be observed even without a law, with others which are to the advantage only of a ruling minority, but are harmful to the masses and can be upheld only by terror.â[474] âThe law, which first made its appearance as a collection of customs which serve for the maintenance of society, is now merely an instrument to keep up the exploitation and domination of the industrious masses by wealthy idlers. It has now no longer any civilizing mission; its only mission is to protect exploitation.â[475] âIt puts rigid immobility in the place of progressive development,â[476] âit seeks to confirm permanently the customs that are advantageous to the ruling minority.â[477]
âIf one looks over the millions of laws which mankind obeys, one can distinguish three great classes: protection of property, protection of government, protection of persons. But in examining these three classes one comes in every case to the necessary conclusion that the law is valueless and harmful. What the protection of property is worth, the Socialists know only too well. The laws about property do not exist to secure to individuals or to society the product of their labor. On the contrary, they exist to rob the producer of a part of his product, and to protect a few in the enjoyment of what they have stolen from the producer or from the whole of society.â[478] And as regards the laws for the protection of government, âwe know well that all governments, without exception, have it for their mission to uphold by force the privileges of the propertied classesâthe nobility, the clergy, and the **bourgeoisie**. A man has only to examine all these laws, only to observe their every-day working, and he will be convinced that not one is worth keeping.â[479] Equally âsuperfluous and harmful, finally, are the laws for the protection of persons, for the punishment and prevention of âcrimesâ. The fear of punishment never yet restrained a murderer. He who would kill his neighbor, for revenge or for necessity, does not beat his brains about the consequences; and every murderer hitherto has had the firm conviction that he would escape prosecution. If murder were declared not punishable, the number of murders would not increase even by one; rather it would decrease to the extent that murders are at present committed by habitual criminals who have been corrupted in prison.â[480]
2. The stage of evolution to which enacted law belongs will soon be left behind by man.
âThe law is a comparatively young formation. Mankind lived for ages without any written law. At that time the relations of men to each other were regulated by mere habits, by customs and usages, which age made venerable, and which every one learned from his childhood in the same way as he learned hunting, cattle-raising, or agriculture.â[481] âBut when society came to be more and more split into two hostile classes, of which the one wanted to rule and the other to escape from rule, the victor of the moment sought to give permanence to the accomplished fact and to hallow it by all that was venerable to the defeated. Consecrated by the priest and protected by the strong hand of the warrior, law appeared.â[482]
But its days are already numbered. âEverywhere we find insurgents who will no longer obey the law till they know where it comes from, what it is good for, by what right it demands obedience, and for what reason it is held in honor. They bring under their criticism everything that has until now been respected as the foundation of society, but first and foremost the fetish, law.â[483] The moment of its disappearance, for the hastening of which we must fight,[484] is close at hand,[485] perhaps even at the end of the nineteenth century.[486]
II. **In the next stage of evolution, which, as has been shown, mankind must soon reach, there will indeed be no enacted law, but there will be law even there.** âThe laws will be totally abrogated;â[487] âunwritten customs,â[488] ââcustomary law,â as jurists say,â[489] will âsuffice to maintain a good understanding.â[490] These norms of the next stage of evolution will be based on a general will;[491] and conformity to them will be adequately assured âby the necessity, which every one feels, of finding co-operation, support, and sympathyâ[492] and by the fear of expulsion from the fellowship,[493] but also, if necessary, by the intervention of the individual citizen[494] or of the masses;[495] they will therefore be legal norms.
Of legal norms of the next stage of evolution Kropotkin mentions in the first place this,âthat contracts must be lived up to.[496]
Furthermore, according to Kropotkin there will obtain in the next stage of evolution a legal norm by virtue of which not only the means of production, but all things, are common property.[497]
An additional legal norm in the next stage of evolution will, according to Kropotkin, be that by virtue of which âevery one who co-operates in production to a certain extent has, for one thing, the right to live; for another, the right to live comfortably.â[498]
I. **According to Kropotkin, in mankindâs progress from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible the State will shortly disappear.**
1. The State has become a hindrance to mankindâs evolution toward a happiness as great as possible.
âWhat does this monstrous engine serve for, that we call âStateâ? For preventing the exploitation of the laborer by the capitalist, of the peasant by the landlord? or for assuring us of work? for providing us food when the mother has nothing but water left for her child? No, a thousand times no.â[499] But instead of this the State âmeddles in all our affairs, pinions us from cradle to grave. It prescribes all our actions, it piles up mountains of laws and ordinances that bewilder the shrewdest lawyer. It creates an army of office-holders who sit like spiders in their webs and have never seen the world except through the dingy panes of their office-window. The immense and ever-increasing sums that the State collects from the people are never sufficient: it lives at the expense of future generations, and steers with all its might toward bankruptcy. âStateâ is tantamount to âwarâ; one State seeks to weaken and ruin another in order to force upon the latter its law, its policy, its commercial treaties, and to enrich itself at its expense; war is to-day the usual condition in Europe, there is a thirty yearsâ supply of causes of war on hand. And civil war rages at the same time with foreign war; the State, which was originally to be a protection for all and especially for the weak, has to-day become a weapon of the rich against the exploited, of the propertied against the propertyless.â[500]
In these respects there is no distinction to be made between the different forms of the State. âToward the end of the last century the French people overthrew the monarchy, and the last absolute king expiated on the scaffold his own crimes and those of his predecessors.â[501] âLater all the countries of the Continent went through the same evolution: they overthrew their absolute monarchies and flung themselves into the arms of parliamentarism.â[502] âNow it is being perceived that parliamentarism, which was entered upon with such great hopes, has everywhere become a tool for intrigue and personal enrichment, for efforts hostile to the people and to evolution.â[503] âPrecisely like any despot, the body of representatives of the peopleâbe it called Parliament, Convention, or anything else; be it appointed by the prefects of a Bonaparte or elected with all conceivable freedom by an insurgent cityâwill always try to enlarge its competence, to strengthen its power by all sorts of meddling, and to displace the activity of the individual and the group by the law.â[504] âIt was only a forty yearsâ movement, which occasionally even set fire to grain-fields, that could bring the English Parliament to secure to the tenant the value of the improvements made by him. But if it is a question of protecting the capitalistâs interest, threatened by a disturbance or even by agitation,âah, then every representative of the people is on hand, then it acts with more recklessness and cowardice than any despot. The six-hundred-headed beast without a name has outdone Louis IX and Ivan IV.â[505] âParliamentarism is nauseating to any one who has seen it near at hand.â[506]
âThe dominion of men, which calls itself âgovernment,â is incompatible with a morality founded on solidarity.â[507] This is best shown by âthe so-called civil rights, whose value and importance the **bourgeois** press is daily praising to us in every key.â[508] âAre they made for those who alone need them? Certainly not. Universal suffrage may under some circumstances afford to the **bourgeoisie** a certain protection against encroachments by the central authority, it may establish a balance between two authorities without its being necessary for the rivals to draw the knife on each other as formerly; but it is valueless when the object is to overthrow authority or even to set bounds to it. For the rulers it is an excellent means of deciding their disputes; but of what use is it to the ruled? Just so with the freedom of the press. To the mind of the **bourgeoisie**, what is the best thing that has been alleged in its favor? Its impotence. âLook at England, Switzerland, the United States,â they say. âThere the press is free and yet the dominion of capital is more assured than in any other country.â Just so they think about the right of association. âWhy should we not grant full right of association?â says the **bourgeoisie**. âIt will not impair our privileges. What we have to fear is secret societies; public unions are the best means to cripple them.â âThe inviolability of the home? Yes, this we must proclaim aloud, this we must inscribe in the statute-books,â say the sly **bourgeois**, âthe police certainly must not be looking into our pots and kettles. If things go wrong some day, we will snap our fingers at a manâs right to his own house, rummage everything, and, if necessary, arrest people in their beds.â âThe secrecy of letters? Yes, just proclaim its inviolability aloud everywhere, our little privacies certainly must not come to the light. If we scent a plot against our privileges, we shall not stand much on ceremony. And if anybody objects, we shall say what an English minister lately said among the applause of Parliament: âYes, gentlemen, it is with a heavy heart and with the deepest reluctance that we are having letters opened, but the country (that is, the aristocracy and **bourgeoisie**) is in danger!ââ That is what political rights are. Freedom of the press and freedom of association, the inviolability of the home, and all the rest, are respected only so long as the people make no use of them against the privileged classes. But on the day when the people begin to use them for the undermining of privileges all these ârightsâ are thrown overboard.â[509]
2. The stage of evolution to which the State belongs will soon be left behind by man. The State is doomed.[510]
It is âof a relatively modern origin.â[511] âThe State is a historic formation which, in the life of all nations, has at a certain time gradually taken the place of free associations. Church, law, military power, and wealth acquired by plunder, have for centuries made common cause, have in slow labor piled stone on stone, encroachment on encroachment, and thus created the monstrous institution which has finally fixed itself in every corner of social lifeânay, in the brains and hearts of menâand which we call the State.â[512]
It has now begun to decompose. âThe peoplesâespecially those of the Latin racesâare bent on destroying its authority, which merely hampers their free development; they want the independence of provinces, communes, and groups of laborers; they want not to submit to any dominion, but to league themselves together freely.â[513] âThe dissolution of the States is advancing at frightful speed. They have become decrepit graybeards, with wrinkled skins and tottering feet, gnawed by internal diseases and without understanding for the new thoughts; they are squandering the little strength that they still had left, living at the expense of their numbered years, and hastening their end by falling foul of each other like old women.â[514] The moment of the Stateâs disappearance is therefore close at hand.[515] Kropotkin says now that it will come in a few years,[516] now that it will come at the end of the nineteenth century.[517]
II. **In the next stage of evolution, which, as has been shown, mankind must soon reach, the place of the State will be taken by a social human life on the basis of the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to.** Anarchism is the âinevitableâ[518] ânext phase,â[519] âhigher form,â[520] of society.
1. Even after the State is done away men will live together socially; but they will no longer be held together in society by a governmental authority, but by the legally binding force of contract. âFree expansion of individuals into groups and of groups into associations, free organization from the simple to the complex as need and inclination are felt,â[521] will be the future form of society.
We can at present perceive a growing Anarchistic movement; that is, âa movement towards limiting more and more the sphere of action of government. After having tried all kinds of government, humanity is trying now to free itself from the bonds of any government whatever, and to respond to its needs of organization by the free understanding between individuals prosecuting the same common aims.â[522] âFree associations are beginning to take to themselves the entire field of human activity.â[523] âThe large organizations resulting merely and simply from free agreement have grown recently. The railway net of Europeâa confederation of so many scores of separate societiesâis an instance; the Dutch **Beurden**, or associations of ship and boat owners, are extending now their organizations over the rivers of Germany, and even to the shipping trade of the Baltic; the numberless amalgamated manufacturersâ associations, and the **syndicats** of France, are so many instances in point. But there also is no lack of free organizations for nobler pursuits: the Lifeboat Association, the Hospitals Association, and hundreds of like organizations. One of the most remarkable societies which has[524] recently arisen is the Red Cross Society. To slaughter men on the battle-fields, that remains the duty of the State; but these very States recognize their inability to take care of their own wounded; they abandon the task, to a great extent, to private initiative.â[525] âThese endeavors will attain to free play, will find a new and vast field for their application, and will form the foundation of the future society.â[526]
âThe agreement between the hundreds of companies to which the European railroads belong has been entered into directly, without the meddling of any central authority that prescribed laws to the several companies. It has been kept up by conventions at which delegates met to consult together and then to lay before their principals plans, not laws. This is a new procedure, utterly different from any government whether monarchical or republican, absolute or constitutional. It is an innovation which at first makes its way into European manners only by hesitating steps, but to which the future belongs.â[527]
2. âTo rack our brains to-day about the details of the form which public life shall take in the future society, would be silly. Yet we must come to an agreement now about the main outlines.â[528] âWe must not forget that perhaps in a year or two we shall be called on to decide all questions of the organization of society.â[529]
Communes will continue to exist; but âthese communes are not agglomerations of men in a territory, and know neither walls nor boundaries; the commune is a clustering of like-minded persons, not a closed integer. The various groups in one commune will feel themselves drawn to similar groups in other communes; they will unite themselves with these as firmly as with their fellow-citizens; and thus there will come about communities of interest whose members are scattered over a thousand cities and villages.â[530]
Men will join themselves together by âcontractsâ[531] to form such communes. They will âtake upon themselves duties to society,â[532] which on its part engages to do certain things for them.[533] It will not be necessary to compel the fulfilment of these contracts,[534] there will be no need of penalties and judges.[535] Fulfilment will be sufficiently assured by âthe necessity, which every one feels, of finding co-operation, support, and sympathy among his neighbors;â[536] he who does not live up to his obligations can of course be expelled from fellowship.[537]
In the commune every one will âdo what is necessary himself, without waiting for a governmentâs orders.â[538] âThe commune will not first destroy the State and then set it up again.â[539] âPeople will see that they are freest and happiest when they have no plenipotentiary agents and depend as little on the wisdom of representatives as on that of Providence.â[540] Nor will there be prisons or other penal institutions;[541] âfor the few anti-social acts that may still take place the best remedy will consist in loving treatment, moral influence, and liberty.â[542]
The communes on their part will join themselves together by contracts[543] quite in the same way as do the members of the individual communes. âThe commune will recognize nothing above it except the interests of the league that it has of its own accord made with other communes.â[544] âOwing to the multiplicity of our needs, a single league will soon not be enough; the commune will feel the necessity of entering into other connections also, joining this or that other league. For the purpose of obtaining food it is already a member of one group; now it must join a second in order to obtain other objects that it needs,âmetal, for instance,âand then a third and fourth too, that will supply it with cloth and works of art. If one takes up an economic atlas of any country, one sees that there are no economic boundaries: the areas of production and exchange for the different objects are blended, interlaced, superimposed. Thus the combinations of the communes also, if they followed their natural development, would soon intertwine in the same way and form an infinitely denser network and a far more consummate âunityâ than the States, whose individual parts, after all, only lie side by side like the rods around the lictorâs axe.â[545]
3. The future society will be able easily to accomplish the tasks that the State accomplishes at present.
âSuppose there is need of a street. Well, then let the inhabitants of the neighboring communes come to an understanding about it, and they will do their business better than the Minister of Public Works would do it. Or a railroad is needed. Here too the communes that are concerned will produce something very different from the work of the promoters who only build bad pieces of track and make millions by it. Or schools are required. People can fit them up for themselves at least as well as the gentlemen at Paris. Or the enemy invades the country. Then we defend ourselves instead of relying on generals who would merely betray us. Or the farmer must have tools and machines. Then he comes to an understanding with the city workingmen, these supply him with them at cost in return for his products, and the middleman, who now robs both the farmer and the workingman, is superfluous.â[546] âOr there comes up a little dispute, or a stronger man tries to push down a weaker. In the first case the people will know enough to create a court of arbitration, and in the second every citizen will regard it as his duty to interfere himself and not wait for the police; there will be as little need of constables as of judges and turnkeys.â[547]
I. **According to Kropotkin, the progress of mankind from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible will shortly bring us to the disappearance not indeed of property, but of its present form, private property.**
1. Private property has become a hindrance to the evolution of mankind toward a happiness as great as possible.
What are the effects of private property to-day? âThe crisis, which was formerly acute, has become chronic; the crisis in the cotton trade, the crisis in the production of metals, the crisis in watchmaking, all the crises, rage concurrently now and do not come to an end. The unemployed in Europe to-day are estimated at several million; those who beg their way from city to city, or gather in mobs to demand âwork or breadâ with threats, are estimated at tens of thousands. Great branches of industry are destroyed; great cities, like Sheffield, forsaken. Everything is at a standstill, want and misery prevail everywhere: the children are pale, the wife has grown five years older in one winter, disease and death are rife among the workingmenâand people talk of over-production!â[548] One might reply that in peasant ownership of land, at least, private property has good effects.[549] âBut the golden age is over for the small farmer. To-day he hardly knows how to make both ends meet. He gets into debt, becomes a victim of the cattle-dealer, the real-estate jobber, the usurer; notes and mortgages ruin whole villages, even more than the frightful taxes imposed by State and commune. Small proprietorship is in a desperate condition; and even if the small farmer is still owner in name, he is in fact nothing more than a tenant paying rent to money-dealers and usurers.â[550]
But private property has still more sweeping indirect effects. âSo long as we have a caste of idlers who have us feed them under the pretext that they must lead us, so long these idlers will always be a focus of pestilence to general morality. He who lives his life in dull laziness, who is always bent merely on getting new pleasures, who by the very basis of his existence can know no solidarity, and who by his course of life cultivates the vilest self-seeking,âhe will always pursue the coarsest sensual pleasures and debase everything around him. With his bag full of dollars and his bestial impulses he will go and dishonor women and children, degrade art, the drama, the press, sell his country and its defenders, and, because he is too cowardly to murder with his own hands, will have his proxies murder the choicest of his nation when, some day, he is afraid for his darling money-bag.â[551] âYear by year thousands of children grow up in the physical and moral filth of our great cities, among a population corrupted by the struggle for daily bread, and at the same time they daily see the immorality, idleness, prodigality, and ostentation of which these same cities are full.â[552] âThus society is incessantly bringing forth beings who are incapable of an honorable and industrious life, and who are full of anti-social feelings. It does homage to them when success crowns their crimes, and sends them to the penitentiary when they are unlucky.â[553]
Private property offends against justice. âThe labor of all has produced the entire accumulated mass of wealth, that of the present generation as well as that of all that went before. The house in which we happen to be together has value only by its being in Paris, this glorious city in which the labor of twenty generations is piled layer upon layer. If it were removed to the snow-fields of Siberia, it would be worth substantially nothing. This machine, invented and patented by you, has in it the labor of five or six generations; it has a value only as a part of the vast whole that we call nineteenth-century industry. Take your lace-making machine to the Papuans in New Guinea, and it is valueless.â[554] âScience and industry; theory and practice; the invention and the putting the invention in operation, which leads to new inventions again; head work and hand work,âall is connected. Every discovery, every progress, every increase in our wealth, has its origin in the total bodily and mental activity of the past and present. Then by what right can any one appropriate to himself the smallest fraction of this vast total and say âthis belongs to me and not to youâ?â[555]âBut this unjust appropriation of what belongs to all has nevertheless taken place. âAmong the changes of time a few have taken possession of all that is made possible to man by the production of goods and the increase of his productive power. To-day the land, though it owes its value to the needs of a ceaselessly increasing population, belongs to a minority which can hinder the people from cultivating it, and which does soâor at least does not permit the people to cultivate it in a manner accordant with modern needs. The mines, which represent the toil of centuries, and whose value is based solely on the needs of industry and the necessities of population, belong likewise to a few, and these few limit the mining of coal, or entirely forbid it when they find a better investment for their money. The machines, too, are the property of a handful of men; and, even if a machine has indubitably been brought to its present perfection by three generations of workers, it nevertheless belongs to a few givers of work. The roads, which would be scrap-iron but for Europeâs dense population, industry, trade, and travel, are in the possession of a few shareholders who perhaps do not even know the location of the lines from which they draw princely incomes.â[556]
2. Mankind will soon have passed the stage of evolution to which private property belongs. Private property is doomed.[557]
Private property is a historic formation: it âhas developed parasitically amidst the free institutions of our earliest ancestors,â[558] and this in the closest connection with the State. âThe political constitution of a society is always the expression, and at the same time the consecration, of its economic constitution.â[559] âThe origin of the State, and its reason for existence, lie in the fact that it interferes in favor of the propertied and to the disadvantage of the propertyless.â[560] âThe omnipotence of the State constitutes the foundation of the strength of the **bourgeoisie**.â[561]
But private property is already on the way to dissolution. âThe economic chaos can last no longer. The people are tired of the crises which the greed of the ruling classes provokes. They want to work and live, not first drudge a few years for scanty wages and then become for many years victims of want and objects of charity. The workingman sees the incapacity of the ruling classes: he sees how unable they are either to understand his efforts or to manage the production and exchange of goods.â[562] Hence âone of the leading features of our century is the growth of Socialism and the rapid spreading of Socialist views among the working classes.â[563] The moment when private property is to disappear is near, therefore: be it in a few years,[564] be it at the end of the nineteenth century,[565] in any case it will come soon.[566]
II. **In mankindâs next stage of evolution, which, as has been shown, must soon be attained, property will take such form that only property of society shall exist.** The ânext phase of evolution,â[567] âhigher form of social organization,â[568] will âinevitablyâ[569] be not only Anarchism, but âAnarchistic Communism.â[570] âThe tendencies towards economical and political freedom are two different manifestations of the very same need of equality which constitutes the very essence of all struggles mentioned by historyâ;[571] âthese two powerful currents of thought characterize our century.â[572]
In this way a comfortable life will be guaranteed to every person who co-operates in production to a certain extent.
1. Mankindâs next stage of evolution will no longer know any but the property of society.
âIn our century the Communist tendency is continually reasserting itself. The penny bridge disappears before the public bridge; and the turnpike road before the free road. The same spirit pervades thousands of other institutions. Museums, free libraries, and free public schools; parks and pleasure grounds; paved and lighted streets, free for everybodyâs use; water supplied to private dwellings, with a growing tendency towards disregarding the exact amount of it used by the individual; tramways and railways which have already begun to introduce the season ticket or the uniform tax, and will surely go much further on this line when they are no longer private property: all these are tokens showing in what direction further progress is to be expected.â[573]
So will the future society be Communistic. âThe first act of the nineteenth-century commune will consist in laying hands on the entire capital accumulated in its bosom.â[574] This applies âto the materials for consumption as well as to those for production.â[575] âPeople have tried to make a distinction between the capital that serves for the production of goods and that which satisfies the wants of life, and have said that machines, factories, raw materials, the means of transportation, and the land are destined to become the property of the community; while dwellings, finished products, clothing, and provisions will remain private property. This distinction is erroneous and impracticable. The house that shelters us, the coal and gas that we burn, the nutriment that our body burns up, the clothing that covers us, and the book from which we draw instruction, are all essential to our existence and are just as necessary for successful production and for the further development of mankind as are machines, factories, raw materials, and other factors of production. With private property in the former goods, there would still remain inequality, oppression, and exploitation; a half-way abolition of private property would have its effectiveness crippled in advance.â[576]
There is no fear that the Communistic communes will isolate themselves.[577] âIf to-day a great city transforms itself into a Communistic commune, and introduces community of the materials for both work and enjoyment, then in a very few days, if it is not shut in by hostile armies, trains of wagons will appear in its markets, and raw materials will arrive from distant ports; and the cityâs industrial products, when once the wants of the population are satisfied, will go to the ends of the earth seeking purchasers; throngs of strangers will stream in from near and far, and will afterward tell at home of the marvelous life of the free city where everybody works, where there are neither poor nor oppressed, where every one enjoys the fruit of his toil, and no one interferes with anotherâs doing so.â[578]
2. The Communism of the future society will ânot be the Communism of the convent or the barrack, such as was formerly preached, but a free Communism which puts the joint products at the disposal of all while leaving to every one the liberty of using them at home.â[579] To get an entirely clear idea of every detail of it, indeed, is not as yet possible; ânevertheless we must come to an agreement about the fundamental features at least.â[580]
What form will production take?
That must first be produced which is requisite âfor the satisfaction of manâs most urgent wants.â[581] For this it suffices âthat all adults, with the exception of those women who are occupied with the education of children, engage to do five hours a day, from the age of twenty or twenty-two to the age of forty-five or fifty, of any one (at their option) of the labors that are regarded as necessary.â[582] âFor instance, a society would enter into the following contract with each of its members: âWe will guarantee to you the enjoyment of our houses, stores of goods, streets, conveyances, schools, museums, etc., on condition that from your twentieth year to your forty-fifth or fiftieth you apply five hours every day to one of the labors necessary to life. Every moment you will have your choice of the groups you will join, or you may found a new one provided that it proposes to do necessary service. For the rest of your time you may associate yourself with whom you like for the purpose of scientific or artistic recreation at your pleasure. We ask of you, therefore, nothing but twelve or fifteen hundred hoursâ work annually in one of the groups which produce food, clothing, and shelter, or which care for health, transportation, etc.; and in return we insure to you all that these groups produce or have producedâ.â[583]
There will be time enough, therefore, to produce what is requisite for the satisfaction of less urgent wants. âWhen one has done in the field or the factory the work that he is under obligation to do for society, he can devote the other half of his day, his week, or his year, to the satisfaction of artistic or scientific wants.â[584] âThe lover of music who wishes a piano will enter the association of instrument-makers; he will devote part of his half-days, and will soon possess the longed-for piano. Or the enthusiast in astronomy will join the astronomersâ association with its philosophers, observers, calculators, and opticians, its scholars and amateurs; and he will obtain the telescope he wishes, if only he dedicates some work to the common causeâfor there is a deal of rough work necessary for an observatory, masonsâ work, carpentersâ work, foundersâ work, machinistsâ workâthe final polish, to be sure, can be given to the instrument of precision by none but the artist. In a word, the five to seven hours that every one has left, after he has first devoted some hours to the production of the necessary, are quite sufficient to render possible for him every kind of luxury.â[585]
âThe separation of agriculture from manufactures will pass away. The factory workmen will be at the same time field workmen.â[586] âAs an eminently periodic industry, which at certain times (and even more in the making of improvements than in harvest) needs a large additional force, agriculture will form the link between village and city.â[587] And âthe separation of mental from bodily labor will come to an endâ[588] too. âPoets and scientists will no longer find poor devils who will sell their energies to them for a plate of soup; they will have to get together and print their writings themselves. Then the authors, and their admirers of both sexes, will soon acquire the art of handling the type-case and composing-stick; they will learn the pleasure of producing jointly, with their own hands, a work that they value.â[589] âEvery labor will be agreeable.â[590] âIf there is still work which is really disagreeable in itself, it is only because our scientific men have never cared to consider the means of rendering it less so: they have always known that there were plenty of starving men who would do it for a few pence a day.â[591] âFactories, smelters, mines, can be as sanitary and as splendid as the best laboratories of our universities; and the more perfectly they are fitted up the more they will produce.â[592] And the product of such labor will be âinfinitely better, and considerably greater, than the mass of goods hitherto produced under the goad of slavery, serfdom, and wage-slavery.â[593]
How will distribution take place?
Every one who contributes his part to production will also have his share in the product. But it must not be assumed that this share in the product will correspond to that share in the production. âEach according to his powers; to each according to his wants.â[594] âNeed will be put above service; it will be recognized that every one who co-operates in production to a certain extent has in the first place the right to live, and in the second place the right to live comfortably.â[595] âEvery one, no matter how strong or weak, how competent or incompetent he may be, will have the right to live,â[596] and âto have a comfortable life; he will furthermore have the right to decide for himself what belongs to a comfortable life.â[597]
Societyâs stock of goods will quite permit this. âIf one considers on the one hand the rapidity with which the productive power of civilized nations is increasing, and on the other hand the limits that are directly or indirectly set to its production by present conditions, one comes to the conclusion that even a moderately sensible economic constitution would permit the civilized nations to heap up in a few years so many useful things that we should have to cry out âEnough! enough coal! enough bread! enough clothes! Let us rest, take recreation, put our strength to a better use, spend our time in a better way!ââ[598]
However, what if the stock should in fact not suffice for all wants? âThe solution isâfree taking of everything that exists in superfluity, and rations of that in which there is a possibility of dearth: rations according to needs, with preference to children, the aged, and the weak in general. That is what is done even now in the country. What commune thinks of limiting the use of the meadows so long as there are enough of them? what commune, so long as there are chestnuts and brushwood enough, hinders those who belong to it from taking as much as they please? And what does the peasant introduce when there is a prospect that firewood will give out? Rationing.â[599]
<em>The change that is promptly to be expected in the course of mankindâs progress from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible,âthe disappearance of the State, the transformation of law and property, and the appearance of the new condition,âwill be accomplished, according to Kropotkin, by a social revolution; that is, by a violent subversion of the old order, which will come to pass of itself, but for which it is the function of those who foresee the course of evolution to prepare menâs minds.</em>
I. We know that we shall not reach the future condition âwithout intense perturbations.â[600] âThat justice may be victorious, and the new thoughts become reality, there is need of a frightful storm to sweep away all this rottenness, to vivify torpid souls with its breath, and to restore self-sacrifice, self-denial, and heroism to our senile, decrepit, crumbling society.â[601] There is need of âsocial revolution: that is, the peopleâs taking possession of societyâs total stock of goods, and the abolition of all authorities.â[602] âThe social revolution is at the door,â[603] âit stands before us at the end of this century,â[604] âit will be here in a few years.â[605] It is âthe task which history sets for us,â[606] but âwhether we will or not, it will be accomplished independently of our will.â[607]
1. âThe social revolution will be no uprising of a few days: we shall have to go through a period of three, four, or five years of revolution, till the transformation of the social and economic situation is completed.â[608] âDuring this time what we have sown to-day will be coming up and bearing fruit; and he who now is yet indifferent will become a convinced adherent of the new doctrine.â[609] Nor will the social revolution be limited to a narrow area. âWe must not assume, to be sure, that it will break out in all Europe at once.â[610] âGermany is nearer the revolution than people thinkâ;[611] âbut whether it start from France, Germany, Spain, or Russia, it will anyhow be a European revolution in the end. It will spread as rapidly as that of our predecessors the heroes of 1848, and set Europe afire.â[612]
2. The first act of the social revolution will be a work of destruction.[613] âThe impulse to destruction, which is so natural and justifiable because it is at the same time an impulse to renovation, will find its full satisfaction. How much old trash there is to clear away! Does not everything have to be transformed, the houses, the cities, the businesses of manufacturing and farming,âin short, all the arrangements of society?â[614] âEverything that it is necessary to abolish should be destroyed without delay: the penitentiaries and prisons, the forts that threaten cities, the slums whose disease-laden air people have breathed so long.â[615]
Yet the social revolution will not be a reign of terror. âNaturally the fight will demand victims. One can understand how it was that the people of Paris, before they hurried to the frontiers, killed the aristocrats in the prisons, who had planned with the enemy for the annihilation of the revolution. He who would blame the people for this should be asked, âHave you suffered with them and like them? if not, blush and be still.ââ[616] But yet the people will never, like the kings and czars, exalt terror into a system. âThey have sympathy for the victims; they are too good-hearted not to feel a speedy repugnance at cruelty. The public prosecutor, the corpse-cart, the guillotine, speedily become repulsive. After a little while it is recognized that such a reign of terror is merely preparing the way for a dictatorship, and the guillotine is abolished.â[617]
The government will be overthrown first. âThere is no need of fearing its strength. Governments only seem terrible; the first collision with the insurgent people lays them prostrate; many have collapsed in a few hours before now.â[618] âThe people rise, and the State machine is already at a standstill; the officials are in confusion and know not what to do; the army has lost confidence in its leaders.â[619]
But it cannot stop with this. âOn the day when the people has swept away the governments, it will also, without waiting for any directions from above, abolish private property by forcible expropriation.â[620] âThe peasants will drive out the great landlords and declare their estates common property; they will annul the mortgages and proclaim general release from debtâ;[621] and in the cities âthe people will seize on the entire wealth accumulated there, turn out the factory-owners, and undertake the management themselves.â[622] âThe expropriation will be general; nothing but an expropriation of the broadest kind can initiate the re-shaping of societyâexpropriation on a small scale would appear like ordinary plunder.â[623] It will extend not only to the materials of production, but also to those of consumption: âthe first thing that the people do after the overthrow of the governments will be to provide itself with sanitary dwellings and with sufficient food and clothing.â[624]âYet expropriation will âhave its limits.â[625] âSuppose by pinching, a poor devil has got himself a house that will hold him and his family. Will he be thrown on the street? Certainly not! If the house is just big enough for him and his family, he shall keep it, and he shall also continue to work the garden under his window. Our young men will even lend him a hand in case of need. But, if he has rented a room to somebody else, the people will say to this one, âYou know, friend, donât you, that you no longer owe the old fellow anything? Keep your room gratis; you need no longer fear the officer of the court, we have the new society!â[626] âExpropriation will extend just to that which makes it possible for any one to exploit anotherâs labor.â[627]
3. âThe work of destruction will be followed by a work of re-shaping.â[628]
Most people conceive of revolution as with âa ârevolutionary governmentââ[629]âthis in two ways. Some understand by this an elective government. âIt is proposed to summon the people to elections, to elect a government as quickly as possible, and entrust to it the work which each of us ought to be doing of his own accord.â[630] âBut any government which an insurgent people attains by elections must necessarily be a leaden weight on its feet, especially in so immense an economic, political, and moral reorganization as the social revolution.â[631] This is perceived by others; âtherefore they give up the thought of a âlegalâ government, at least for the time of insurrection against all laws, and preach the ârevolutionary dictatorship.â âThe party which has overthrown the government,â say they, âwill forcibly put itself in the governmentâs place. It will seize the authority and adopt a revolutionary procedure. For every one who does not recognize itâthe guillotine; for every one who refuses obedience to itâthe guillotine likewise.â So talk the little Robespierres. But we Anarchists know that this thought is nothing but an unwholesome fruit of government fetishism, and that any dictatorship, even the best disposed, is the death of the revolution.â[632]
âWe will do what is needful ourselves, without waiting for the orders of a government.â[633] âIf the dissolution of the State is once started, if once the oppression-machine begins to give out, free associations will be formed quite automatically. Just remember the voluntary combinations of the armed **bourgeoisie** during the great Revolution. Remember the societies which were voluntarily formed in Spain, and which defended the independence of the country, when the State was shaken to its foundations by Napoleonâs armies. As soon as the State no longer compels any co-operation, natural wants bring about a voluntary co-operation quite automatically. If the State be but overthrown, free society will rise up at once on its ruins.â[634]
âThe reorganization of production will not be possible in a few days,â[635] especially as the revolution will presumably not break out in all Europe at a time.[636] The people will consequently have to take temporary measures to assure themselves, first of all, of food, clothing, and shelter. First the populace of the insurgent cities will take possession of the dealersâ stocks of food, and of the grain warehouses and the slaughter-houses. Volunteers make an inventory of the provisions found, and distribute printed tabular statements by the million. Henceforth free taking of all that is present in abundance; rations of what has to be measured out, with preference to the sick and the weak; a supply for deficiencies by importation from the country (which will come in plenty if we produce things that the farmer needs and put them at his disposal) and also by the inhabitants of the city entering upon the cultivation of the royal parks and meadows in the vicinity.[637] The people will take possession of the dwelling-houses in like manner. Again volunteers make lists of the available dwellings and distribute them. People come together by streets, quarters, districts, and agree about the allotment of the dwellings. But the evils that will at first still have to be borne are soon to be done away: the artisans of the building trades need only work a few hours a day, and soon the over-spacious dwellings that were on hand will be sensibly altered, and model houses, entirely new, will be built.[638] The same procedure will be followed with regard to clothing. The people take possession of the great clothiersâ establishments, and volunteers list the stocks. People take freely what is on hand in abundance, in rations what is limited in quantity. What is lacking is supplied in the shortest of time by the factories with their perfected machines.[639]
II. âTo prepare menâs mindsâ[640] for the approaching revolution is the task of those who foresee the course of evolution. This is especially âthe task of the secret societies and revolutionary organizations.â[641] It is the task of âthe Anarchist party.â[642] The Anarchists âare to-day as yet a minority, but their number is daily growing, will grow more and more, and will on the eve of the revolution become a majority.â[643] âWhat a dismal sight France presented a few years before the great Revolution, and how weak was the minority of those who thought of the abolition of royalty and feudalism; but what a change three or four years later! the minority had begun the revolution and had carried the masses with it.â[644]âBut how are menâs minds to be prepared for the revolution?
1. First and foremost, the aim of the revolution is to be made generally known. âIt is to be proclaimed by word and deed till it is thoroughly popularized, so that on the day of the rising it is in everybodyâs mouth. This task is greater and more serious than is generally assumed; for, if some few do have the aim clearly before their eyes, it is quite otherwise with the masses, constantly worked upon as they are by the **bourgeois** press.â[645]
But this does not suffice. âThe spirit of insurrection must be aroused; the sense of independence and the wild boldness without which no revolution comes about must awake.â[646] âBetween the peaceable discussion of evils and tumult, insurrection, lies a chasmâthe same chasm that in the greater part of mankind separates reflection from act, thought from will.â[647]
2. The way to obtain these two results is âactionâconstant, incessant action by minorities. Courage, devotion, self-sacrifice are as contagious as cowardice, servility, and apprehension.â[648]
âWhat forms is the propaganda to take? Every form that is prescribed by the situation, by opportunity, and propensity. It may be now serious, now jocular; but it must always be bold. It must never leave a means unused, never leave a fact of public life unobserved, to keep minds alert, to give aliment and expression to discontent, to stir hate against exploiters, to make the government ridiculous, and to demonstrate its impotence. But above all, to arouse boldness and the spirit of insurrection, it must continually preach by example.â[649]
âMen of courage, willing not only to speak but to act; pure characters who prefer prison, exile, and death to a life that contradicts their principles; bold natures who know that in order to win one must dare,âthese are the advance-guard who open the fight long before the masses are ripe to lift the banner of insurrection openly and to seek their rights arms in hand. In the midst of the complaining, talking, discussing, comes a mutinous deed by one or more persons, which incarnates the longings of all.â[650]
âPerhaps at first the masses remain indifferent and believe the wise ones who regard the act as âcrazyâ, but soon they are privately applauding the crazy and imitating them. While the first of them are filling the penitentiaries, others are already continuing their work. The declarations of war against present-day society, the mutinous deeds, the acts of revenge, multiply. General attention is aroused; the new thought makes its way into menâs heads and wins their hearts. A single deed makes more propaganda in a few days than a thousand pamphlets. The government defends itself, it rages pitilessly; but by this it only causes further deeds to be committed by one or more persons, and drives the insurgents to heroism. One deed brings forth another; opponents join the mutiny; the government splits into factions; harshness intensifies the conflict; concessions come too late; the revolution breaks out.â[651]
3. To make still clearer the means by which the aim of the revolution is to be made generally known and the spirit of insurrection is to be aroused, Kropotkin tells some of the history of what preceded the Revolution of 1789.
He tells how at that time thousands of lampoons acquainted the people with the vices of the court, and how a multitude of satirical songs flagellated crowned heads and stirred hatred against the nobility and clergy. He sets before us how in placards the king, the queen, the farmers-general, were threatened, reviled, and jeered at; how enemies of the people were hanged or burned or quartered in effigy. He describes to us the way in which the insurrectionists got the people used to the streets and taught them to defy the police, the military, the cavalry. We learn how in the villages secret organizations, the jacques, set fire to the barns of the lord of the manor, destroyed his crops or his game, murdered him himself, threatened the collection or payment of rent with death. He sets forth to us how then, one day, the storehouses were broken into, the trains of wagons were stopped on the highway, the toll-gates were burned and the officials killed, the tax-lists and the account-books and the city archives went up in flames, and the revolution broke out on all sides.[652]
âWhat conclusions are to be drawn from thisâ[653] Kropotkin does not think it necessary to explain. He contents himself with characterizing as âa precious instruction for usâ[654] the facts which he reports.
[431] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 99.
[432] **Ib.** p. 104.
[433] Kr. â**Temps nouveaux**â p. 39.
[434] **Ib.** p. 39.
[435] **Ib.** pp. 8, 39.
[436] **Ib.** p. 5.
[437] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[438] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 9.
[439] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ pp. 8â9.
[440] **Ib.** p. 9.
[441] Kr. â**Temps nouveaux**â p. 13.
[442] **Ib.** p. 12.
[443] **Ib.** p. 7.
[444] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[445] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 24.
[446] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 7.
[447] **Ib.** p. 4.
[448] **Ib.** p. 7.
[449] **Ib.** p. 4.
[450] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 28.
[451] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 17.
[452] Kr. â**Temps nouveaux**â p. 59.
[453] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[454] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 275â6.
[455] **Ib.** pp. 277â8.
[456] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 17.
[457] **Ib.** p. 275.
[458] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 9.
[459] **Ib.** p. 10.
[460] Kr. â**Morale**â p. 74.
[461] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[462] Kr. â**Morale**â pp. 24, 31.
[463] **Ib.** p. 30.
[464] Kr. â**Morale**â pp. 30â31.
[465] **Ib.** p. 41.
[466] **Ib.** p. 42.
[467] **Ib.** p. 38; Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 296.
[468] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 342, 129.
[469] Kr. â**Morale**â p. 57.
[470] **Ib.** pp. 61â2.
[471] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 215. [In Eltzbacherâs general discussions, and his summaries of the different writersâ views on law, the word translated âlawâ is everywhere **Recht**, French **droit**, Latin **jus**, law as a body of rights and duties. But in the quotations from Kropotkin under the heading âLawâ the word is everywhere (with the single exception of the phrase âcustomary lawâ) **Gesetz**, French **loi**, Latin **lex**, a law as an enacted formula to describe menâs actions; and the same is the word translated âlawâ in Eltzbacherâs summaries under the heading âBasisâ in the different chapters.]
[472] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 214.
[473] **Ib.** p. 227.
[474] **Ib.** p. 227.
[475] **Ib.** p. 235.
[476] **Ib.** p. 219.
[477] **Ib.** p. 226.
[478] **Ib.** p. 236.
[479] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 239.
[480] **Ib.** pp. 240â42.
[481] **Ib.** p. 221.
[482] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 226.
[483] **Ib.** pp. 218â19.
[484] Kr. â**Morale**â p. 74.
[485] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 264â5.
[486] **Ib.** p. 235; Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â pp. 28â9.
[487] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 227, 235.
[488] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 29.
[489] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 221.
[490] **Ib.** p. 221.
[491] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 229, 109.
[492] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 24.
[493] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 202.
[494] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 30.
[495] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 110, 134â5, â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 109.
[496] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 169, 128â9, 203â5.
[497] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 136â7.
[498] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 229.
[499] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 14.
[500] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 11â14.
[501] **Ib.** p. 172.
[502] **Ib.** p. 173.
[503] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 175.
[504] **Ib.** pp. 181â2.
[505] **Ib.** pp. 183â4.
[506] **Ib.** p. 190.
[507] **Ib.** p. 19.
[508] **Ib.** p. 33.
[509] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 35â9.
[510] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 30.
[511] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 7.
[512] Kr. â**Temps nouveaux**â pp. 49â50.
[513] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 10.
[514] **Ib.** pp 9â10.
[515] **Ib.** pp. 264â5.
[516] **Ib.** p. 139.
[517] **Ib.** p. 235; Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â pp. 28â9.
[518] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 30.
[519] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[520] **Ib.** p. 7.
[521] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 26.
[522] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 23.
[523] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 117â18.
[524] [**Sic**, edition of 1891].
[525] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ pp. 25â7.
[526] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 118.
[527] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 174.
[528] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 25.
[529] **Ib.** p. 26.
[530] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 117.
[531] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 169, 203.
[532] **Ib.** pp. 145, 136, 128â9.
[533] **Ib.** pp. 203â5.
[534] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ pp. 29â30, â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 188.
[535] Kr. â**Prisons**â p. 49.
[536] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 24. [Kropotkin prefixes âhis own social habits and.â]
[537] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 202.
[538] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 139.
[539] **Ib.** p. 111.
[540] **Ib.** p. 175.
[541] Kr. â**Prisons**â p. 49.
[542] **Ib.** pp. 58â9.
[543] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 44â5.
[544] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 108.
[545] **Ib.** pp. 115â16.
[546] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 166.
[547] Kr. â**Studies**â p. 30.
[548] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 5â6.
[549] **Ib.** pp. 322â3.
[550] **Ib.** p. 326.
[551] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 24.
[552] Kr. â**Prisons**â p. 47.
[553] **Ib.** p. 49.
[554] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 10.
[555] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 8â9.
[556] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 9â10.
[557] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 30.
[558] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 11.
[559] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 169.
[560] Kr. â**Temps nouveaux**â p. 45.
[561] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 17.
[562] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 7â8.
[563] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[564] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 139, â**LâAnarchieâsa philosophie son idĂ©al**â p. 25.
[565] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 235, â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â pp. 28â9.
[566] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 264â5.
[567] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 4.
[568] **Ib.** p. 7.
[569] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 30.
[570] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 88, â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 30.
[571] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 8.
[572] **Ib.** p. 8.
[573] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 21.
[574] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 110.
[575] **Ib.** p. 137.
[576] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 136.
[577] **Ib.** p. 114.
[578] **Ib.** pp. 113â14.
[579] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 12.
[580] Kr. âStudiesâ p. 25.
[581] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 239.
[582] **Ib.** pp. 128â9.
[583] **Ib.** pp. 203â4.
[584] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 136.
[585] **Ib.** pp. 150â51.
[586] **Ib.** p. 96.
[587] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 330â1.
[588] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 195â6.
[589] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 137.
[590] **Ib.** p. 153.
[591] Kr. âAnarchist Communismâ p. 31.
[592] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 156.
[593] **Ib.** p. 193.
[594] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 12.
[595] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 229.
[596] **Ib.** p. 26.
[597] **Ib.** p. 28.
[598] **Ib.** p. 20.
[599] Kr. âLâ**Anarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 13.
[600] **Ib.** p. 28.
[601] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 280.
[602] **Ib.** p. 261.
[603] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 22.
[604] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 28. [The nineteenth century, of course, is meant.]
[605] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 139.
[606] Kr. â**SiĂšcle**â p. 32.
[607] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â p. 29.
[608] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 90, âStudiesâ p. 23.
[609] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 90â91.
[610] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 85.
[611] Kr. â**LâAnarchie. Sa philosophieâson idĂ©al**â p. 26.
[612] Kr. â**LâAnarchie dans lâĂ©volution socialiste**â pp. 28â9.
[613] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 263.
[614] **Ib.** p. 342.
[615] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 342.
[616] Kr. â**Prisons**â p. 57.
[617] Kr. â**Studies**â p. 16.
[618] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 166.
[619] **Ib.** p. 246.
[620] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 134â5.
[621] **Ib.** p. 167.
[622] **Ib.** p. 135.
[623] **Ib.** p. 337.
[624] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 63.
[625] **Ib.** p. 56.
[626] **Ib.** p. 109.
[627] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 56.
[628] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 263.
[629] **Ib.** p. 246.
[630] **Ib.** pp. 248â9.
[631] **Ib.** p. 253.
[632] **Ib.** pp. 253â5.
[633] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 139.
[634] **Ib.** pp. 116â17.
[635] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â p. 75.
[636] **Ib.** p. 85.
[637] Kr. â**ConquĂȘte**â pp. 76â96.
[638] **Ib.** pp. 104â7.
[639] **Ib.** pp. 114â16.
[640] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 260.
[641] **Ib.** p. 260.
[642] **Ib.** pp. 99, 254; Kr. â**Temps nouveaux**â p. 54.
[643] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 90.
[644] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 92â5.
[645] **Ib.** p. 312.
[646] **Ib.** p. 285.
[647] **Ib.** p. 283.
[648] **Ib.** p. 284.
[649] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 284.
[650] **Ib.** p. 285.
[651] Kr. â**Paroles**â pp. 285â8.
[652] **Ib.** pp. 293â304.
[653] **Ib.** p. 292.
[654] Kr. â**Paroles**â p. 304.
Benjamin R. Tucker was born in 1854 at South Dartmouth, near New Bedford, Massachusetts. From 1870 to 1872 he studied technology in Boston; there he made the acquaintance of Josiah Warren[655] in 1872. In 1874 he traveled in England, France, and Italy.
In 1877 Tucker took the temporary editorship of the âWord,â published at Princeton, Massachusetts. In 1878 he published the quarterly âThe Radical Reviewâ in New Bedford; but only four numbers appeared. In 1881, in Boston, he founded the semi-monthly paper âLiberty,â of which there also appeared for a short time a German edition under the title âLibertasâ; in Boston, also, he was for ten years one of the editorial staff of the âGlobe.â Since 1892 he has lived in New York, and âLibertyâ has appeared there as a weekly.[656]
2. Tuckerâs teaching about law, the State, and property is contained mainly in his articles in âLiberty.â He has published a collection[657] of these articles under the title âInstead of a Book. By a Man Too Busy to Write One. A fragmentary exposition of philosophical Anarchismâ (1893).
3. Tucker calls his teaching âAnarchism.â âCircumstances have combined to make me somewhat conspicuous as an exponent of the theory of Modern Anarchism.â[658] âAnarchy does not mean simply opposed to the **archos**, or political leader. It means opposed to **arch[=e]**. Now, **arch[=e]**, in the first instance, means **beginning**, **origin**. From this it comes to mean **a first principle**, **an element**; then **first place**, **supreme power**, **sovereignty**, **dominion**, **command**, **authority**; and finally **a sovereignty**, **an empire**, **a realm**, **a magistracy**, **a governmental office**. Etymologically, then, the word anarchy may have several meanings. But the word Anarchy as a philosophical term and the word Anarchist as the name of a philosophical sect were first appropriated in the sense of opposition to dominion, to authority, and are so held by right of occupancy, which fact makes any other philosophical use of them improper and confusing.â[659]
<em>Tucker considers that the law which has supreme validity for every one of us is self-interest; and from this he derives the law of equal liberty.</em>
1. For every man self-interest is the supreme law. âThe Anarchists are not only utilitarians, but egoists in the farthest and fullest sense.â[660]
What does self-interest mean? My interest is everything that serves my purposes.[661] It takes in not only the lowest but also âthe higher forms of selfishness.â[662] Thus, in particular, the interest of society is at the same time that of every individual: âits life is inseparable from the lives of individuals; it is impossible to destroy one without destroying the other.â[663]
Self-interest is the supreme law for man. âThe Anarchists totally discard the idea of moral obligation, of inherent rights and duties.â[664] âSo far as inherent right is concerned, might is its only measure. Any man, be his name Bill Sykes or Alexander Romanoff, and any set of men, whether the Chinese highbinders or the Congress of the United States, have the right, if they have the power, to kill or coerce other men and to make the entire world subservient to their ends.â[665] âThe Anarchism of to-day affirms the right of society to coerce the individual and of the individual to coerce society so far as either has the requisite power.â[666]
2. From this supreme law Tucker derives âthe law of equal liberty.â[667] The law of equal liberty is based on every individualâs self-interest. For âliberty is the chief essential to manâs happiness, and therefore the most important thing in the world, and I want as much of it as I can get.â[668] On the other hand, âhuman equality is a necessity of stable society,â[669] and the life of society âis inseparable from the lives of individuals.â[670] Consequently every individualâs self-interest demands the equal liberty of all.
âEqual liberty means the largest amount of liberty compatible with equality and mutuality of respect, on the part of individuals living in society, for their respective spheres of action.â[671] ââMind your own businessâ is the only moral law of the Anarchistic scheme.â[672] âIt is our duty to respect othersâ rights, assuming the word ârightâ to be used in the sense of the limit which the principle of equal liberty logically places upon might.â[673]âOn the law of equal liberty is founded âthe distinction between invasion and resistance, between government and defence. This distinction is vital: without it there can be no valid philosophy of politics.â[674]
âBy âinvasionâ I mean the invasion of the individual sphere, which is bounded by the line inside of which liberty of action does not conflict with othersâ liberty of action.â[675] This boundary-line is in part unmistakable; for instance, a threat is not an invasion if the threatened act is not an invasion, âa man has a right to threaten what he has a right to execute.â[676] But the boundary-line may also be dubious; for instance, âwe cannot clearly identify the maltreatment of child by parent as either invasive or non-invasive of the liberty of third parties.â[677] âAdditional experience is continually sharpening our sense of what constitutes invasion. Though we still draw the line by rule of thumb, we are drawing it more clearly every day.â[678] âThe nature of such invasion is not changed, whether it is made by one man upon another man, after the manner of the ordinary criminal, or by one man upon all other men, after the manner of an absolute monarch, or by all other men upon one man, after the manner of a modern democracy.â[679]
âOn the other hand, he who resists anotherâs attempt to control is not an aggressor, an invader, a governor, but simply a defender, a protector.â[680] âThe individual has the right to repel invasion of his sphere of action.â[681] âAnarchism justifies the application of force to invasive men,â[682] âviolence is advisable when it will accomplish the desired end and inadvisable when it will not.â[683] And âdefensive associations acting on the Anarchistic principle would not only demand redress for, but would prohibit, all clearly invasive acts. They would not, however, prohibit non-invasive acts, even though these acts create additional opportunity for invasive persons to act invasively: for instance, the selling of liquor.â[684] âAnd the nature of such resistance is not changed whether it be offered by one man to another man, as when one repels a criminalâs onslaught, or by one man to all other men, as when one declines to obey an oppressive law, or by all other men to one man, as when a subject people rises against a despot, or as when the members of a community voluntarily unite to restrain a criminal.â[685]
<em>According to Tucker, from the standpoint of every oneâs self-interest and the equal liberty of all there is no objection to law.</em> Legal norms are to obtain: that is, norms that are based on a general will[686] and to which obedience is enforced, if necessary, by every means,[687] even by prison, torture, and capital punishment.[688] But the law is to be âso flexible that it will shape itself to every emergency and need no alteration. And it will then be regarded as <em>just</em> in proportion to its flexibility, instead of as now in proportion to its rigidity.â[689] The means to this end is that âjuries will judge not only the facts, but the lawâ;[690] machinery for altering the law is then unnecessary.[691]âIn particular, there are to be recognized the following legal norms, whose correctness Tucker tries to deduce from the law of equal liberty:
First, a legal norm by which the person is secured against hurt. âWe are the sternest enemies of invasion of the person, and, although chiefly busy in destroying the causes thereof, have no scruples against such heroic treatment of its immediate manifestations as circumstances and wisdom may dictate.â[692] Capital punishment is quite compatible with the protection of the person against hurt, for its essence is not that of an act of hurting, but of an act of defence.[693]
Next, there is to be recognized a legal norm by virtue of which âownership on a basis of laborâ[694] exists. âThis form of property secures each in the possession of his own products, or of such products of others as he may have obtained unconditionally without the use of fraud or force.â[695] âIt will be seen from this definition that Anarchistic property concerns only products. But anything is a product upon which human labor has been expended. It should be stated, however, that in the case of land, or of any other material the supply of which is so limited that all cannot hold it in unlimited quantities, Anarchism undertakes to protect no titles except such as are based on actual occupancy and use.â[696] Against injury to property, as well as against injury to the person, Anarchism has no scruples against âsuch heroic treatment as circumstances and wisdom may dictate.â[697]
Furthermore, there is to be recognized the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to. Obligation comes into existence when obligations are âconsciously and voluntarily assumedâ;[698] and the other party thus acquires âa right.â[699] To be sure, the obligatory force of contract is not without bounds. âContract is a very serviceable and most important tool, but its usefulness has its limits; no man can employ it for the abdication of his manhoodâ;[700] therefore âthe constituting of an association in which each member waives the right of secession would be a mere **form**.â[701] Furthermore, no one can employ it for the invasion of third parties; therefore a promise âwhose fulfilment would invade third partiesâ[702] would be invalid.ââI deem the keeping of promises such an important matter that only in the extremest cases would I approve their violation. It is of such vital consequence that associates should be able to rely upon each other that it is better never to do anything to weaken this confidence except when it can be maintained only at the expense of some consideration of even greater importance.â[703] âThe man who has received a promise is defrauded by its non-fulfilment, invaded, deprived of a portion of his liberty against his will.â[704] âI have no doubt of the right of any man to whom, for a consideration, a promise has been made, to insist, even by force, upon the fulfilment of that promise, provided the promise be not one whose fulfilment would invade third parties. And, if the promisee has a right to use force himself for such a purpose, he has a right to secure such co-operative force from others as they are willing to extend. These others, in turn, have a right to decide what sort of promises, if any, they will help him to enforce. When it comes to the determination of this point, the question is one of policy solely; and very likely it will be found that the best way to secure the fulfilment of promises is to have it understood in advance that the fulfilment is not to be enforced.â[705]
I. **With regard to every manâs self-interest, especially on the basis of the law of equal liberty, Tucker rejects the State; and that universally, not merely for special circumstances determined by place and time.** For the State is âthe embodiment of the principle of invasion.â[706]
1. âTwo elements are common to all the institutions to which the name âStateâ has been applied: first, aggression.â[707] âAggression, invasion, government, are interconvertible terms.â[708] âThis is the Anarchistic definition of government: the subjection of the non-invasive individual to an external will.â[709] And âsecond, the assumption of authority over a given area and all within it, exercised generally for the double purpose of more complete oppression of its subjects and extension of its boundaries.â[710] Therefore âthis is the Anarchistic definition of the State: the embodiment of the principle of invasion in an individual, or a band of individuals, assuming to act as representatives or masters of the entire people within a given area.â[711]
âRule is evil, and it is none the better for being majority rule.â[712] âThe theocratic despotism of kings or the democratic despotism of majoritiesâ[713] are alike condemnable. âWhat is the ballot? It is neither more nor less than a paper representative of the bayonet, the billy, and the bullet. It is a labor-saving device for ascertaining on which side force lies and bowing to the inevitable. The voice of the majority saves bloodshed, but it is no less the arbitrament of force than is the decree of the most absolute of despots backed by the most powerful of armies.â[714]
2. âIn the first place, all the acts of governments are indirectly invasive, because dependent upon the primary invasion called taxation.â[715] âThe very first act of the State, the compulsory assessment and collection of taxes, is itself an aggression, a violation of equal liberty, and, as such, vitiates every subsequent act, even those acts which would be purely defensive if paid for out of a treasury filled by voluntary contributions. How is it possible to sanction, under the law of equal liberty, the confiscation of a manâs earnings to pay for protection which he has not sought and does not desire?â[716]
âAnd, if this is an outrage, what name shall we give to such confiscation when the victim is given, instead of bread, a stone, instead of protection, oppression? To force a man to pay for the violation of his own liberty is indeed an addition of insult to injury. But that is exactly what the State is doing.â[717] For âin the second place, by far the greater number of their acts are directly invasive, because directed, not to the restraint of invaders, but to the denial of freedom to the people in their industrial, commercial, social, domestic, and individual lives.â[718]
âHow thoughtless, then, to assert that the existing political order is of a purely defensive character!â[719] âDefence is a service, like any other service. It is labor both useful and desired, and therefore an economic commodity subject to the law of supply and demand. In a free market this commodity would be furnished at the cost of production. The production and sale of this commodity are now monopolized by the State. The State, like almost all monopolists, charges exorbitant prices. Like almost all monopolists, it supplies a worthless, or nearly worthless, article. Just as the monopolist of a food product often furnishes poison instead of nutriment, so the State takes advantage of its monopoly of defence to furnish invasion instead of protection. Just as the patrons of the one pay to be poisoned, so the patrons of the other pay to be enslaved. And the State exceeds all its fellow-monopolists in the extent of its villany because it enjoys the unique privilege of compelling all people to buy its product whether they want it or not.â[720]
3. It cannot be alleged in favor of the State that it is necessary as a means for combating crime.[721] âThe State is itself the most gigantic criminal extant. It manufactures criminals much faster than it punishes them.â[722] âOur prisons are filled with criminals which our virtuous State has made what they are by its iniquitous laws, its grinding monopolies, and the horrible social conditions that result from them. We enact many laws that manufacture criminals, and then a few that punish them.â[723]
No more can the State be defended on the ground that it is wanted for the relief of suffering. âThe State is rendering assistance to the suffering and starving victims of the Mississippi inundation. Well, such work is better than forging new chains to keep the people in subjection, we allow; but is not worth the price that is paid for it. The people cannot afford to be enslaved for the sake of being insured. If there were no other alternative, they would do better, on the whole, to take Natureâs risks and pay her penalties as best they might. But Liberty supplies another alternative, and furnishes better insurance at cheaper rates. Mutual insurance, by the organization of risk, will do the utmost that can be done to mitigate and equalize the suffering arising from the accidental destruction of wealth.â[724]
II. **Every manâs self-interest, and equal liberty particularly, demands, in place of the State, a social human life on the basis of the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to.** The âvoluntary association of contracting individualsâ[725] is to take the place of the State.
1. âThe Anarchists have no intention or desire to abolish society. They know that its life is inseparable from the lives of individuals; that it is impossible to destroy one without destroying the other.â[726] âSociety has come to be manâs dearest possession. Pure air is good, but no one wants to breathe it long alone. Independence is good, but isolation is too heavy a price to pay for it.â[727]
But men are not to be held together in society by a concrete supreme authority, but solely by the legally binding force of contract.[728] The form of society is to be âvoluntary association,â[729] whose âconstitutionâ[730] is nothing but a contract.
2. But what is to be the nature of the voluntary association in detail?
In the first place, it cannot bind its members for life. âThe constituting of an association in which each member waives the right of secession would be a mere **form**, which every decent man who was a party to it would hasten to violate and tread under foot as soon as he appreciated the enormity of his folly. To indefinitely waive oneâs right of secession is to make oneâs self a slave. Now, no man can make himself so much a slave as to forfeit the right to issue his own emancipation proclamation.â[731]
In the next place, the voluntary association, as such, can have no dominion over a territory. âCertainly such voluntary association would be entitled to enforce whatever regulations the contracting parties might agree upon within the limits of whatever territory, or divisions of territory, had been brought into the association by these parties as individual occupiers thereof, and no non-contracting party would have a right to enter or remain in this domain except upon such terms as the association might impose. But if, somewhere between these divisions of territory, had lived, prior to the formation of the association, some individual on his homestead, who for any reason, wise or foolish, had declined to join in forming the association, the contracting parties would have had no right to evict him, compel him to join, make him pay for any incidental benefits that he might derive from proximity to their association, or restrict him in the exercise of any previously-enjoyed right to prevent him from reaping these benefits. Now, voluntary association necessarily involving the right of secession, any seceding member would naturally fall back into the position and upon the rights of the individual above described, who refused to join at all. So much, then, for the attitude of the individual toward any voluntary association surrounding him, his support thereof evidently depending upon his approval or disapproval of its objects, his view of its efficiency in attaining them, and his estimate of the advantages and disadvantages involved in joining, seceding, or abstaining.â[732]
For the members of the voluntary association numerous obligations arise from their membership. The association may require, as a condition of membership, the agreement to perform certain services,âfor instance, âjury service.â[733] And âinasmuch as Anarchistic associations recognize the right of secession, they may utilize the ballot, if they see fit to do so. If the question decided by ballot is so vital that the minority thinks it more important to carry out its own views than to preserve common action, the minority can withdraw. In no case can a minority, however small, be governed without its consent.â[734] The voluntary association is entitled to compel its members to live up to their obligations. âIf a man makes an agreement with men, the latter may combine to hold him to his agreementâ;[735] therefore a voluntary association is âentitled to enforce whatever regulations the contracting parties may agree upon.â[736] To be sure, one must bear in mind that âvery likely the best way to secure the fulfilment of promises is to have it understood in advance that the fulfilment is not to be enforced.â[737]
Of especial importance among the obligations of the members of a voluntary association is the duty of paying taxes; but the tax is voluntary by virtue of the fact that it is based on contract.[738] âVoluntary taxation, far from impairing the associationâs credit, would strengthen itâ;[739] for, in the first place, because of the simplicity of its functions, the association seldom or never has to borrow; in the second place, it cannot, like the present State upon its basis of compulsory taxation, repudiate its debts and still continue business; and, in the third place, it will necessarily be more intent on maintaining its credit by paying its debts than is the State which enforces taxation.[740] And furthermore, the voluntariness of the tax has this advantage, that âthe defensive institution will be steadily deterred from becoming an invasive institution through fear that the voluntary contributions will fall off; it will have this constant motive to keep itself trimmed down to the popular demand.â[741]
âIrelandâs true order: the wonderful Land League, the nearest approach, on a large scale, to perfect Anarchistic organization that the world has yet seen. An immense number of local groups, scattered over large sections of two continents separated by three thousand miles of ocean; each group autonomous, each free; each composed of varying numbers of individuals of all ages, sexes, races, equally autonomous and free; each inspired by a common, central purpose; each supported entirely by voluntary contributions; each obeying its own judgment; each guided in the formation of its judgment and the choice of its conduct by the advice of a central council of picked men, having no power to enforce its orders except that inherent in the convincing logic of the reasons on which the orders are based; all co-ordinated and federated, with a minimum of machinery and without sacrifice of spontaneity, into a vast working unit, whose unparalleled power makes tyrants tremble and armies of no avail.â[742]
3. Among the prominent associations of the new society are mutual insurance societies and mutual banks,[743] and, especially, defensive associations.
âThe abolition of the State will leave in existence a defensive associationâ[744] which will give protection against those âwho violate the social law by invading their neighbors.â[745] To be sure, this need will be only transitory. âWe look forward to the ultimate disappearance of the necessity of force even for the purpose of repressing crime.â[746] âThe necessity for defence against individual invaders is largely and perhaps, in the end, wholly due to the oppressions of the invasive State. When the State falls, criminals will begin to disappear.â[747]
A number of defensive associations may exist side by side. âThere are many more than five or six insurance companies in England, and it is by no means uncommon for members of the same family to insure their lives and goods against accident or fire in different companies. Why should there not be a considerable number of defensive associations in England, in which people, even members of the same family, might insure their lives and goods against murderers or thieves? Defence is a service, like any other service.â[748] âUnder the influence of competition the best and cheapest protector, like the best and cheapest tailor, would doubtless get the greater part of the business. It is conceivable even that he might get the whole of it. But, if he should, it would be by his virtue as a protector, not by his power as a tyrant. He would be kept at his best by the possibility of competition and the fear of it; and the source of power would always remain, not with him, but with his patrons, who would exercise it, not by voting him down or by forcibly putting another in his place, but by withdrawing their patronage.â[749] But, if invader and invaded belong to different defensive associations, will not a conflict of associations result? âAnticipations of such conflicts would probably result in treaties, and even in the establishment of federal tribunals, as courts of last resort, by the co-operation of the various associations, on the same voluntary principle in accordance with which the associations themselves were organized.â[750]
âVoluntary defensive associations acting on the Anarchistic principle would not only demand redress for, but would prohibit, all clearly invasive acts.â[751] To fulfil this function they may choose any appropriate means, without thereby exercising a government. âGovernment is the subjection of the **non-invasive** individual to a will not his own. The subjection of the **invasive** individual is not government, but resistance to and protection from government.â[752]ââAnarchism recognizes the right to arrest, try, convict, and punish for wrong doing.â[753] âAnarchism will take enough of the invaderâs property from him to repair the damage done by his invasion.â[754] âIf it can find no better instrument of resistance to invasion, Anarchism will use prisons.â[755] It admits even capital punishment. âThe society which inflicts capital punishment does not commit murder. Murder is an offensive act. The term cannot be applied legitimately to any defensive act. There is nothing sacred in the life of an invader, and there is no valid principle of human society that forbids the invaded to protect themselves in whatever way they can.â[756] âIt is allowable to punish invaders by torture. But, if the âgoodâ people are not fiends, they are not likely to defend themselves by torture until the penalties of death and tolerable confinement have shown themselves destitute of efficacy.â[757]ââAll disputes will be submitted to juries.â[758] âSpeaking for myself, I think the jury should be selected by drawing twelve names by lot from a wheel containing the names of all the citizens in the community.â[759] âThe juries will judge not only the facts, but the law, the justice of the law, its applicability to the given circumstances, and the penalty or damage to be inflicted because of its infraction.â[760]
I. **According to Tucker, from the standpoint of every oneâs self-interest and the equal liberty of all there is no objection to property.** Tucker rejects only the distribution of property on the basis of monopoly, as it everywhere and always exists in the State. That the State is essentially invasion appears in the laws which ânot only prescribe personal habits, but, worse still, create and sustain monopoliesâ[761] and thereby make usury possible.[762]
1. Usury is the taking of surplus value.[763] âA laborerâs product is such portion of the value of that which he delivers to the consumer as his own labor has contributed.â[764] The laborer does not get this product, âat least not as laborer; he gains a bare subsistence by his work.â[765] But, âsomebody gets the surplus wealth. Who is the somebody?â[766] âThe usurer.â[767]
âThere are three forms of usury: interest on money, rent of land and houses, and profit in exchange. Whoever is in receipt of any of these is a usurer. And who is not? Scarcely any one. The banker is a usurer; the manufacturer is a usurer; the merchant is a usurer; the landlord is a usurer; and the workingman who puts his savings, if he has any, out at interest, or takes rent for his house or lot, if he owns one, or exchanges his labor for more than an equivalent,âhe too is a usurer. The sin of usury is one under which all are concluded, and for which all are responsible. But all do not benefit by it. The vast majority suffer. Only the chief usurers accumulate: in agricultural and thickly settled countries, the landlords; in industrial and commercial countries, the bankers. Those are the Somebodies who swallow up the surplus wealth.â[768]
2. âAnd where do they get their power? From monopoly maintained by the State. Usury rests on this.â[769] And âof the various monopolies that now prevail, four are of principal importance.â[770]
âFirst in the importance of its evil influence they [the founders of Anarchism] considered the money monopoly, which consists of the privilege given by the government to certain individuals, or to individuals holding certain kinds of property, of issuing the circulating medium, a privilege which is now enforced in this country by a national tax of ten per cent. upon all other persons who attempt to furnish a circulating medium, and by State laws making it a criminal offence to issue notes as currency. It is claimed that holders of this privilege control the rate of interest, the rate of rent of houses and buildings, and the prices of goods,âthe first directly, and the second and third indirectly. For, if the business of banking were made free to all, more and more persons would enter into it until the competition should become sharp enough to reduce the price of lending money to the labor cost, which statistics show to be less than three-fourths of one per cent.â[771] âThen down will go house-rent. For no one who can borrow capital at one per cent. with which to build a house of his own will consent to pay rent to a landlord at a higher rate than that.â[772] Finally, âdown will go profits also. For merchants, instead of buying at high prices on credit, will borrow money of the banks at less than one per cent., buy at low prices for cash, and correspondingly reduce the prices of their goods to their customers.â[773]
âSecond in importance comes the land monopoly, the evil effects of which are seen principally in exclusively agricultural countries, like Ireland. This monopoly consists in the enforcement by government of land-titles which do not rest upon personal occupancy and cultivation.â[774] âGround-rent exists only because the State stands by to collect it and to protect land-titles rooted in force or fraud.â[775] âAs soon as individuals should no longer be protected in anything but personal occupancy and cultivation of land, ground-rent would disappear, and so usury have one less leg to stand on.â[776]
The third and fourth places are occupied by the tariff and patent monopolies.[777] âThe tariff monopoly consists in fostering production at high prices and under unfavorable conditions by visiting with the penalty of taxation those who patronize production at low prices and under favorable conditions. The evil to which this monopoly gives rise might more properly be called **mis**usury than usury, because it compels labor to pay, not exactly for the use of capital, but rather for the misuse of capital.â[778] âThe patent monopoly protects inventors and authors against competition for a period long enough to enable them to extort from the people a reward enormously in excess of the labor measure of their services,âin other words, it gives certain people a right of property for a term of years in laws and facts of nature, and the power to exact tribute from others for the use of this natural wealth, which should be open to all.â[779] It is on the tariff and patent monopolies, next to the money monopoly, that profit in exchange is based. If they were done away along with the money monopoly, it would disappear.[780]
II. **Every oneâs self-interest, and particularly the equal liberty of all, demands a distribution of property in which every one is guaranteed the product of his labor.**[781]
1. âEqual liberty, in the property sphere, is such a balance between the liberty to take and the liberty to keep that the two liberties may coexist without conflict or invasion.â[782] âNearly all Anarchists consider labor to be the only basis of the right of ownership in harmony with that lawâ;[783] âthe laborers, instead of having only a small fraction of the wealth in the world, should have all the wealth.â[784] This form of property âsecures each in the possession of his own products, or of such products of others as he may have obtained unconditionally without the use of fraud or force, and in the realization of all titles to such products which he may hold by virtue of free contract with others.â[785]
âIt will be seen from this definition that Anarchistic property concerns only products. But anything is a product upon which human labor has been expended, whether it be a piece of iron or a piece of land. (It should be stated, however, that in the case of land, or of any other material the supply of which is so limited that all cannot hold it in unlimited quantities, Anarchism undertakes to protect no titles except such as are based on actual occupancy and use.)â[786]
2. A distribution of property in which every one is guaranteed the product of his labor presupposes merely that equal liberty be applied in those spheres which are as yet dominated by State monopoly.[787]
âFree money first.â[788] âI mean by free money the utter absence of restriction upon the issue of all money not fraudulentâ;[789] âmaking the issue of money as free as the manufacture of shoes.â[790]
Money is here understood in the broadest sense, it means both âcommodity money and credit money,â[791] by no means coin alone; âif the idea of the royalty of gold and silver could once be knocked out of the peopleâs heads, and they could once understand that no particular kind of merchandise is created by nature for monetary purposes, they would settle this question in a trice.â[792] âIf they only had the liberty to do so, there are enough large and small property-holders willing and anxious to issue money, to provide a far greater amount than is needed.â[793] âDoes the law of England allow citizens to form a bank for the issue of paper money against any property that they may see fit to accept as security; said bank perhaps owning no specie whatever; the paper money not redeemable in specie except at the option of the bank; the customers of the bank mutually pledging themselves to accept the bankâs paper in lieu of gold or silver coin of the same face value; the paper being redeemable only at the maturity of the mortgage notes, and then simply by a return of said notes and a release of the mortgaged property,âis such an institution, I ask, allowed by the law of England? If it is, then I have only to say that the working people of England are very great fools not to take advantage of this inestimable liberty.â[794] Then âcompetition would reduce the rate of interest on capital to the mere cost of banking, which is much less than one per cent.,â[795] for âcapitalists will not be able to lend their capital at interest when people can get money at the bank without interest with which to buy capital outright.â[796] Likewise the charge of rent on buildings âwould be almost entirely and directly abolished,â[797] and âprofits fall to the level of the manufacturerâs or merchantâs proper wage,â[798] âexcept in business protected by tariff or patent laws.â[799] âThis facility of acquiring capital will give an unheard-of impetus to businessâ;[800] âif free banking were only a picayunish attempt to distribute more equitably the small amount of wealth now produced, I would not waste a momentâs energy on it.â[801]
Free land is needed in the second place.[802] ââThe land for the people,â according to âLibertyâ, means the protection of all people who desire to cultivate land in the possession of whatever land they personally cultivate, without distinction between the existing classes of landlords, tenants, and laborers, and the positive refusal of the protecting power to lend its aid to the collection of any rent whatsoever.â[803] This âsystem of occupying ownership, accompanied by no legal power to collect rent, but coupled with the abolition of the State-guaranteed monopoly of money, thus making capital readily available,â[804] would âabolish ground-rentâ[805] and âdistribute the increment naturally and quietly among its rightful owners.â[806]
In the third and fourth place, free trade and freedom of intellectual products are necessary.[807] If they were added to freedom in money, âprofit on merchandise would become merely the wages of mercantile labor.â[808] Free trade âwould result in a great reduction in the prices of all articles taxed.â[809] And âthe abolition of the patent monopoly would fill its beneficiaries with a wholesome fear of competition which would cause them to be satisfied with pay for their services equal to that which other laborers get for theirs.â[810]
If equal liberty is realized in these four spheres, its realization in the sphere of property follows of itself: that is, a distribution of property in which every one is guaranteed the product of his labor.[811] âEconomic privilege must disappear as a result of the abolition of political tyranny.â[812] In a society in which there is no more government of man by man, there can be no such things as interest, rent, and profits;[813] every one is guaranteed the ownership of the product of his labor. âSocialism does not say: âThou shalt not steal!â It says: âWhen all men have Liberty, thou wilt not steal.ââ[814]
3. âLiberty will abolish all means whereby any laborer can be deprived of any of his product; but it will not abolish the limited inequality between one laborerâs product and anotherâs.â[815] âThere will remain the slight disparity of products due to superiority of soil and skill. But even this disparity will soon develop a tendency to decrease. Under the new economic conditions and enlarged opportunities resulting from freedom of credit and land classes will tend to disappear; great capacities will not be developed in a few at the expense of stunting those of the many; freedom of locomotion will be vastly increased; the toilers will no longer be anchored in such large numbers in the present commercial centres, and thus made subservient to the city landlords; territories and resources never before utilized will become easy of access and development; and under all these influences the disparity above mentioned will decrease to a minimum.â[816]
âProbably it will never disappear entirely.â[817] âNow, because liberty has not the power to bring this about, there are people who say: We will have no liberty, for we must have absolute equality. I am not of them. If I can go through life free and rich, I shall not cry because my neighbor, equally free, is richer. Liberty will ultimately make all men rich; it will not make all men equally rich. Authority may (and may not) make all men equally rich in purse; it certainly will make them equally poor in all that makes life best worth living.â[818]
<em>According to Tucker, the manner in which the change called for by every oneâs self-interest takes place is to be that those who have recognized the truth shall first convince a sufficient number of people how necessary the change is to their own interests, and that then they all of them, by refusing obedience, abolish</em> <em>the State, transform law and property, and thus bring about the new condition.</em>
I. First a sufficient number of men are to be convinced that their own interests demand the change.
1. âA system of Anarchy in actual operation implies a previous education of the people in the principles of Anarchy.â[819] âThe individual must be penetrated with the Anarchistic idea and taught to rebel.â[820] âPersistent inculcation of the doctrine of equality of liberty, whereby finally the majority will be made to see in regard to existing forms of invasion what they have already been made to see in regard to its obsolete forms,ânamely, that they are not seeking equality of liberty at all, but simply the subjection of all others to themselves.â[821] âThe Irish Land League failed because the peasants were acting, not intelligently in obedience to their wisdom, but blindly in obedience to leaders who betrayed them at the critical moment. Had the people realized the power they were exercising and understood the economic situation, they would not have resumed the payment of rent at Parnellâs bidding, and to-day they might have been free. The Anarchists do not propose to repeat their mistake. That is why they are devoting themselves entirely to the inculcation of principles, especially of economic principles. In steadfastly pursuing this course regardless of clamor, they alone are laying a sure foundation for the success of the revolution.â[822]
2. In particular, according to Tucker, appropriate means for the inculcation of the Anarchistic idea are âspeech and the press.â[823]âBut what if the freedom of speech and of the press be suppressed? Then force is justifiable.[824]
But force is to be used only as a âlast resort.â[825] âWhen a physician sees that his patientâs strength is being exhausted so rapidly by the intensity of his agony that he will die of exhaustion before the medical processes inaugurated have a chance to do their curative work, he administers an opiate. But a good physician is always loth to do so, knowing that one of the influences of the opiate is to interfere with and defeat the medical processes themselves. It is the same with the use of force, whether of the mob or of the State, upon diseased society; and not only those who prescribe its indiscriminate use as a sovereign remedy and a permanent tonic, but all who ever propose it as a cure, and even all who would lightly and unnecessarily resort to it, not as a cure, but as an expedient, **are social quacks**.â[826]
Therefore violence âshould be used against the oppressors of mankind only when they have succeeded in hopelessly repressing all peaceful methods of agitation.â[827] âBloodshed in itself is pure loss. When we must have freedom of agitation, and when nothing but bloodshed will secure it, then bloodshed is wise.â[828] âAs long as freedom of speech and of the press is not struck down, there should be no resort to physical force in the struggle against oppression. It must not be inferred that, because âLibertasâ thinks it may become advisable to use force to secure free speech, it would therefore sanction a bloody deluge as soon as free speech had been struck down in one, a dozen, or a hundred instances. Not until the gag had become completely efficacious would âLibertasâ advise that last resort, the use of force.â[829] âTerrorism is expedient in Russia and inexpedient in Germany and England.â[830]âIn what form is violence to be used? âThe days of armed revolution have gone by. It is too easily put down.â[831] âTerrorism and assassinationâ[832] are necessary, but they âwill have to consist of a series of acts of individual dynamiters.â[833]
3. But, besides speech and the press, there are yet other methods of âpropagandism.â[834]
Such a method is âisolated individual resistance to taxation.â[835] âSome year, when an Anarchist feels exceptionally strong and independent, when his conduct can impair no serious personal obligations, when on the whole he would a little rather go to jail than not, and when his property is in such shape that he can successfully conceal it, let him declare to the assessor property of a certain value, and then defy the collector to collect. Or, if he have no property, let him decline to pay his poll tax. The State will then be put to its trumps. Of two things one,âeither it will let him alone, and then he will tell his neighbors all about it, resulting the next year in an alarming disposition on their part to keep their own money in their own pockets; or else it will imprison him, and then by the requisite legal processes he will demand and secure all the rights of a civil prisoner and live thus a decently comfortable life until the State shall get tired of supporting him and the increasing number of persons who will follow his example. Unless, indeed, the State, in desperation, shall see fit to make its laws regarding imprisonment for taxes more rigorous, and then, if our Anarchist be a determined man, we shall find out how far a republican government, âderiving its just powers from the consent of the governed,â is ready to go to procure that âconsent,ââwhether it will stop at solitary confinement in a dark cell or join with the czar of Russia in administering torture by electricity. The farther it shall go the better it will be for Anarchy, as every student of the history of reform well knows. Who shall estimate the power for propagandism of a few cases of this kind, backed by a well-organized force of agitators outside the prison walls?â[836]
Another method of propaganda consists in âa practical test of Anarchistic principles.â[837] But this cannot take place in isolated communities, but only âin the very heart of existing industrial and social life.â[838] âIn some large city fairly representative of the varied interests and characteristics of our heterogeneous civilization let a sufficiently large number of earnest and intelligent Anarchists, engaged in nearly all the different trades and professions, combine to carry on their production and distribution on the cost principle, and,â[839] âsetting at defiance the national and State banking prohibitions,â[840] âto start a bank through which they can obtain a non-interest-bearing currency for the conduct of their commerce and dispose their steadily accumulating capital in new enterprises, the advantages of this system of affairs being open to all who should choose to offer their patronage,âwhat would be the result? Why, soon the whole composite population, wise and unwise, good, bad, and indifferent, would become interested in what was going on under their very eyes, more and more of them would actually take part in it, and in a few years, each man reaping the fruit of his labor and no man able to live in idleness on an income from capital, the whole city would become a great hive of Anarchistic workers, prosperous and free individuals.â[841]
II. If a sufficient number of persons are convinced that their self-interest demands the change, then the time is come to abolish the State, transform law and property, and bring about the new condition, by âthe Social Revolution,â[842] **i. e.** by as general a refusal of obedience as possible. The State âis sheer tyranny, and has no rights which any individual is bound to respect; on the contrary, every individual who understands his rights and values his liberties will do his best to overthrow it.â[843]
1. Many believe âthat the State cannot disappear until the individual is perfected.
âIn saying which, Mr. Appleton joins hands with those wise persons who admit that Anarchy will be practicable when the millennium arrives. No doubt it is true that, if the individual could perfect himself while the barriers to his perfection are standing, the State would afterwards disappear. Perhaps, too, he could go to heaven, if he could lift himself by his boot-straps.â[844] ââBullionâ thinks that âcivilization consists in teaching men to govern themselves and then letting them do it.â A very slight change suffices to make this stupid statement an entirely accurate one, after which it would read: âCivilization consists in teaching men to govern themselves by letting them do it.ââ[845] Therefore it is necessary to âabolish the Stateâ[846] by âthe impending social revolution.â[847]
2. Others have the âfallacious idea that Anarchy can be inaugurated by force.â[848]
In what way it is to be inaugurated is solely a question of âexpediency.â[849] âTo brand the policy of terrorism and assassination as immoral is ridiculously weak. âLibertyâ does not assume to set any limit on the right of an invaded individual to choose his own methods of defence. The invader, whether an individual or a government, forfeits all claim to consideration from the invaded. This truth is independent of the character of the invasion. It makes no difference in what direction the individual finds his freedom arbitrarily limited; he has a right to vindicate it in any case, and he will be justified in vindicating it by whatever means are available.â[850]
âThe right to resist oppression by violence is beyond doubt. But its exercise would be unwise unless the suppression of free thought, free speech, and a free press were enforced so stringently that all other means of throwing it off had become hopeless.â[851] âIf government should be abruptly and entirely abolished to-morrow, there would probably ensue a series of physical conflicts about land and many other things, ending in reaction and a revival of the old tyranny. But, if the abolition of government shall take place gradually, it will be accompanied by a constant acquisition and steady spreading of social truth.â[852]
3. The social revolution is to come about by passive resistance; that is, refusal of obedience.[853]
âPassive resistance is the most potent weapon ever wielded by man against oppression.â[854] ââPassive resistance,â said Ferdinand Lassalle, with an obtuseness thoroughly German, âis the resistance which does not resist.â Never was there a greater mistake. It is the only resistance which in these days of military discipline meets with any result. There is not a tyrant in the civilized world to-day who would not do anything in his power to precipitate a bloody revolution rather than see himself confronted by any large fraction of his subjects determined not to obey. An insurrection is easily quelled, but no army is willing or able to train its guns on inoffensive people who do not even gather in the street but stay at home and stand back on their rights.â[855]
âPower feeds on its spoils, and dies when its victims refuse to be despoiled. They canât persuade it to death; they canât vote it to death; they canât shoot it to death; but they can always starve it to death. When a determined body of people, sufficiently strong in numbers and force of character to command respect and make it unsafe to imprison them, shall agree to quietly close their doors in the faces of the tax-collector and the rent-collector, and shall, by issuing their own money in defiance of legal prohibition, at the same time cease paying tribute to the money-lord, government, with all the privileges which it grants and the monopolies which it sustains, will go by the board.â[856]
Consider âthe enormous and utterly irresistible power of a large and intelligent minority, comprising say one-fifth of the population in any given locality,â refusing to pay taxes.[857] âI need do no more than call attention to the wonderfully instructive history of the Land League movement in Ireland, the most potent and instantly effective revolutionary force the world has ever known so long as it stood by its original policy of âPay No Rent,â and which lost nearly all its strength the day it abandoned that policy. But it was pursued far enough to show that the British government was utterly powerless before it; and it is scarcely too much to say, in my opinion, that, had it been persisted in, there would not to-day be a landlord in Ireland. It is easier to resist taxes in this country than it is to resist rent in Ireland; and such a policy would be as much more potent here than there as the intelligence of the people is greater, providing always that you can enlist in it a sufficient number of earnest and determined men and women. If one-fifth of the people were to resist taxation, it would cost more to collect their taxes, or try to collect them, than the other four-fifths would consent to pay into the treasury.â[858]
[655] [Recognized by Tucker as the originator of Anarchism, so far as any man can claim this title. See Bailieâs life of Warren.]
[656] [At present (1908) a bi-monthly magazine.]
[657] [Or rather a selection.]
[658] Tucker p. 21.
[659] **Ib.** p. 112.
[660] **Ib.** p. 24.
[661] **Ib.** pp. 24, 64.
[662] **Ib.** p. 64.
[663] Tucker p. 35. [This passage refers merely to what it mentions, the alleged intent utterly to destroy society. As to identity of interests, I believe Tuckerâs position is that the interest of society is that of **almost** every individual.]
[664] **Ib.** p. 24.
[665] **Ib.** p. 24.
[666] **Ib.** p. 132.
[667] **Ib.** p. 42. [Eltzbacher does not seem to perceive that Tucker uses this as a ready-made phrase, coined by Herbert Spencer and designating Spencerâs well-known formula that in justice âevery man has freedom to do all that he wills, provided he infringes not the equal freedom of any other man.â]
[668] **Ib.** p. 41.
[669] **Ib.** p. 64.
[670] Tucker p. 35. [This citation is again irrelevant, but Eltzbacherâs misapplication of it does not misrepresent Tuckerâs views.]
[671] **Ib.** p. 65.
[672] **Ib.** p. 15.
[673] **Ib.** p. 59. [It should be understood that a great part of âInstead of a Bookâ is made up of the reprints of discussions with various opponents whose language is quoted and alluded to.]
[674] **Ib.** p. 23.
[675] **Ib.** p. 67.
[676] **Ib.** p. 153.
[677] **Ib.** p. 135. [Since the publication of âInstead of a Bookâ Tucker has had a notable discussion of the child question in âLiberty,â which, while developing much disagreement on this point among Tuckerâs friends, has at least brought definiteness into the judgments passed upon it.]
[678] Tucker p. 78.
[679] **Ib.** p. 23.
[680] **Ib.** p. 23.
[681] **Ib.** p. 59. [The wording of this clause is so thoroughly Eltzbacherâs own that his quotation-marks appear unjustifiable; but the doctrine is Tuckerâs.]
[682] **Ib.** p. 81.
[683] **Ib.** p. 80.
[684] **Ib.** p. 167.
[685] Tucker p. 23.
[686] **Ib.** pp. 60, 52, 158, 104, 167.
[687] **Ib.** p. 25.
[688] **Ib.** p. 60. [But see below, page 200, where Tuckerâs page 60 is quoted **verbatim**.]
[689] **Ib.** p. 312.
[690] **Ib.** p. 312. [Tucker is not likely to think that he is fairly represented without a fuller quotation: ânot only the facts, but the law, the justice of the law, its applicability to the given circumstances, and the penalty or damage to be inflicted because of its infraction.â He would emphasize âthe justice of the lawââa juryman will disregard a law that he disapproves. Tucker here prefixes âAll rules and laws will be little more than suggestions for the guidance of juries.â Nevertheless the juryman is to be guided by norm and not by caprice: see âLibertyâ Sept. 7, 1895, where he says: âI am asked by a correspondent if I would âpassively see a woman throw her baby into the fire as a man throws his newspaperâ. It is highly probable that I would interfere in such a case. But it is as probable, and perhaps more so, that I would personally interfere to prevent the owner of a masterpiece by Titian from applying the torch to the canvas. My interference in the former case no more invalidates the motherâs property right in her child than my interference in the latter case would invalidate the property right of the owner of the painting. If I interfere in either case, I am an invader, acting in obedience to my injured feelings. As such I deserve to be punished. I consider that it would be the duty of a policeman in the service of the defence association to arrest me for assault. On my arraignment I should plead guilty, and it would be the duty of the jury to impose a penalty on me. I might ask for a light sentence on the strength of the extenuating circumstances, and I believe that my prayer would be heeded. But, if such invasions as mine were persisted in, it would become the duty of the jury to impose penalties sufficiently severe to put a stop to them.â]
[691] Tucker p. 312.
[692] **Ib.** p. 52.
[693] **Ib.** pp. 156â7. [Compare the exact words of this passage as quoted on page 200 below.]
[694] **Ib.** p. 131. [Not **verbatim**.]
[695] **Ib.** p. 60.
[696] **Ib.** p. 61.
[697] Tucker p. 52.
[698] **Ib.** p. 24.
[699] **Ib.** pp. 146, 350.
[700] **Ib.** p. 48.
[701] **Ib.** p. 48.
[702] **Ib.** p. 158.
[703] **Ib.** p. 51.
[704] **Ib.** p. 158.
[705] Tucker pp. 157â8.
[706] **Ib.** p. 25.
[707] **Ib.** p. 22.
[708] **Ib.** p. 23.
[709] **Ib.** p. 23.
[710] Tucker p. 22.
[711] **Ib.** p. 23.
[712] **Ib.** p. 169.
[713] **Ib.** p. 115. [The words are Lucien V. Pinneyâs, but Tucker quotes them approvingly.]
[714] **Ib.** pp. 426â7.
[715] **Ib.** p. 57.
[716] **Ib.** p. 25.
[717] Tucker pp. 25â6.
[718] **Ib.** p. 57.
[719] **Ib.** p. 26.
[720] **Ib.** p. [32-]33.
[721] Tucker p. 54.
[722] **Ib.** p. 53.
[723] **Ib.** pp. 26â7.
[724] **Ib.** pp. 158â9.
[725] Tucker p. 44. [See my note below, page 195.]
[726] **Ib.** p. 35.
[727] **Ib.** p. 321.
[728] **Ib.** p. 32.
[729] **Ib.** p. 44. [Or rather p. 167, and sundry other passages; on p. 44 see my note below, page 195.]
[730] **Ib.** p. 342.
[731] **Ib.** p. 48.
[732] Tucker pp. 44â5. [All this is a discussion of the characteristics which the State of to-day would have to possess if it were to deserve to be characterized as a voluntary association. The same conditions must of course be fulfilled by any future voluntary association; but it does not follow that all the points mentioned are such as Anarchistic associations would have most occasion to contemplate.]
[733] Tucker p. 56.
[734] **Ib.** pp. 56â7.
[735] **Ib.** p. 24.
[736] **Ib.** p. 44. [For context and limitations see page 195 of the present book.]
[737] **Ib.** p. 158.
[738] **Ib.** p. 32. [It is not necessary that taxation exist, though it may be altogether presumable that it will. Still less is it necessary that the taxation be considerable in amount.]
[739] Tucker pp. 36â7.
[740] **Ib.** p. 37.
[741] **Ib.** p. 43.
[742] Tucker p. 414.
[743] **Ib.** p. 159. [Tucker himself would assuredly have given the emphasis of âespeciallyâ to the mutual banks. The defensive associations receive especially frequent mention because of the need of incessantly answering the objection âIf we lose the State, who will protect us against ruffians?â but Tucker certainly expects that the defensive association will from the start fill a much smaller sphere in every respect than the present police. See **e. g.** âInstead of a Bookâ p. 40.]
[744] **Ib.** p. 25.
[745] **Ib.** p. 25.
[746] **Ib.** p. 52.
[747] **Ib.** p. 40.
[748] Tucker p. 32.
[749] **Ib.** pp. 326â7.
[750] **Ib.** p. 36.
[751] **Ib.** p. 167. [But the restraint of aggressions against those with whom the association has no contract, and also the possible refusal to pay any attention to some particular class of aggressions which it may be thought best to let alone, are optional; in these respects the association will do what seems best to serve the interests (including the pleasure, altruistic or other) of its members; those who do not approve the policy adopted may quit the association if they like.]
[752] Tucker p. 39.
[753] **Ib.** p. 55 [where Tucker explicitly refuses to approve this statement unless he is allowed to add the caveat âif by the words wrong doing is meant invasionâ].
[754] **Ib.** p. 56.
[755] **Ib.** p. 56.
[756] **Ib.** pp. 156â7. [But accompanied by a disapproval of the ordinary practice of capital punishment.]
[757] **Ib.** p. 60 [where the particular torture under discussion is failure to âfeed, clothe, and make comfortableâ the prisoners].
[758] **Ib.** p. 312. [But âAnarchism, as such, neither believes nor disbelieves in jury trial; it is a matter of expediency,â pp. 55â6.]
[759] Tucker p. 56.
[760] **Ib.** p. 312.
[761] **Ib.** p. 26.
[762] **Ib.** p. 178.
[763] **Ib.** pp. 178, 177.
[764] **Ib.** p. 241.
[765] **Ib.** p. 177. [This is given as an answer to the question here quoted next, about âsurplus wealth.â]
[766] **Ib.** p. 177. [Quoted from N. Y. âTruth.â]
[767] **Ib.** p. 178.
[768] Tucker p. 178.
[769] **Ib.** p. 178. [Not **verbatim**.]
[770] **Ib.** p. 11.
[771] Tucker p. 11.
[772] **Ib.** p. 12.
[773] **Ib.** p. 12.
[774] **Ib.** p. 12.
[775] **Ib.** p. 178.
[776] **Ib.** p. 12. [This is given as the view of Proudhon and Warren; the next sentence states Tuckerâs belief that for perfect correctness it should be modified by admitting that a small fraction of ground-rent, tending constantly to a minimum, would persist even then, but would be no cause for âserious alarm.â]
[777] Tucker pp. 12â13.
[778] **Ib.** p. 12.
[779] **Ib.** p. 13.
[780] **Ib.** pp. 12â13, 178.
[781] **Ib.** pp. 59â60.
[782] Tucker p. 67.
[783] **Ib.** p. 131.
[784] **Ib.** p. 185. [Quoted, with express approval, from A. B. Brown.]
[785] **Ib.** p. 60.
[786] **Ib.** p. 61.
[787] **Ib.** p. 178.
[788] **Ib.** p. 273.
[789] **Ib.** p. 274.
[790] **Ib.** p. 374.
[791] Tucker p. 272.
[792] **Ib.** p. 198.
[793] **Ib.** p. 248.
[794] **Ib.** p. 226.
[795] **Ib.** p. 474.
[796] Tucker p. 287.
[797] **Ib.** pp. 274â5.
[798] **Ib.** p. 287.
[799] **Ib.** p. 178.
[800] **Ib.** p. 11.
[801] **Ib.** p. 243.
[802] **Ib.** p. 275.
[803] **Ib.** p. 299.
[804] **Ib.** p. 325.
[805] **Ib.** p. 275.
[806] **Ib.** p. 325. [Meaning, of course, John Stuart Millâs âunearned incrementâ in the value of land.]
[807] **Ib.** pp. 12â13.
[808] Tucker pp. 474, 178.
[809] **Ib.** p. 12.
[810] **Ib.** p. 13.
[811] **Ib.** p. 403.
[812] **Ib.** p. 403.
[813] **Ib.** p. 470.
[814] **Ib.** p. 362. [âSocialismâ is here used as including Anarchism; and Tucker prefers so to use the word.]
[815] **Ib.** p. [347-]348.
[816] Tucker pp. 332â3.
[817] **Ib.** p. 333.
[818] **Ib.** p. 348.
[819] Tucker p. 104.
[820] **Ib.** p. 114.
[821] **Ib.** pp. 77â8.
[822] **Ib.** p. 416.
[823] Tucker pp. 397, 413.
[824] **Ib.** p. 413.
[825] **Ib.** p. 397.
[826] **Ib.** p. 428.
[827] **Ib.** p. 428 [where the subject is not âviolenceâ of all sorts great and small, but âterrorism and assassinationâ].
[828] **Ib.** p. 439.
[829] Tucker p. 397.
[830] **Ib.** p. 428.
[831] **Ib.** p. 440.
[832] **Ib.** p. 428 [with limiting context quoted above, page 211]
[833] **Ib.** p. 440.
[834] **Ib.** p. 45.
[835] **Ib.** p. 45 [where nothing is said as to whether the work is the better or the worse for being âisolatedâ].
[836] Tucker p. 412.
[837] **Ib.** p. 423.
[838] **Ib.** p. 423.
[839] **Ib.** p. 423.
[840] Tucker p. 27.
[841] **Ib.** pp. 423â4.
[842] **Ib.** pp. 416, 439.
[843] **Ib.** p. 45.
[844] Tucker p. 114.
[845] **Ib.** p. 158.
[846] **Ib.** p. 114.
[847] **Ib.** p. 487.
[848] **Ib.** p. 427.
[849] **Ib.** p. 429.
[850] **Ib.** pp. 428â9.
[851] Tucker p. 439.
[852] **Ib.** p. 329 [where the course it must take is somewhat more precisely described].
[853] **Ib.** p. 413.
[854] **Ib.** p. 415.
[855] **Ib.** p. 413.
[856] Tucker pp. 415â16.
[857] **Ib.** p. 412.
[858] Tucker pp. 412â13. [This chapter should be completed by a mention of Tuckerâs doctrine that we must expect Anarchy to be established by gradually getting rid of one oppression after another till at last all the domination of violence shall have disappeared. See, for instance, âLibertyâ for December, 1900: âThe fact is that Anarchist society was started thousands of years ago, when the first glimmer of the idea of liberty dawned upon the human mind, and has been advancing ever since,ânot steadily advancing, to be sure, but fitfully, with an occasional reversal of the current. Mr. Byington looks upon the time when a jury of Anarchists shall sit, as a point not far from the beginning of the history of Anarchyâs growth, whereas I look upon that time as a point very near the end of that history. The introduction of more Anarchy into our economic life will have made marriage a thing of the past long before the first drawing of a jury of Anarchists to pass upon any contract whatever.â Also âInstead of a Bookâ p. 104: âAnarchists work for the abolition of the State, but by this they mean not its overthrow, but, as Proudhon put it, its dissolution in the economic organism. This being the case, the question before us is not, as Mr. Donisthorpe supposes, what measures and means of interference we are justified in instituting, but which ones of those already existing we should first lop off.â Tucker has lately been laying more emphasis on this view than on the more programme-like propositions cited by Eltzbacher, which date from the first six years of the publication of âLiberty.â Indeed, I am sure I remember that somewhere lately, being challenged as to the feasibility of some of the latter, he admitted that those precise forms of action might perhaps not be adequate to bring the State to its end, and added that the end of the State is at present too remote to allow us to specify the processes by which it must ultimately be brought about. All this, however, does not mean that Tuckerâs faith in passive resistance as the most potent instrument discoverable both for propaganda and for the practical winning of liberty has grown weaker; he has no more given up this principle than he has given up the plan of propaganda by discussion.]
I. Lef Nikolayevitch Tolstoi was born in 1828 at Yasnaya Polyana, district of Krapivna, government of Tula. From 1843 to 1846 he studied in Kazan at first oriental languages, then jurisprudence; from 1847 to 1848, in St. Petersburg, jurisprudence. After a lengthy stay at Yasnaya Polyana, he entered an artillery regiment in the Caucasus, in 1851; he became an officer, remained in the Caucasus till 1853, then served in the Crimean war, and left the army in 1855.
Tolstoi now lived at first in St. Petersburg. In 1857 he took a lengthy tour in Germany, France, Italy, and Switzerland. After his return he lived mostly in Moscow till 1860. In 1860â1861 he traveled in Germany, France, Italy, England, and Belgium; in Brussels he made the acquaintance of Proudhon.
Since 1861 Tolstoi has lived almost uninterruptedly at Yasnaya Polyana, as at once agriculturist and author.
Tolstoi has published numerous works; his works up to 1878 are mostly stories, among which the two novels âWar and Peaceâ and âAnna Kareninaâ are notable; his later works are mostly of a philosophical nature.
2. Of special importance for Tolstoiâs teaching about law, the State, and property are his works âMy Confessionâ (1879), âThe Gospel in Briefâ (1880), âWhat I Believeâ (1884) [also known in English as âMy Religionâ], âWhat Shall We Do Then?â (1885), âOn Lifeâ (1887), âThe Kingdom of God is Within You; or, Christianity not a mystical doctrine, but a new life-conceptionâ (1893).
3. Tolstoi does not call his teaching about law, the State, and property âAnarchism.â He designates as âAnarchismâ the teaching which sets up as its goal a life without government and wishes to see this realized by the application of force.[859]
<em>According to Tolstoi our supreme law is love; from this he derives the commandment not to resist evil by force.</em>
1. Tolstoi designates âChristianityâ[860] as his basis; but by Christianity he means not the doctrine of one of the Christian churches, neither the Orthodox nor the Catholic nor that of any of the Protestant bodies,[861] but the pure teaching of Christ.[862]
âStrange as it may sound, the churches have always been not merely alien but downright hostile to the teaching of Christ, and they must needs be so. The churches are not, as many think, institutions that are based on a Christian origin and have only erred a little from the right way; the churches as such, as associations that assert their infallibility, are anti-Christian institutions. The Christian churches and Christianity have no fellowship except in name; nay, the two are utterly opposite and hostile elements. The churches are arrogance, violence, usurpation, rigidity, death; Christianity is humility, penitence, submissiveness, progress, life.â[863] The church has âso transformed Christâs teaching to suit the world that there no longer resulted from it any demands, and that men could go on living as they had hitherto lived. The church yielded to the world, and, having yielded, followed it. The world did everything that it chose, and left the church to hobble after as well as it could with its teachings about the meaning of life. The world led its life, contrary to Christâs teaching in each and every point, and the church contrived subtleties to demonstrate that in living contrary to Christâs law men were living in harmony with it. And it ended in the worldâs beginning to lead a life worse than the life of the heathen, and the churchâs daring not only to justify such a life but even to assert that this was precisely what corresponded to Christâs teaching.â[864]
Particularly different from Christâs teaching is the church âcreed,â[865]âthat is, the totality of the utterly incomprehensible and therefore useless âdogmas.â[866] âOf a God, external creator, origin of all origins, we know nothingâ;[867] âGod is the spirit in man,â[868] âhis conscience,â[869] âthe knowledge of lifeâ;[870] âevery man recognizes in himself a free rational spirit independent of the flesh: this spirit is what we call God.â[871] Christ was a man,[872] âthe son of an unknown father; as he did not know his father, in his childhood he called God his fatherâ;[873] and he was a son of God as to his spirit, as every man is a son of God,[874] he embodied âMan confessing his sonship of God.â[875] Those who âassert that Christ professed to redeem with his blood mankind fallen by Adam, that God is a trinity, that the Holy Spirit descended upon the apostles and that it passes to the priest by the laying on of hands, that seven mysteries are necessary to salvation, and so forth,â[876] âpreach doctrines utterly alien to Christ.â[877] âNever did Christ with a single word attest the personal resurrection and the immortality of man beyond the grave,â[878] which indeed is âa very low and coarse ideaâ;[879] the Ascension and the Resurrection are to be counted among âthe most objectionable miracles.â[880]
Tolstoi accepts Christâs teaching as valid not on the ground of faith in a revelation, but solely for its rationality. Faith in a revelation âwas the main reason why the teaching was at first misunderstood and later mutilated outright.â[881] Faith in Christ is ânot a trusting in something related to Christ, but the knowledge of the truth.â[882]
ââThere is a law of evolution, and therefore one must live only his own personal life and leave the rest to the law of evolution,â is the last word of the refined culture of our day, and, at the same time, of that obscuration of consciousness to which the cultured classes are a prey.â[883] But âhuman life, from getting up in the morning to going to bed at night, is an unbroken series of actions; man must daily choose out from hundreds of actions possible to him those actions which he will perform; therefore, man cannot live without something to guide the choice of his actions.â[884] Now, reason alone can offer him this guide. âReason is that law, recognized by man, according to which his life is to be accomplished.â[885] âIf there is no higher reason,âand such there is not, nor can anything prove its existence,âthen my reason is the supreme judge of my life.â[886] âThe ever-increasing subjugationâ[887] âof the bestial personality to the rational consciousnessâ[888] is âthe true life,â[889] is âlifeâ[890] as opposed to mere âexistence.â[891]
âIt used to be said, âDo not argue, but believe in the duty that we have prescribed to you; reason will deceive you; faith alone will bring you the true happiness of life.â And the man exerted himself to believe, and he believed. But intercourse with other men showed him that in many cases these believed something quite different, and asserted that this other faith bestowed the highest happiness. It has become unavoidable to decide the question which of the many faiths is the right one; and only reason can decide this.â[892] âIf the Buddhist who has learned to know Islam remains a Buddhist, he is no longer a Buddhist in faith but in reason. As soon as another faith comes up before him, and with it the question whether to reject his faith or this other, reason alone can give him an answer. If he has learned to know Islam and has still remained a Buddhist, then rational conviction has taken the place of his former blind faith in Buddha.â[893] âMan recognizes truth only by reason, not by faith.â[894]
âThe law of reason reveals itself to men gradually.â[895] âEighteen hundred years ago there appeared in the midst of the pagan Roman world a remarkable new teaching, which was not comparable to any that had preceded it, and which was ascribed to a man called Christ.â[896] This teaching contains âthe very strictest, purest, and completestâ[897] apprehension of the law of reason to which âthe human mind has hitherto raised itself.â[898] Christâs teaching is âreason itselfâ;[899] it must be accepted by men because it alone gives those rules of life âwithout which no man ever has lived or can live, if he would live as a man,âthat is, with reason.â[900] Man has, âon the basis of reason, no right to refuse allegiance to it.â[901]
2. Christâs teaching sets up love as the supreme law for us.
What is love? âWhat men who do not understand life call âloveâ is only the giving to certain conditions of their personal comfort a preference over any others. When the man who does not understand life says that he loves his wife or child or friend, he means by this only that his wifeâs, childâs, or friendâs presence in his life heightens his personal comfort.â[902]
âTrue love is always renunciation of oneâs personal comfortâ[903] for a neighborâs sake. True love âis a condition of wishing well to all men, such as commonly characterizes children but is produced in grown men only by self-abnegation.â[904] âWhat living man does not know the happy feeling, even if he has felt it only once and in most cases only in earliest childhood, of that emotion in which one wishes to love everybody, neighbors and father and mother and brothers and bad men and enemies and dog and horse and grass; one wishes only one thing, that it were well with all, that all were happy; and still more does one wish that he were himself capable of making all happy, one wishes he might give himself, give his whole life, that all might be well off and enjoy themselves. Just this, this alone, is that love in which manâs life consists.â[905]
True love is âan ideal of full, infinite, divine perfection.â[906] âDivine perfection is the asymptote of human life, toward which it constantly strives, to which it draws nearer and nearer, but which can be attained only at infinity.â[907] âTrue life, according to previous teachings, consists in the fulfilling of commandments, the fulfilling of the law; according to Christâs teaching it consists in the maximum approach to the divine perfection which has been exhibited, and which is felt in himself by every man.â[908]
According to the teaching of Christ, love is our highest law. âThe commandment of love is the expression of the inmost heart of the teaching.â[909] There are âthree conceptions of life, and only three: first the personal or bestial, second the social or heathenish,â[910] âthird the Christian or divine.â[911] The man of the bestial conception of life, âthe savage, acknowledges life only in himself; the mainspring of his life is personal enjoyment. The heathenish, social man recognizes life no longer in himself alone, but in a community of persons, in the tribe, the family, the race, the State; the mainspring of his life is reputation. The man of the divine conception of life acknowledges life no longer in his person, nor yet in a community of persons, but in the prime source of eternal, never-dying lifeâin God; the mainspring of his life is love.â[912]
That love is our supreme law according to Christâs teaching means nothing else than that it is such according to reason. As early as 1852 Tolstoi gives utterance to the thought âThat love and beneficence are truth is the only truth on earth,â[913] and much later, in 1887, he calls love âmanâs only rational activity,â[914] that which âresolves all the contradictions of human life.â[915] Love abolishes the insensate activity directed to the filling of the bottomless tub of our bestial personality,[916] does away with the foolish fight between beings that strive after their own happiness,[917] gives a meaning independent of space and time to life, which without it would flow off without meaning in the face of death.[918]
3. From the law of love Christâs teaching derives the commandment not to resist evil by force. ââResist not evilâ means ânever resist the evil manâ, that is, ânever do violence to anotherâ, that is, ânever commit an act that is contrary to loveâ.â[919]
Christ expressly derived this commandment from the law of love. He gave numerous commandments, among which five in the Sermon on the Mount are notable; âthese commandments do not constitute the teaching, they only form one of the numberless stages of approach to perfectionâ;[920] they âare all negative, and only showâ[921] what âat mankindâs present ageâ[922] we âhave already the full possibility of not doing, along the road by which we are striving to reach perfection.â[923] The first of the five commandments of the Sermon on the Mount reads âKeep the peace with all, and if the peace is broken use every effort to restore itâ;[924] the second says âLet the man take only one woman and the woman only one man, and let neither forsake the other under any pretextâ;[925] the third, âmake no vowsâ;[926] the fourth, âendure injury, return not evil for evilâ;[927] the fifth, âbreak not the peace to benefit thy people.â[928] Among these commandments the fourth is the most important; it is enunciated in the fifth chapter of Matthew, verses 38â9: âYe have heard that it was said, Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth. But I say to you, Resist not evil.â[929] Tolstoi tells how to him this passage âbecame the key of the whole.â[930] âI needed only to take these words simply and downrightly, as they were spoken, and at once everything in Christâs whole teaching that had seemed confused to me, not only in the Sermon on the Mount but in the Gospels altogether, was comprehensible to me, and everything that had been contradictory agreed, and the main gist appeared no longer useless but a necessity; everything formed a whole, and the one confirmed the other past a doubt, like the pieces of a shattered column that one has rightly put together.â[931] The principle of non-resistance binds together âthe entire teaching into a whole; but only when it is no mere dictum but a peremptory rule, a law.â[932] âIt is really the key that opens everything, but only when it goes into the inmost of the lock.â[933]
We must necessarily derive the commandment not to resist evil by force from the law of love. For this demands that either a sure, indisputable criterion of evil be found, or all violent resistance to evil be abandoned.[934] âHitherto it has been the business now of the pope, now of an emperor or king, now of an assembly of elected representatives, now of the whole nation, to decide what was to be rated as an evil and combated by violent resistance. But there have always been men, both without and within the State, who have not acknowledged as binding upon them either the decisions that were given out as divine commandments or the decisions of the men who were clothed with sanctity or the institutions that were supposed to represent the will of the people; men who regarded as good what to the powers that be appeared evil, and who, in opposition to the force of these powers, likewise made use of force. The men who were clothed with sanctity regarded as an evil what appeared good to the men and institutions that were clothed with secular authority, and the combat grew ever sharper and sharper. Thus it came to what it has come to to-day, to the complete obviousness of the fact that there is not and cannot be a generally binding external definition of evil.â[935] But from this follows the necessity of accepting the solution given by Christ.[936]
According to Tolstoi, the precept of non-resistance must not be taken âas if it forbade every combat against evil.â[937] It forbids only the combating of evil by force.[938] But this it forbids in the broadest sense. It refers, therefore, not only to evil practised against ourselves, but also to evil practised against our fellow-men;[939] when Peter cut off the ear of the high priestâs servant, he was defending ânot himself but his beloved divine Teacher, but Christ forbade him outright and said âAll who take the sword will perish by the sword.ââ[940] Nor does the precept say that only a part of men are under obligation âto submit without a contest to what is prescribed to them by certain authorities,â[941] but it forbids âeverybody, therefore even those in whom power is vested, and these especially, to use force in any case against anybody.â[942]
I. **For loveâs sake, particularly on the ground of the commandment not to resist evil by force, Tolstoi rejects law; not unconditionally, indeed, but as an institution for the more highly developed peoples of our time.** To be sure, he speaks only of enacted laws; but he means all law,[943] for he rejects on principle every norm based on the will of men,[944] upheld by human force,[945] especially by courts,[946] capable of deviating from the moral law,[947] of being different in different territories,[948] and of being at any time arbitrarily changed.[949]
Perhaps once upon a time law was better than its non-existence. Law is âupheld by violenceâ;[950] on the other hand, it guards against violence of individuals to each other;[951] perhaps there was once a time when the former violence was less than the latter.[952] Now, at any rate, this time is past for us; manners have grown milder; the men of our time âacknowledge the commandments of philanthropy, of sympathy with oneâs neighbor, and ask only the possibility of quiet, peaceable life.â[953]
Law offends against the commandment not to resist evil by force.[954] Christ declared this. The words âJudge not, that ye be not judgedâ (Matt. 7.1), âCondemn not, and ye shall not be condemnedâ (Luke 6.37), âmean not only âdo not judge your neighbor in words,â but also âdo not condemn him by act; do not judge your neighbor according to your human laws by your courts.ââ[955] Christ here speaks not merely âof every individualâs personal relation to the court,â[956] but rejects âthe administration of law itself.â[957] âHe says, âYou believe that your laws better the evil; they only make it greater; there is only one way to check evil, and this consists in returning good for evil, doing good to all without discrimination.ââ[958] And âmy heart and my reasonâ[959] say to me the same as Christ says.
But this is not the only objection to be made against law. âAuthority condemns in the rigid form of law only what public opinion has in most cases long since disallowed and condemned; withal, public opinion disallows and condemns all actions that are contrary to the moral law, but the law condemns and prosecutes only the actions included within certain quite definite and very narrow limits, and thereby, in a measure, justifies all similar actions that do not come within these limits. Ever since Mosesâs day public opinion has regarded selfishness, sensuality, and cruelty as evils and has condemned it; it has repudiated and condemned every form of selfishness, not only the appropriation of othersâ property by force, fraud, or guile, but exploitation altogether; it has condemned every sort of unchastity, be it with a concubine, a slave, a divorced woman, or even with oneâs own wife; it has condemned all cruelty, as it finds expression in the ill-treating, starving, and killing not only of men but of animals too. But the law prosecutes only particular forms of selfishness, like theft and fraud, and only particular forms of unchastity and cruelty, like marital infidelity, murder, and mayhem; therefore, in a measure, it permits all the forms of selfishness, unchastity, and cruelty that do not come under its narrow definitions inspired by a false conception.â[960]
âThe Jew could easily submit to his laws, for he did not doubt that they were written by Godâs finger; likewise the Roman, as he thought they originated from the nymph Egeria; and man in general so long as he regarded the princes who gave him laws as Godâs anointed, or believed that the legislating assemblies had the wish and the capacity to make the best laws.â[961] But âas early as the time when Christianity made its appearance men were beginning to comprehend that human laws were written by men; that men, whatever outward splendor may enshroud them, cannot be infallible, and that erring men do not become infallible even by getting together and calling themselves âSenateâ or something else.â[962] âWe know how laws are made; we have all been behind the scenes; we all know that the laws are products of selfishness, deception, partisanship, that true justice does not and cannot dwell in them.â[963] Therefore âthe recognition of any special laws is a sign of the crassest ignorance.â[964]
II. **Love requires that in place of law it itself be the law for men.** From this it follows that instead of law Christâs commandments should be our rule of action.[965] But this is âthe Kingdom of God on earth.â[966]
âWhen the day and the hour of the Kingdom of God appear, depends on men themselves alone.â[967] âEach must only begin to do what we must do, and cease to do what we must not do, and the near future will bring the promised Kingdom of God.â[968] âIf only everybody would bear witness, in the measure of his strength, to the truth that he knows, or at least not defend as truth the untruth in which he lives, then in this very year 1893 there would take place such changes toward the setting up of truth on earth as we dare not dream of for centuries to come.â[969] âOnly a little effort more, and the Galilean has won.â[970]
The Kingdom of God is ânot outside in the world, but in manâs soul.â[971] âThe Kingdom of God cometh not with outward show; neither will men say, âLo here!â or, âThere!â for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you (Luke 17.20).â[972] The Kingdom of God is nothing else than the following of Christâs commandments, especially the five commandments of the Sermon on the Mount,[973] which tell us how we must act in our present stage in order to correspond to the ideal of love as much as possible,[974] and which command us to keep the peace and do everything for its restoration when it is broken, to remain true to one another as man and wife, to make no vows, to forgive injury and not return evil for evil, and, finally, not to break the peace with anybody for our peopleâs sake.[975]
But what form will outward life take in the Kingdom of God? âThe disciple of Christ will be poor; that is, he will not live in the city but in the country; he will not sit at home, but work in wood and field, see the sunshine, the earth, the sky, and the beasts; he will not worry over what he is to eat to tempt his appetite, and what he can do to help his digestion, but will be hungry three times a day; he will not roll on soft cushions and think upon deliverance from insomnia, but sleep; he will be sick, suffer, and die like all menâthe poor who are sick and die seem to have an easier time of it than the richââ;[976] he âwill live in free fellowship with all menâ;[977] âthe Kingdom of God on earth is the peace of men with each other; thus it appeared to the prophets, and thus it appears to every human heart.â[978]
II. **Together with law Tolstoi necessarily has to reject also, for the more highly developed nations of our time, the legal institution of the State.**
âPerhaps there was once a time when, in a low state of morality with a general inclination of men to mutual violence, the existence of a power limiting this violence was advantageousâthat is, in which the State violence was less than that of individuals against each other. But such an advantage of State violence over its non-existence could not last; the more the individualsâ inclination to violence decreased and manners grew milder, and the more the governments degenerated by having nothing to check them, the more worthless did State violence grow. In this changeâin the moral evolution of the masses on the one hand and the degeneration of the governments on the otherâlies the whole history of the last two thousand years.â[979] âI cannot prove either the general necessity of the State or its general perniciousness,â[980] âI know only that on the one hand the State is no longer necessary for me, and that on the other hand I can no longer do the things that are necessary for the existence of the State.â[981]
âChristianity in its true significance abolishes the State,â[982] annihilates all government.[983] The State offends against love, particularly against the commandment not to resist evil by force.[984] And not only this; in founding a dominion[985] the State furthermore offends against the principle that for love âall men are Godâs sons and there is equality among them allâ;[986] it is therefore to be rejected even aside from the violence on which it is based as a legal institution. âThat the Christian teaching has an eye only to the redemption of the individual, and does not relate to public questions and State affairs, is a bold and unfounded assertion.â[987] âTo every honest, earnest man in our time it must be clear that true Christianityâthe doctrine of humility, forgiveness, loveâis incompatible with the State and its haughtiness, its deeds of violence, its capital punishments and wars.â[988] âThe State is an idolâ;[989] its objectionableness is independent of its form, be this âabsolute monarchy, the Convention, the Consulate, the empire of a first or third Napoleon or yet of a Boulanger, constitutional monarchy, the Commune, or the republic.â[990]âTolstoi carries this out into detail.
1. The State is the rule of the bad, raised to the highest pitch.
The State is rule. Government in the State is âan association of men who do violence to the rest.â[991]
âAll governments, the despotic and the liberal alike, have in our time become what Herzen has so aptly called a Jenghis Khan with telegraphs.â[992] The men in whom the power is vested âpractise violence not in order to overcome evil, but solely for their advantage or from caprice; and the other men submit to the violence not because they believe that it is practised for their good,âthat is, in order to liberate them from evil,âbut only because they cannot free themselves from it.â[993] âIf Nice is united with France, Lorraine with Germany, Bohemia with Austria, if Poland is divided, if both Ireland and India are subjected to the English dominion, if people fight with China, kill the Africans, expel the Chinese from America, and persecute the Jews in Russia, it is not because this is good or necessary or useful for men and the opposite would be evil, but only because it so pleases those in whom the power is vested.â[994]
The State is the rule of the bad.[995] ââIf the State power were to be annihilated, the wicked would rule over the less wicked,â say the defenders of State rule.â[996] But has the power, when it has passed from some men to some others in the State, really always come to the better men? âWhen Louis the Sixteenth, Robespierre, Napoleon, came to power, who ruled then, the better or the worse? When did the better rule, when the power was vested in the Versaillese or in the Communards, when Charles the First or Cromwell stood at the head of the government? When Peter the Third was czar, and then when after his murder the authority of czar was exercised in one part of Russia by Catharine and in another by Pugatcheff, who was wicked then and who was good? All men who find themselves in power assert that their power is necessary in order that the wicked may not do violence to the good, and regard it as self-evident that they are the good and are giving the rest of the good protection against the bad.â[997] But in reality those who grasp and hold the power cannot possibly be the better.[998] âIn order to obtain and retain power, one must love it. But the effort after power is not apt to be coupled with goodness, but with the opposite qualities, pride, craft, and cruelty. Without exalting self and abasing others, without hypocrisy, lying, prisons, fortresses, penalties, killing, no power can arise or hold its own.â[999] âIt is downright ridiculous to speak of Christians in power.â[1000] To this it is to be added âthat the possession of power depraves men.â[1001] âThe men who have the power cannot but misuse it; they must infallibly be unsettled by such frightful authority.â[1002] âHowever many means men have invented to hinder the possessors of power from subordinating the welfare of the whole to their own advantage, hitherto not one of these means has worked. Everybody knows that those in whose hands is the powerâbe they emperors, ministers, chiefs of police, or common policemenâare, just because the power is in their hands, more inclined to immorality, to the subordinating of the general welfare to their advantage, than those who have no power; nor can it be otherwise.â[1003]
The State is the rule of the bad, raised to the highest pitch. We shall always find âthat the scheming of the possessors of authorityânay, their unconscious effortâis directed toward weakening the victims of their authority as much as possible; for, the weaker the victim is, the more easily can he be held down.â[1004] âTo-day there is only one sphere of human activity left that has not been conquered by the authority of government: the sphere of the family, of housekeeping, private life, labor. And even this sphere, thanks to the fighting of the Communists and Socialists, the governments are already beginning to invade, so that soon, if the reformers have their way, work and rest, housing, clothing, and food, will likewise be fixed and regulated by the governments.â[1005] âThe most fearful band of robbers is not so horrible as a State organization. Every robber chief is at any rate limited by the fact that the men who make up his band retain at least a part of human liberty, and can refuse to commit acts which are repugnant to their consciences.â[1006] But in the State there is no such limit; âno crime is so horrible that it will not be committed by the officials and the army at the will of himâBoulanger, Pugatcheff, Napoleonâwho accidentally stands at the head.â[1007]
2. The rule in the State is based on physical force.
Every government has for its prop the fact that there are in the State armed men who are ready to execute the governmentâs will by physical force, a class âeducated to kill those whose killing the authorities command.â[1008] Such men are the police[1009] and especially the army.[1010] The army is nothing else than a collectivity of âdisciplined murderersâ,[1011] its training is âinstruction in murderingâ,[1012] its victories are âdeeds of murder.â[1013] âThe army has always formed the basis of power, and does to this day. The power is always in the hands of those who command the army, and, from the Roman CĂŠsars to the Russian and German emperors, all possessors of power have always cared first and foremost for their armies.â[1014]
In the first place, the army upholds the governmentâs rule against external assaults. It protects it against having the rule taken from it by another government.[1015] War is nothing but a contest of two or more governments for the rule over their subjects. It is âimpossible to establish international peace in a rational way, by treaty or arbitration, so long as the insensate and pernicious subjection of nations to governments continues to exist.â[1016] In consequence of this importance of armies âevery State is compelled to increase its army to face the others, and this increase has the effect of a contagion, as Montesquieu observed a hundred and fifty years since.â[1017]
But, if one thinks armies are kept by governments only for external defence, he forgets âthat governments need armies particularly to protect them against their oppressed and enslaved subjects.â[1018] âIn the German Reichstag lately, in reply to the question why money was needed in order to increase the pay of the petty officers, the chancellor made the direct statement that reliable petty officers were necessary for the combating of Socialism. Caprivi merely said out loud what everybody knows, carefully as it is concealed from the peoples,âthe reason why the French kings and the popes kept Swiss and Scots, why in Russia the recruits are so introduced that the interior regiments get their contingents from the frontiers and the frontier regiments theirs from the interior. Caprivi told, by accident, what everybody knows or at least feels,âto wit, that the existing order exists not because it must exist or because the people wills its existence, but because the governmentâs force, the army with its bribed petty-officers and officers and generals, keeps it up.â[1019]
3. The rule in the State is based on the physical force of the ruled.
It is peculiar to government that it demands from the citizens the very force on which it is based, and that consequently in the State âall the citizens are their own oppressors.â[1020] The government demands from the citizens both force and the supporting of force. Here belongs the obligation, general in Russia, to take an oath at the czarâs accession to the throne, for by this oath one vows obedience to the authorities,âthat is, to men who are devoted to violence; likewise the obligation to pay taxes, for the taxes are used for works of violence, and the compulsory use of passports, for by taking out a passport one acknowledges his dependence on the Stateâs institution of violence; withal the obligation to testify in court and to take part in the court as juryman, for every court is the fulfilment of the commandment of revenge; furthermore, the obligation to police service which in Russia rests upon all the country people, for this service demands that we do violence to our brother and torment him; and above all the general obligation to military service,âthat is, the obligation to be executioners and to prepare ourselves for service as executioners.[1021] The unchristianness of the State comes to light most plainly in the general obligation to military service: âevery man has to take in hand deadly weapons, a gun, a knife; and, if he does not have to kill, at least he does have to load the gun and sharpen the knife,âthat is, be ready for killing.â[1022]
But how comes it that the citizens fulfil these demands of the government, though the government is based on this very fulfilment, and so mutually oppress each other? This is possible only by âa highly artificial organization, created with the help of scientific progress, in which all men are bewitched into a circle of violence from which they cannot free themselves. At present this circle consists of four means of influence; they are all connected and hold each other, like the links of a chain.â[1023] The first means is âwhat is best described as the hypnotization of the people.â[1024] This hypnotization leads men to âthe erroneous opinion that the existing order is unchangeable and must be upheld, while in reality it is unchangeable only by its being upheld.â[1025] The hypnotization is accomplished âby fomenting the two forms of superstition called religion and patriotismâ;[1026] it âbegins its influence even in childhood, and continues it till death.â[1027] With reference to this hypnotization one may say that State authority is based on the fraudulent misleading of public opinion.[1028] The second means consists in âbribery; that is, in taking from the laboring populace its wealth, by money taxes, and dividing this among the officials, who, for this pay, must maintain and strengthen the enslavement of the people.â[1029] The officials âmore or less believe in the unchangeability of the existing order, mainly because it benefits them.â[1030] With reference to this bribery one may say that State authority is based on the selfishness of those to whom it guarantees profitable positions.[1031] The third means is âintimidation. It consists in setting down the present State orderâof whatever sort, be it a free republican order or be it the most grossly despoticâas something sacred and unchangeable, and imposing the most frightful penalties upon every attempt to change it.â[1032] Finally, the fourth means is to âseparate a certain part of all the men whom they have stupefied and bewitched by the three first means, and subject these men to special stronger forms of stupefaction and bestialization, so that they become will-less tools of every brutality and cruelty that the government sees fit to resolve upon.â[1033] This is done in the army, to which, at present, all young men belong by virtue of the general obligation to military service.[1034] âWith this the circle of violence is made complete. Intimidation, bribery, hypnosis, bring men to enlist as soldiers. The soldiers, in turn, afford the possibility of punishing men, plundering them in order to bribe officials with the money, hypnotizing them, and thus bringing them into the ranks of the very soldiers on whom the power for all this is based.â[1035]
II. **Love requires that a social life based solely on its commandments take the place of the State.** âTo-day every man who thinks, however little, sees the impossibility of keeping on with the life hitherto lived, and the necessity of determining new forms of life.â[1036] âThe Christian humanity of our time must unconditionally renounce the heathen forms of life that it condemns, and set up a new life on the Christian bases that it recognizes.â[1037]
1. Even after the State is done away, men are to live in societies. But what is to hold them together in these societies?
Not a promise, at any rate. Christ commands us to make âno vows,â[1038] to âpromise men nothing.â[1039] âThe Christian cannot promise that he will do or not do a particular thing at a particular hour, because he cannot know what the law of love, which it is the meaning of his life to obey, will demand of him at that hour.â[1040] And still less can he âgive his word to fulfil somebodyâs will, without knowing what the substance of this will is to beâ;[1041] by the mere fact of such a promise he would âmake it manifest that the inward divine law is no longer the sole law of his lifeâ;[1042] âone cannot serve two masters.â[1043]
Men are to be held together in societies in future by the mental influence which the men who have made progress in knowledge exert upon the less advanced. âMental influence is such a way of working upon a man that by it his wishes change and coincide with what is wanted of him; the man who yields to a mental influence acts according to his own wishes.â[1044] Now, the force âby which men can live in societiesâ[1045] is found in the mental influence which the men who have made progress in knowledge exert upon the less advanced, in the âcharacteristic of little-thinking men, that they subordinate themselves to the directions of those who stand on a higher level of knowledge.â[1046] In consequence of this characteristic âa body of men put themselves under the same rational principles, the minority consciously, because the principles agree with the demands of their reason, and the majority unconsciously, because the principles have become public opinion.â[1047] âIn this subordination there is nothing irrational or self-contradictory.â[1048]
2. But in the future societary condition how shall the functions which the State at present performs be performed? Here people usually have three things in mind.[1049]
First, protection against the bad men in our midst.[1050] âBut who are the bad men among us? If there once were such men three or four centuries ago, when people still paraded warlike arts and equipments and looked upon killing as a brilliant deed, they are gone to-day anyhow; nobody any longer carries weapons, everybody acknowledges the commands of philanthropy. But, if by the men from whom the State must protect us we mean the criminals, then we know that they are not special creatures like the wolf among the sheep, but just such men as all of us, who like committing crimes as little as we do; we know that the activity of governments with their cruel forms of punishment, which do not correspond to the present stage of morality, their prisons, tortures, gallows, guillotines, contributes more to the barbarizing of the people than to their culture, and hence rather to the multiplication than to the diminution of such criminals.â[1051] If we are Christians and start from the principle that âwhat our life exists for is the serving of others, then no one will be foolish enough to rob men that serve him of their means of support or to kill them. Miklucho-Maclay settled among the wildest so-called âsavagesâ, and they not only left him alive but loved him and submitted to his authority, solely because he did not fear them, asked nothing of them, and did them good.â[1052]
Secondly, the question is asked how in the future societary condition we can find protection against external enemies.[1053] But we do know âthat the nations of Europe profess the principles of liberty and fraternity, and therefore need no protection against each other; but, if it were a protection against the barbarians that was meant, a thousandth part of the armies that are now kept up would suffice. State authority not merely leaves in existence the danger of hostile attacks, but even itself provokes this danger.â[1054] But, âif there existed a community of Christians who did evil to nobody and gave to others all the superfluous products of their labor, then no enemy, neither the German nor the Turk nor the savage, would kill or vex such men; all one could do would be to take from them what they were ready to give voluntarily without distinguishing between Russians, Germans, Turks, and savages.â[1055]
Thirdly, the question is asked how in the future societary condition institutions for education, popular culture, religion, commerce, etc. are to be possible.[1056] âPerhaps there was once a time when men lived so far apart, when the means for coming together and exchanging thoughts were so undeveloped, that people could not, without a State centre, discuss and agree on any matter either of trade and economy or of culture. But to-day this separation no longer exists; the means of intercourse have developed extraordinarily; for the forming of societies, associations, corporations, for the gathering of congresses and the creation of economic and political institutions, governments are not needed; nay, in most cases they are rather a hindrance than a help toward the attainment of such ends.â[1057]
3. But what form will menâs life together in the future societary condition take in detail? âThe future will be as circumstances and men shall make it.â[1058] We are not at this moment able to get perfectly clear ideas of it.[1059]
âMen say, âWhat will the new orders be like, that are to take the place of the present ones? So long as we do not know what form our life will take in future, we will not go forward, we will not stir from this spot.ââ[1060] âIf Columbus had gone to making such observations, he would never have weighed anchor. It was insanity to steer across an ocean that no man had ever yet sailed upon toward a land whose existence was a question. With this insanity, he discovered the New World. It would certainly be more convenient if nations had nothing to do but move out of one ready-furnished mansion into another and a better; only, by bad luck, there is nobody there to furnish the new quarters.â[1061]
But what disquiets men in their imagining of the future is âless the question âWhat will be?â They are tormented by the question âHow are we to live without all the familiar conditions of our existence, that are called science, art, civilization, culture?ââ[1062] âBut all these, bear in mind, are only forms in which truth appears. The change that lies before us will be an approach to the truth and its realization. How can the forms in which truth appears be brought to naught by an approach to the truth? They will be made different, better, higher, but by no means will they be brought to naught. Only that which was false in the forms of its appearance hitherto will be brought to naught; what was genuine will but unfold itself the more splendidly.â[1063]
âIf the individual manâs life were completely known to him when he passes from one stage of maturity to another, he would have no reason for living. So it is with the life of mankind too; if at its entrance upon a new stage of growth a programme lay before it already drawn up, this would be the surest sign that it was not alive, not progressing, but that it was sticking at one point. The details of a new order of life cannot be known to us, they have to be worked out by us ourselves. Life consists only in learning to know the unknown, and putting our action in harmony with the new knowledge. In this consists the life of the individual, in this the life of human societies and of humanity.â[1064]
I. **Together with law Tolstoi necessarily has to reject also, for the more highly developed nations of our time, the legal institution of property.**
Perhaps there was once a time when the violence necessary to secure the individual in the possession of a piece of goods against all others was less than the violence which would have been practised in a general fight for the possession of the goods, so that the existence of property was better than its non-existence. But at any rate this time is past, the existing order has âlived out its timeâ;[1065] among the men of to-day no wild fight for the possession of goods would break out even if there were no property; they all âprofess allegiance to the commands of philanthropy,â[1066] each of them âknows that all men have equal rights in the goods of the world,â[1067] and already we see âmany a rich man renounce his inheritance from a specially delicate sense of germinant public opinion.â[1068]
Property offends against love, especially against the commandment not to resist evil by force.[1069] But not only this; in founding a dominion of possessors over non-possessors it also offends against the principle that for love âall men are Godâs sons and there is equality among them allâ;[1070] and it is therefore to be rejected, even aside from the violence on which it is based as a legal institution. The rich are under âguilt by the very fact that they are rich.â[1071] It is âa crimeâ[1072] that tens of thousands of âhungry, cold, deeply degraded human beings are living in Moscow, while I with a few thousand others have tenderloin and sturgeon for dinner and cover horses and floors with blankets and carpets.â[1073] I shall be âan accomplice in this unending and uninterrupted crime so long as I still have a superfluous bit of bread while another has no bread at all, or still possess two garments while another does not possess even one.â[1074]âTolstoi carries this out into detail.
1. Property means the dominion of the possessors over the non-possessors.
Property is the exclusive right to use some things, whether one actually uses them or not.[1075] âMany of the men who called me their horse,â Tolstoi makes the horse Linen-Measurer say, âdid not ride me; quite different men rode me. Nor did they feed me; quite different men fed me. Nor was it those who called me their horse that did me kindnesses, but coachmen, veterinary surgeons, strangers altogether. Later, when the circle of my observations grew wider, I convinced myself that the idea âmine,â which has no other basis than menâs low and bestial propensity which they call âsense of ownershipâ or âright of property,â finds application not only with respect to us horses. A man says âthis house is mineâ and never lives in it, he only attends to the building and repair of the house. A merchant says âmy store, my dry-goods store,â and his clothing is not of the best fabrics he has in his store. There are men who call a piece of land âmineâ and have never seen this piece of land nor set foot on it. What men aim at in life is not to do what they think good, but to call as many things as possible âmine.ââ[1076]
But the significance of property consists in the fact that the poor man who has no property is dependent on the rich man who has property; in order to come by the things which he needs for his living, but which belong to another, he must do what this other willsâin particular, he must work for him. Thus property divides men into âtwo castes, an oppressed laboring caste that famishes and suffers and an idle oppressing caste that enjoys and lives in superfluity.â[1077] âWe are all brothers, and yet every morning my brother or my sister carries out my dishes. We are all brothers, but every morning I have to have my cigar, my sugar, my mirror, and other such things, in whose production healthy brothers and sisters, people like me, have sacrificed and are sacrificing their health.â[1078] âI spend my whole life in the following way: I eat, talk, and listen; eat, write, and readâthat is, talk and listen again; eat and play; eat, talk, and listen again; eat and go to bed; and so it goes on, one day like another. I cannot do, do not know how to do, anything beyond this. And, that I may be able to do this, the porter, the farmer, the cook, the cookâs maid, the lackey, the coachman, the laundress, must work from morning till night, not to speak of the work of other men which is necessary in order that those coachmen, cooks, lackeys, and so on may have all that they need when they work for meâthe axes, barrels, brushes, dishes, furniture, likewise the wax, the blacking, the kerosene, the hay, the wood, the beef. All of them have to work day by day, early and late, that I may be able to talk, eat, and sleep.â[1079]
This significance of property makes itself especially felt in the case of the things that are necessary for the producing of other things, and so most notably in the case of land and tools.[1080] âThere can be no farmer without land that he tills, without scythes, wagons, and horses; no shoemaker is possible without a house built on the earth, without water, air, and toolsâ;[1081] but property means that in many cases âthe farmer possesses no land, no horses, no scythe, the shoemaker no house, no water, no awl: that somebody is keeping these things back from them.â[1082] This leads to the consequence âthat for a large fraction of the workers the natural conditions of production are deranged, that this fraction is necessitated to use other peopleâs stock,â[1083] and may by the owner of the stock be compelled âto work not on their own account, but for an employer.â[1084] Consequently the workman works ânot for himself, to suit his own wish, but under compulsion, to suit the whim of some idle persons who live in superfluity, for the benefit of some rich man, the proprietor of a factory or other industrial plant.â[1085] Thus property means the exploitation of the laborer by those to whom the land and tools belong; it means âthat the products of human labor pass more and more out of the hands of the laboring masses into the hands of the unlaboring.â[1086]
Furthermore, the significance of property as making the poor dependent on the rich becomes especially prominent in the case of money. âMoney is a value that remains always equal, that always ranks as correct and legal.â[1087] Consequently, as the saying is, âhe who has money has in his pocket those who have none.â[1088] âMoney is a new form of slavery, distinguished from the old solely by its impersonality, by the lack of any human relation between the master and the slaveâ;[1089] for âthe essence of all slavery consists in drawing the benefit of anotherâs labor-force by compulsion, and it is quite immaterial whether the drawing of this benefit is founded upon property in the slave or upon property in money which is indispensable to the other man.â[1090] âNow, honestly, of what sort is my money, and how have I come by it? I got part for the land that I inherited from my father. The peasant sold his last sheep, his last cow, to pay me this money. Another part of my assets consists of the sums which I have received for my literary productions, my books. If my books are harmful, then by them I have seduced the purchasers to evil and have acquired the money by bad means. If, on the contrary, my books are useful to people, the case is still worse; I have not given them without ceremony to those who had a use for them, but have said âGive me seventeen rubles and you shall have them,â and, as in the other case the peasant sold his last sheep, so here the poor student or teacher, and many another poor person, have denied themselves the plainest necessities to give me the money. And thus I have piled up a quantity of such money, and what do I do with it? I bring it to the city and give it to the poor here on condition that they satisfy all my whims, that they come after me into the city to clean the sidewalks for me, and to make me lamps, shoes, and so forth, in the factories. With my money I take all their products to myself, and I take pains to give them as little as possible and get from them as much as possible for it. And then all at once, quite unexpectedly, I begin to distribute to the poor this same money gratisânot to all, but arbitrarily to any whom I happen to take up at randomâ;[1091] that is, I take from the poor thousands of rubles with one hand, and with the other I distribute to some of them a few kopeks.[1092]
2. The dominion which property involves, of possessors over non-possessors, is based on physical force.
âIf the vast wealth that the laborers have piled up ranks not as the property of all, but only as that of an elect few,âif the power of raising taxes from labor and using them at pleasure is reserved to some men,âthis is not based on the fact that the people want to have it so or that by nature it must be so, but on the fact that the ruling classes see their advantage in it and determine it so by virtue of their power over menâs bodiesâ;[1093] it is based on âviolence and slaying and the threat thereof.â[1094] âIf men hand over the greatest part of the product of their labor to the capitalist or landlord, though they, as do all laborers now, hold this to be unjust,â[1095] they do it âonly because they know they will be beaten and killed if they do not.â[1096] âOne may even say outright that in our society, in which to every well-to-do man living an aristocratic life there are ten weary, ravenous, envious laborers, probably pining away with wife and children too, all the privileges of the rich, all their luxury and their abundance, are acquired and secured only by chastisement, imprisonment, and capital punishment.â[1097]
Property is upheld by the police[1098] and the army.[1099] âWe may act as if we did not see the policeman walking up and down before the window with loaded revolver to protect us while we eat a savory meal or look at a new play, and as if we had no inkling of the soldiers who are every moment ready to go with rifle and cartridges where any one tries to infringe on our property. Yet we well know, if we can finish our meal and see the new play in peace, if we can drive out or hunt or attend a festival or a race undisturbed, we have to thank for this only the policemanâs bullet and the soldierâs weapon, which are ready to pierce the poor victim of hunger who looks upon our enjoyments from his corner with grumbling stomach, and who would at once disturb them if the policeman with his revolver went away, or if in the barracks there were no longer any soldiers standing ready to appear at our first call.â[1100]
3. The dominion which property involves, of the possessors over the non-possessors, is based on the physical force of the ruled.
Those very men of the non-possessing classes who through property are dependent on the possessing classes must do police duty, serve in the army, pay the taxes out of which police and army are kept up, and in these and other ways either themselves exercise or at least support the physical force by which property is upheld.[1101] âIf there did not exist these men who are ready to discipline or kill any one whatever at the word of command, no one would dare assert what the non-laboring landlords now do all of them so confidently assert,âthat the soil which surrounds the peasants who die off for lack of land is the property of a man who does not work on itâ;[1102] it would ânot come into the head of the lord of the manor to take from the peasants a forest that has grown up under their eyesâ;[1103] nor would any one say âthat the stores of grain accumulated by fraud in the midst of a starving population must remain unscathed that the merchant may have his profit.â[1104]
II. **Love requires that a distribution based solely on its commandments take the place of property.** âThe impossibility of continuing the life that has hitherto been led, and the necessity of determining new forms of life,â[1105] relate to the distribution of goods as well as to other things. âThe abolition of property,â[1106] and its replacement by a new kind of distribution of goods, is one of the âquestions now in order.â[1107]
According to the law of love, every man who works as he has strength should have so muchâbut only so muchâas he needs.
1. That every man who works as he has strength should have so much as he needs and no more is a corollary from two precepts which follow from the law of love.
The first of these precepts says, Man shall âask no work from others, but himself devote his whole life to work for others. âMan lives not to be served but to serve.ââ[1108] Therefore, in particular, he is not to keep accounts with others about his work, or think that he âhas the more of a living to claim, the greater or more useful his quantum of work done is.â[1109] Following this precept provides every man with what he needs. This is true primarily of the healthy adult. âIf a man works, his work feeds him. If another makes use of this manâs work for himself, he will feed him for the very reason that he is making use of his work.â[1110] Man assures himself of a living ânot by taking it away from others, but by making himself useful and necessary to others. The more necessary he is to others, the more assured is his existence.â[1111] But the following of the precept to serve others also provides the sick, the aged, and children with their living. Men âdo not stop feeding an animal when it falls sick; they do not even kill an old horse, but give it work appropriate to its strength; they bring up whole families of little lambs, pigs, and puppies, because they expect benefit from them. How, then, should they not support the sick man who is necessary to them? How should they not find appropriate work for old and young, and bring up human beings who will in turn work for them?â[1112]
The second precept that follows from the law of love, and of which a corollary is that every man who works as he has strength should have as much as he needs and no more, bids us âShare what you have with the poor; gather no riches.â[1113] âTo the question of his hearers, what they were to do, John the Baptist gave the short, clear, simple answer, âHe who hath two coats, let him share with him who hath none; and he who hath food let him do likewiseâ (Luke 3.10â11). And Christ too made the same declaration several times, only still more unambiguously and clearly. He said, âBlessed are the poor, woe to the rich.â He said that one could not serve God and Mammon at once. He not only forbade his disciples to take money, but also to have two garments. He told the rich young man that because he was rich he could not enter into the Kingdom of God, and that a camel should sooner go through a needleâs eye than a rich man come into heaven. He said that he who did not forsake everythingâhouse, children, landsâto follow him could not be his disciple. He told his hearers the parable of the rich man who did nothing bad except that heâlike our rich menâclothed himself in costly apparel and fed himself on savory food and drink, and who plunged his soul into perdition by this alone, and of the poor Lazarus who did nothing good and who entered into the Kingdom of Heaven only because he was a beggar.â[1114]
2. But what form can such a distribution of goods take in detail?
This is best shown us by âthe Russian colonists. These colonists arrive on the soil, settle, and begin to work, and no one of them takes it into his head that any one who does not begin to make use of the land can have any right to it; on the contrary, the colonists regard the ground **a priori** as common property, and consider it altogether justifiable that everybody plows and reaps where he chooses. For working the fields, for starting gardens, and for building houses, they procure implements; and here too it does not suggest itself to them that these could of themselves produce any incomeâon the contrary, the colonists look upon any profit from the means of labor, any interest for grain lent, etc., as an injustice. They work on masterless land with their own means or with means borrowed free of interest, either each for himself or all together on joint account.â[1115]
âIn talking of such fellowship I am not setting forth fancies, but only describing what has gone on at all times, what is even at present taking place not only among the Russian colonists but everywhere where manâs natural condition is not yet deranged by some circumstances or other. I am describing what seems to everybody natural and rational. The men settle on the soil and go each one to work, make their implements, and do their labor. If they think it advantageous to work jointly, they form a labor company.â[1116] But, in individual business as well as in collective industry, âneither the water nor the ground nor the garments nor the plow can belong to anybody save him who drinks the water, wears the garments, and uses the plow; for all these things are necessary only to him who puts them to use.â[1117] One can call âonly his labor his ownâ;[1118] by it one has as much as one needs.[1119]
<em>The way in which the change required by love is to take place, according to Tolstoi, is that those men who have learned to know the truth are to convince as many others as possible how necessary the change is for loveâs sake, and that they, with the help of the refusal of obedience, are to abolish law, the State, and property, and bring about the new condition.</em>
I. The prime necessity is that the men who have learned to know the truth should convince as many others as possible that love demands the change.
1. âThat an order of life corresponding to our knowledge may take the place of the order contrary to it, the present antiquated public opinion must first be replaced by a new and living one.â[1120]
It is not deeds of all sorts that bring to pass the grandest and most significant changes in the life of humanity, âneither the fitting out of armies a million strong nor the construction of roads and engines, neither the organization of expositions nor the formation of trade-unions, neither revolutions, barricades, and explosions nor inventions in aerial navigationâbut the changes of public opinion, and these alone.â[1121] Liberation is possible only âby a change in our conception of lifeâ;[1122] âeverything depends on the force with which each individual man becomes conscious of Christian truthâ;[1123] âknow the truth and the truth shall make you free.â[1124] Our liberation must necessarily take place by âthe Christianâs recognizing the law of love, which his Master has revealed to him, as entirely sufficient for all human relations, and his perceiving the superfluousness and illegitimateness of all violence.â[1125]
The bringing about of this revolution in public opinion is in the hands of the men who have learned to know the truth.[1126] âA public opinion does not need hundreds and thousands of years to arise and spread; it has the quality of working by contagion and swiftly seizing a great number of men.â[1127] âAs a jarring touch is enough to change a fluid saturated with salts to crystals in a moment, so now the slightest effort may perhaps suffice to cause the unveiled truth to seize upon hundreds, thousands, millions of men so that a public opinion corresponding to knowledge shall be established and that hereby the whole order of life shall become other than it is. It is in our hands to make this effort.â[1128]
2. The best means for bringing about the necessary revolution in public opinion is that the men who have learned to know the truth should testify to it by deed.
âThe Christian knows the truth only in order to testify to it before those who do not know it,â[1129] and that âby deed.â[1130] âThe truth is imparted to men by deeds of truth, deeds of truth illuminate every manâs conscience, and thus destroy the force of deceit.â[1131] Hence you ought properly, âif you are a landlord, to give your land at once to the poor, and, if you are a capitalist, to give your money or your factory to the workingmen; if you are a prince, a cabinet minister, an official, a judge, or a general, you ought at once to resign your position, and, if you are a soldier, you ought to refuse obedience without regard to any danger.â[1132] But, to be sure, âit is very probable that you are not strong enough to do this; you have connections, dependents, subordinates, superiors, the temptations are powerful, and your force gives out.â[1133]
3. But there is still another means, though a less effective one, for bringing about the necessary revolution in public opinion, and this âyou can alwaysâ[1134] employ. It is that the men who have learned to know the truth should âspeak it out frankly.â[1135]
âIf menâyes, if even a few menâwould do this, the antiquated public opinion would at once fall of itself, and a new, living, present-day one would arise.â[1136] âNot billions of rubles, not millions of soldiers, no institutions, wars, or revolutions, have so much power as the simple declaration of a free man that he considers something to be right or wrong. If a free man speaks out honestly what he thinks and feels, in the midst of thousands who in word and act stand for the very contrary, one might think he must remain isolated. But usually it is otherwise; all, or most, have long been privately thinking and feeling in the same way; and then what to-day is still an individualâs new opinion will perhaps to-morrow be already the general opinion of the majority.â[1137] âIf we would only stop lying and acting as if we did not see the truth, if we would only testify to the truth that summons us and boldly confess it, it would at once turn out that there are hundreds, thousands, millions, of men in the same situation as ourselves, that they see the truth like us, are afraid like us of remaining isolated if they confess it, and are only waiting, like us, for the rest to testify to it.â[1138]
II. To bring about the change and put the new condition in the place of law, the State, and property, it is further requisite that the men who have learned to know the truth should conform their lives to their knowledge, and, in particular, that they should refuse obedience to the State.
1. Men are to bring about the change themselves. They are âno longer to wait for somebody to come and help them, be it Christ in the clouds with the sound of the trumpet, be it a historic law or a differential or integral law of forces. Nobody will help us if we do not help ourselves.â[1139]
âI have been told a story that happened to a courageous commissary of police. He came into a village where they had applied for soldiers on account of an outbreak among the peasants. In the spirit of Nicholas the First he proposed to make an end of the rising by his personal presence alone. He had a few cart-loads of sticks brought, gathered all the peasants in a barn, and shut himself in with them. By his shouts he succeeded in so cowing the peasants that they obeyed him and began to beat each other at his command. So they beat each other till there was found a simple-minded peasant who did not obey, and who called out to his fellows that they should not beat each other either. Only then did the beating cease, and the official made haste to get away. The advice of this simple-minded peasantâ should be followed by the men of our time.[1140]
2. But it is not by violence that men are to bring about the change. âRevolutionary enemies fight the government from outside; Christianity does not fight at all, but wrecks its foundations from within.â[1141]
âSome assert that liberation from force, or at least its diminution, can be effected by the oppressed menâs forcibly shaking off the oppressing government; and many do in fact undertake to act on this doctrine. But they deceive themselves and others: their activity only enhances the despotism of governments, and the attempts at liberation are welcomed by the governments as pretexts for strengthening their power.â[1142]
However, suppose that by the favor of circumstances (as, for instance, in France in 1870) they succeed in overthrowing a government, the party which had won by force would be compelled, âin order to remain at the helm and introduce its order into life, not only to employ all existing violent methods, but to invent new ones in addition. It would be other men that would be enslaved, and they would be coerced into other things, but there would exist not merely the same but a still more cruel condition of violence and enslavement; for the combat would have fanned the flames of hatred, strengthened the means of enslavement, and evolved new ones. Thus it has been after all revolutions, insurrections, and conspiracies, after all violent changes of government. Every fight only puts stronger means of enslavement in the hands of the men who at a given time are in power.â[1143]
3. Men are to bring about the change by conforming their lives to their knowledge. âThe Christian frees himself from all human authority by recognizing as sole plumb-line for his life and the lives of others the divine law of love that is implanted in manâs soul and has been brought into consciousness by Christ.â[1144]
This means that one is to return good for evil,[1145] give to oneâs neighbor all that one has that is superfluous and take away from him nothing that one does not need,[1146] especially acquire no money and get rid of the money one has,[1147] not buy nor rent,[1148] and, without shrinking from any form of work, satisfy oneâs needs with oneâs own hands;[1149] and particularly does it mean that one is to refuse obedience to the unchristian demands of State authority.[1150]
That obedience to these demands is refused we see in many cases in Russia at present. Men are refusing the payment of taxes, the general oath, the oath in court, the exercise of police functions, action as jurymen, and military service.[1151] âThe governments find themselves in a desperate situation as they face the Christiansâ refusals.â[1152] They âcan chastise, put to death, imprison for life, and torture, any one who tries to overthrow them by force; they can bribe and smother with gold the half of mankind; they can bring into their service millions of armed men who are ready to annihilate all their foes. But what can they do against men who do not destroy anything, do not set up anything either, but only, each for himself, are unwilling to act contrary to the law of Christ, and therefore refuse to do what is most necessary for the governments?â[1153] âLet the State do as it will by such men, inevitably it will contribute only to its own annihilation,â[1154] and therewith to the annihilation of law and property and to the bringing in of the new order of life. âFor, if it does not persecute people like the Dukhobors, the Stundists, etc., the advantages of their peaceable Christian way of living will induce others to join themâand not only convinced Christians, but also such as want to get clear of their obligations to the State under the cloak of Christianity. If, on the other hand, it deals cruelly with men against whom there is nothing except that they have endeavored to live morally, this cruelty will only make it still more enemies, and the moment must at last come when there can no longer be found any one who is ready to back up the State with instrumentalities of force.â[1155]
4. In the conforming of life to knowledge the individual must make the beginning. He must not wait for all or many to do it at the same time with him.
The individual must not think it will be useless if he alone conforms his life to Christâs teaching.[1156] âMen in their present situation are like bees that have left their hive and are hanging on a twig in a great mass. The situation of the bees on the twig is a temporary one, and absolutely must be changed. They must take flight and seek a new abode. Every bee knows that, and wishes to make an end of its own suffering condition and that of the others; but this cannot be done by one so long as the others do not help. But all cannot rise at once, for one hangs over another and hinders it from letting go; therefore all remain hanging. One might think that there was no way out of this situation for the beesâ;[1157] if and really there would be none, were it not that each bee is an independent living being. But it is only needful âthat one bee spread its wings, rise and fly, and after it the second, the third, the tenth, the hundredth, for the immobile hanging mass to become a freely flying swarm of bees. Thus it is only needful that one man comprehend life as Christianity teaches it, and take hold of it as Christianity teaches him to, and then that a second, a third, a hundredth follow him, and the magic circle from which no escape seemed possible is destroyed.â[1158]
Neither may the individual let himself be deterred by the fear of suffering. ââIf I alone,â it is commonly said, âfulfil Christâs teaching in the midst of a world that does not follow it, give away my belongings, turn my cheek without resistance, yes, and refuse the oath and military service, then I shall have the last bit taken from me, and, if I do not die of hunger, they will beat me to death, and, if they do not beat me to death, they will jail me or shoot me; and I shall have given all the happiness of my life, nay, my life itself, for nothing.ââ[1159] Be it so. âI do not ask whether I shall have more trouble, or die sooner, if I follow Christâs teaching. That question can be asked only by one who does not see how meaningless and miserable is his life as an individual life, and who imagines that he shall ânot dieâ. But I know that a life for the sake of oneâs own happiness is the greatest folly, and that such an aimless life can be followed only by an aimless death. And therefore I fear nothing. I shall die like everybody, like even those who do not fulfil Christâs teaching, but my life and my death will have a meaning for me and for others. My life and my death will contribute to the rescue and life of othersâand that is just what Christ taught.â[1160]
If once enough individuals have conformed their lives to their knowledge, the multitude will soon follow. âThe passage of men from one order of life to another does not take place steadily, as the sand in the hour-glass runs out, one grain after another from the first to the last, but rather as a vessel that has been sunk into water fills itself. At first the water gets in only on one side, slowly and uniformly; but then its weight makes the vessel sink, and now the thing takes in, all at once, all the water that it can hold.â[1161] Thus the impulse given by individuals will provoke a movement that goes on faster and faster, wider and wider, avalanche-like, suddenly sweeps along the masses, and brings about the new order of life.[1162] Then the time is come âwhen all men are filled with God, shun war, beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning-hooks; that is, in our language, when the prisons and fortresses are empty, when the gallows, rifles, and cannon are out of use. What seemed a dream has found its fulfilment in a new form of life.â[1163]
[859] To. âKingdomâ pp. 244â5, 280, 315, 325.
[860] **Ib.** pp. 263, 285â6, To. âGospelâ p. 25, âReligion and Moralityâ p. 14.
[861] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 251.
[862] To. âGospelâ pp. 13â14, 16â17.
[863] To. âKingdomâ p. 96â7.
[864] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 247â8.
[865] To. âReason and Dogmaâ p. 5.
[866] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 196.
[867] To. âGospelâ pp. 51, 29â30.
[868] **Ib.** p. 47.
[869] To. âPatriotismâ p. 118.
[870] To. âGospelâ p. 29.
[871] To. âGospelâ p. 50; To. âReligion and Moralityâ p. 27.
[872] To. âOn Lifeâ p. 214.
[873] To. âGospelâ p. 31.
[874] **Ib.** pp. 32, 31, 40, 112.
[875] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 164.
[876] To. âGospelâ p. 21.
[877] **Ib.** p. 21.
[878] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 160, 174.
[879] **Ib.** p. 166.
[880] To. âConfessionâ p. 92.
[881] To. âKingdomâ pp. 75â7, 79.
[882] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 195, 272, âKingdomâ pp. 72â3, âGospelâ p. 5.
[883] To. âKingdomâ p. 234.
[884] To. âOn Lifeâ p. 48.
[885] **Ib.** pp. 72, 66.
[886] To. âConfessionâ p. 54.
[887] To. âOn Lifeâ p. 101.
[888] **Ib.** p. 100.
[889] **Ib.** p. 100.
[890] **Ib.** pp. 160, 101.
[891] **Ib.** pp. 160, 101.
[892] **Ib.** pp. 262â3.
[893] To. âOn Lifeâ p. 263.
[894] **Ib.** p. 263.
[895] To. âReligion and Moralityâ pp. 21â2.
[896] To. âKingdomâ p. 71.
[897] To. âGospelâ p. 25.
[898] **Ib.** p. 25.
[899] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 138â9
[900] **Ib.** p. 268.
[901] **Ib.** p. 148.
[902] To. âOn Lifeâ pp. 159â60.
[903] **Ib.** p. 165.
[904] **Ib.** p. 164.
[905] **Ib.** pp. 170â71.
[906] To. âKingdomâ p. 140.
[907] **Ib.** p. 139.
[908] **Ib.** p. 138.
[909] To. âKingdomâ p. 142, âWhat I Believeâ p. 17.
[910] To. âKingdomâ p. 123.
[911] To. âReligion and Moralityâ p. 12.
[912] To. âKingdomâ pp. 124â5.
[913] To. âMorningâ pp. 70â71.
[914] To. âOn Lifeâ p. 148.
[915] **Ib.** pp. 147, 148.
[916] **Ib.** pp. 122, 133â5, 174, 176.
[917] **Ib.** pp. 121, 174.
[918] To. âOn Lifeâ pp. 26, 122â3, 196, 206.
[919] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 17.
[920] To. âKingdomâ p. 144.
[921] **Ib.** pp. 142â3.
[922] **Ib.** p. 160.
[923] **Ib.** p. 144.
[924] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 122.
[925] **Ib.** p. 123.
[926] **Ib.** p. 123.
[927] **Ib.** p. 123.
[928] **Ib.** p. 123.
[929] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 12.
[930] **Ib.** p. 12.
[931] **Ib.** p. 15.
[932] **Ib.** pp. 21â2.
[933] **Ib.** p. 22.
[934] To. âKingdomâ pp. 68â9.
[935] To. âKingdomâ pp. 269â70.
[936] **Ib.** p. 282.
[937] **Ib.** p. 63.
[938] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 17, 20; âKingdomâ p. 268. [Has Tolstoi compared in a Greek concordance the other occurrences of the word translated âresistâ?]
[939] To. âKingdomâ pp. 49â50.
[940] **Ib.** p. 50.
[941] To. âKingdomâ pp. 268â9.
[942] **Ib.** p. 269.
[943] [âHe speaks only of the **Gesetz**, but he means all **Recht**â; see footnote on page 145 of the present book.]
[944] To. âKingdomâ pp. 268, 300â301.
[945] **Ib.** pp. 361â2.
[946] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 29, 32.
[947] To. âKingdomâ pp. 361â2, 172.
[948] **Ib.** p. 172.
[949] **Ib.** p. 300.
[950] **Ib.** p. 361.
[951] **Ib.** p. 241.
[952] **Ib.** p. 240.
[953] **Ib.** p. 256.
[954] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 29.
[955] **Ib.** pp. 28â9.
[956] **Ib.** p. 32.
[957] **Ib.** p. 32.
[958] **Ib.** pp. 45â6.
[959] **Ib.** p. 29.
[960] To. âKingdomâ pp. 361â2.
[961] **Ib.** p. 172.
[962] **Ib.** p. 268.
[963] **Ib.** p. 172.
[964] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 120.
[965] **Ib.** pp. 180, 235.
[966] **Ib.** pp. 235, 180.
[967] To. âKingdomâ p. 393, âWhat I Believeâ p. 121.
[968] To. âKingdomâ pp. 393â4.
[969] **Ib.** pp. 486â7.
[970] To. âPersecutionsâ p. 47.
[971] To. âGospelâ p. 50.
[972] To. âKingdomâ p. 526.
[973] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 121.
[974] To. âKingdomâ pp. 142â3, 144.
[975] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 122â3, 179, 124, 219â20; âGospelâ pp. 59â60; âKingdomâ pp. 143â4.
[976] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 225.
[977] **Ib.** p. 225.
[978] **Ib.** p. 121.
[979] To. âKingdomâ pp. 240â41.
[980] **Ib.** p. 336.
[981] **Ib.** pp. 335â6.
[982] **Ib.** p. 332.
[983] **Ib.** p. 211.
[984] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 21; âPersecutionsâ p. 46.
[985] To. âKingdomâ pp. 209â10.
[986] **Ib.** pp. 167, 164.
[987] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 25.
[988] To. âKingdomâ p. 332.
[989] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 50.
[990] To. âKingdomâ pp. 429â30, 244.
[991] **Ib.** pp. 209â10.
[992] **Ib.** p. 274.
[993] **Ib.** pp. 271â2.
[994] To. âKingdomâ p. 271.
[995] **Ib.** pp. 341, 339.
[996] **Ib.** p. 340.
[997] **Ib.** p. 340.
[998] **Ib.** p. 339.
[999] To. âKingdomâ pp. 339â40.
[1000] **Ib.** p. 342.
[1001] **Ib.** p. 243.
[1002] To. âPatriotismâ p. 91.
[1003] To. âKingdomâ p. 239.
[1004] **Ib.** p. 243.
[1005] To. âKingdomâ p. 281.
[1006] **Ib.** p. 442.
[1007] **Ib.** p. 442.
[1008] To. âPersecutionsâ p. 41.
[1009] To. âKingdomâ p. 327.
[1010] **Ib.** p. 238.
[1011] To. âPatriotismâ p. 120.
[1012] To. âKingdomâ p. 443.
[1013] To. âPatriotismâ p. 119.
[1014] To. âKingdomâ p. 238.
[1015] To. âKingdomâ pp. 248â9.
[1016] To. âPatriotismâ p. 91.
[1017] To. âKingdomâ p. 249.
[1018] **Ib.** p. 245.
[1019] To. âKingdomâ p. 246â7.
[1020] **Ib.** pp. 250, 423â4.
[1021] **Ib.** pp. 314â28.
[1022] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 26â7.
[1023] To. âKingdomâ p. 274.
[1024] **Ib.** p. 276.
[1025] **Ib.** p. 422.
[1026] **Ib.** p. 277.
[1027] **Ib.** p. 276.
[1028] To. âPatriotismâ pp. 40â41, 100â102; âKingdomâ pp. 429â32.
[1029] To. âKingdomâ p. 275.
[1030] To. âKingdomâ p. 422.
[1031] **Ib.** pp. 275â6, 420â22, 444â5.
[1032] **Ib.** p. 278.
[1033] **Ib.** p. 278.
[1034] **Ib.** p. 279.
[1035] **Ib.** p. 279.
[1036] To. âKingdomâ p. 511; âPatriotismâ p. 117.
[1037] To. âKingdomâ p. 189.
[1038] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 123.
[1039] To. âKingdomâ pp. 143â4.
[1040] **Ib.** pp. 300â301.
[1041] **Ib.** p. 300.
[1042] **Ib.** p. 301.
[1043] **Ib.** p. 301.
[1044] **Ib.** p. 236.
[1045] **Ib.** p. 461.
[1046] To. âKingdomâ p. 461.
[1047] **Ib.** pp. 461â2.
[1048] **Ib.** p. 461.
[1049] **Ib.** p. 255.
[1050] **Ib.** p. 255.
[1051] To. âKingdomâ pp. 255â6.
[1052] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 290.
[1053] To. âKingdomâ pp. 255, 258.
[1054] **Ib.** p. 258.
[1055] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 289.
[1056] To. âKingdomâ pp. 255, 257.
[1057] **Ib.** p. 257.
[1058] **Ib.** p. 510.
[1059] To. âPersecutionsâ pp. 46â7.
[1060] To. âKingdomâ p. 372.
[1061] To. âKingdomâ p. 510.
[1062] **Ib.** p. 512.
[1063] **Ib.** pp. 513â14.
[1064] To. âKingdomâ pp. 372â3.
[1065] **Ib.** p. 518.
[1066] **Ib.** p. 256.
[1067] **Ib.** p. 164.
[1068] **Ib.** p. 376.
[1069] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 21; âWhat Shall We Doâ pp. 157â8.
[1070] To. âKingdomâ pp. 167, 164.
[1071] **Ib.** p. 273.
[1072] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ p. 19.
[1073] **Ib.** pp. 18â19.
[1074] **Ib.** p. 19.
[1075] To. âMoneyâ p. 18.
[1076] To. âLinen-Measurerâ pp. 602â3.
[1077] To. âKingdomâ p. 164.
[1078] **Ib.** p. 168.
[1079] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ p. 143.
[1080] To. âMoneyâ p. 18.
[1081] **Ib.** p. 13.
[1082] **Ib.** p. 13.
[1083] **Ib.** p. 16.
[1084] **Ib.** p. 15.
[1085] To. âKingdomâ p. 166.
[1086] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ p. 139.
[1087] **Ib.** p. 152.
[1088] To. âMoneyâ p. 6.
[1089] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ pp. 151â2.
[1090] **Ib.** p. 160.
[1091] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ pp. 134â5.
[1092] **Ib.** p. 135.
[1093] To. âKingdomâ pp. 247â8.
[1094] **Ib.** p. 406.
[1095] **Ib.** p. 407.
[1096] **Ib.** p. 407.
[1097] **Ib.** p. 409.
[1098] **Ib.** p. 492.
[1099] **Ib.** pp. 247, 447.
[1100] To. âKingdomâ pp. 492â3.
[1101] **Ib.** pp. 314â28.
[1102] **Ib.** pp. 424â5.
[1103] **Ib.** p. 425.
[1104] **Ib.** p. 425.
[1105] To. âKingdomâ p. 511.
[1106] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 249.
[1107] **Ib.** p. 249.
[1108] **Ib.** p. 228.
[1109] **Ib.** pp. 227â8.
[1110] **Ib.** p. 227.
[1111] **Ib.** p. 229.
[1112] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 230.
[1113] To. âKingdomâ p. 520.
[1114] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ pp. 157â8.
[1115] To. âMoneyâ p. 10.
[1116] To. âMoneyâ p. 11.
[1117] **Ib.** pp. 11â12.
[1118] âKernelâ p. 89.
[1119] **Ib.** p. 89.
[1120] âPatriotismâ p. 116.
[1121] To. âPatriotismâ pp. 108â9.
[1122] To. âKingdomâ p. 301.
[1123] **Ib.** p. 474.
[1124] **Ib.** p. 302.
[1125] **Ib.** p. 301.
[1126] To. âPatriotismâ pp. 116â17.
[1127] To. âKingdomâ p. 358.
[1128] To. âKingdomâ p. 508.
[1129] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 290.
[1130] **Ib.** p. 290.
[1131] **Ib.** p. 293.
[1132] To. âKingdomâ p. 523.
[1133] **Ib.** p. 523.
[1134] **Ib.** p. 523.
[1135] To. âPatriotismâ p. 116.
[1136] **Ib.** p. 109.
[1137] To. âPatriotismâ pp. 112â13.
[1138] To. âKingdomâ p. 509.
[1139] To. âWhat I Believeâ pp. 147â8.
[1140] To. âKingdomâ pp. 306â7.
[1141] **Ib.** p. 326.
[1142] **Ib.** pp. 279â80.
[1143] To. âKingdomâ pp. 280â81.
[1144] **Ib.** p. 298.
[1145] To. âWhat I Believeâ p. 292.
[1146] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ p. 164; âWhat I Believeâ p. 291.
[1147] To. âWhat Shall We Doâ p. 162.
[1148] **Ib.** p. 161.
[1149] To âWhat Shall We Doâ p. 161.
[1150] To. âKingdomâ p. 314.
[1151] **Ib.** pp. 327â8.
[1152] **Ib.** p. 330.
[1153] **Ib.** p. 328.
[1154] To. âPersecutionsâ p. 44.
[1155] To. âPersecutionsâ p. 44.
[1156] To. âKingdomâ p. 293.
[1157] **Ib.** pp. 302â3.
[1158] To. âKingdomâ pp. 303â4.
[1159] âWhat I Believeâ p. 148.
[1160] **Ib.** pp. 179â80.
[1161] To. âKingdomâ p. 353.
[1162] **Ib.** p. 356.
[1163] **Ib.** p. 392.
We have now gained the standpoint that permits us to view comprehensively the entire body of Anarchistic teachings.
This comprehensive view is possible only as follows: first we have to look and see what the seven recognized Anarchistic teachings here presented have in common, and what specialties are to be found among them; next we must consider how far that which is common to the seven teachings may be equated to that which the entire body of Anarchistic teachings have in common, and, in addition, how far the specialties represented among the seven teachings may be equated to the specialties represented in the entire body of Anarchistic teachings.
To characterize those qualities of the Anarchistic teachings to which attention is to be paid, words already existing are here used as far as has been found practicable. Where such were totally lacking, the need of a concise formula has of necessity overcome repugnance to neologisms.
I. As to their basis the seven teachings here presented have nothing in common.
1. In part they recognize as the supreme law of human procedure merely a natural law, which, as such, does not tell us what ought to take place but what really will take place; these teachings may be called **genetic**. The other part of them regard as the supreme law of human procedure a norm, which, as such, tells us what ought to take place, even if it never really will take place; these teachings may be characterized as **critical**. Genetic are the teachings of Bakunin and Kropotkin: the supreme law of human procedure is for Bakunin the evolutionary law of mankindâs progress from a less perfect existence to an existence as perfect as possible, and for Kropotkin that of mankindâs progress from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible. Critical are the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tucker, and Tolstoi.
2. The critical teachings, again, are partly such as set up a duty as the supreme law of human procedure, the duty being itself the ultimate purpose,âthese teachings may be characterized as **idealistic**,âand partly such as set up happiness as the supreme law of human procedure, all duty being only a means to happiness,âthese may take the name of **eudemonistic**. Idealistic are the teachings of Proudhon and Tolstoi: Proudhon sets up as the supreme law of human procedure the duty of justice, Tolstoi the duty of love. Eudemonistic are the teachings of Godwin, Stirner, and Tucker.
3. The eudemonistic teachings, finally, regard as the supreme law of human procedure either the happiness of mankind as a whole, which the individual is accordingly to further without regard to his own happiness,âthese teachings may be characterized as **altruistic**,âor the happiness of the individual, which he is accordingly to further without regard to the welfare of mankind as a whole,âthese teachings may be called **egoistic**. Altruistic is Godwinâs teaching, egoistic Stirnerâs and Tuckerâs.
II. With regard to what they have in common in their basis, the seven recognized Anarchistic teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings. They have in their basis nothing in common with each other; all the more is it impossible, therefore, that the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings should have in their basis anything in common.
Furthermore, as regards the specialties that they exhibit in respect to their basis the teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of Anarchistic teachings without limitation. For the specialties represented among them can be arranged as a system that has no room left for any more co-ordinate specialties, but only for subordinate. No Anarchistic teaching, therefore, can have any specialty that will not be subordinate to these specialties.
Therefore, what is true of the seven teachings here presented is true of Anarchistic teachings altogether. In their basis they have nothing in common, and are to be divided with respect to its differences as shown in the table on page 273.
I. In their relation to lawâthat is, to those norms which are based on menâs will to have a certain procedure generally observed within a circle which includes themselvesâthe seven teachings here presented have nothing in common.
1. A part of them negate law for our future; these teachings may be called **anomistic**. The other part of them affirm it for our future; these teachings may be characterized as **nomistic**. Anomistic are the teachings of Godwin, Stirner, Tolstoi; nomistic those of Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, and Tucker.
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-6.jpg f]]
There cannot be given a more precise definition of what is common to the anomistic teachings on the one hand and to the nomistic on the other, and what is peculiar to the one group as against the other, than has here been given. For both the negation and the affirmation of law for our future have totally different meanings in the different teachings.
The negation of law for our future means in the cases of Godwin and Stirner that they reject law unconditionally, and so for our future as well as everywhere else: Godwin because it is always and everywhere contrary to the general happiness, Stirner because it is always and everywhere contrary to the individualâs happiness.
In Tolstoiâs case the meaning of the negation of law for our future is that he rejects law, though not unconditionally, yet for our future, because it is, though not at all times and in all places, yet under our circumstances, in a higher degree repugnant to love than its non-existence.
The affirmation of law for our future means in the cases of Proudhon and Tucker that they approve law as such (though certainly not every particular form of law) unconditionally, and hence for our future as well as elsewhere: Proudhon because law as such never and nowhere offends against justice, Tucker because law as such never and nowhere impairs the individualâs happiness.[1164]
In the cases of Bakunin and Kropotkin, finally, the affirmation of law for our future has the meaning that they foresee that the progress of evolution will in our future leave in existence law as such, even though not the present particular form of law: Bakunin meaning by this the progress of mankind from a less perfect existence to an existence as perfect as possible, and Proudhon its progress from a less happy existence to an existence as happy as possible.
2. The anomistic teachings part company again in regard to what they (in the same different senses in which they negate law for our future) affirm for our future in contrast to the law.
According to Godwin, in future the general happiness ought to be menâs controlling principle in the place of law.
According to Stirner, in future the happiness of self ought to be menâs controlling principle in the place of law.
According to Tolstoi, in future love ought to be menâs controlling principle in the place of law.
3. On the other part, the nomistic teachings part company in regard to the particular form of law that they affirm for our future.
According to Tucker, even in future there ought to exist enacted law, in which the will that creates the law is expressly declared,[1165] as well as unenacted law, in which such an express declaration of this will is not present.
According to Bakunin and Kropotkin, in future only unenacted law will exist.
According to Proudhon, there ought to exist in future only the single legal norm that contracts must be lived up to.[1166]
II. With regard to what they have in common in their relation to law, the seven recognized Anarchistic teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings. In their relation to law they have nothing in common. Much less, therefore, can the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings have anything in common in their relation to law.
Furthermore, as regards the specialties that they exhibit in their relation to law the teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of Anarchistic teachings without limitation. For the specialties represented among them can be arranged as a system in which there is no room left for any more co-ordinate specialties, but only for subordinate. No Anarchistic teaching, therefore, can have any specialty that will not be subordinate to these specialties.
Therefore, what is true of the seven teachings here presented is true of Anarchistic teachings altogether. In their relation to law they have nothing in common, and are to be divided as follows with respect to the differences of this relation:
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-8.jpg f]]
I. In their relation to the Stateâthat is, to the legal relation by virtue of which a supreme authority exists in a territoryâthe seven teachings here presented have something in common.
1. They have this in common, that they negate the State for our future.
There cannot be given a more precise definition of what the teachings here presented have in common in their relation to the State than has here been given. For the negation of the State for our future has totally different meanings in them.
In the cases of Godwin, Stirner, Tucker, and Proudhon, the negation of the State for our future means that they reject the State unconditionally, and hence for our future as well as everywhere else: Godwin because the State always and everywhere impairs the general happiness, Stirner and Tucker because it always and everywhere impairs the individualâs happiness, Proudhon because at all times and in all places the State offends against justice.
In Tolstoiâs case the negation of the State for our future means that he rejects the State, though not unconditionally, yet for our future, because the State is, though not always and everywhere, yet under our circumstances, more repugnant to love than its non-existence.
Finally, in the cases of Bakunin and Kropotkin the negation of the State for our future has the meaning that they foresee that in our future the progress of evolution will abolish the State: Bakunin meaning mankindâs progress from a less perfect existence to one as perfect as possible, Kropotkin its progress from a less happy existence to one as happy as possible.
2. As to what they affirm for our future in contrast to the State (in the same different senses in which they negate the State for our future) the seven teachings here presented have nothing in common.
One part of them affirm for our future, in contrast to the State, a social human life in a voluntary legal relationâto wit, under the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to; these teachings may take the name of **federalistic**. The other part of them affirm for our future, in contrast to the State, a social human life without any legal relationâto wit, under the same controlling principle that they affirm for our future in contrast to law; these teachings may be characterized as **spontanistic**. Federalistic are the teachings of Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, and Tucker; spontanistic those of Godwin,[1167] Stirner, and Tolstoi.
3. The spontanistic teachings in turn part company in respect to the non-legal controlling principle which they affirm in contrast to the State as the basis of the social human life for our future.
According to Godwin, the place of the State ought to be taken by a social human life based on the principle that the general happiness should be every oneâs rule of action.
According to Stirner, the place of the State ought to be taken by a social human life based on the principle that each oneâs own happiness should be his rule of action.
According to Tolstoi, the place of the State ought to be taken by a social human life based on the principle that love should be every oneâs rule of action.
II. With regard to what they have in common in their relation to the State, the seven recognized Anarchistic teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings. In their relation to the State they have only this one thing in common, that they negate the State for our futureâand in very different senses at that. But this is common to all recognized Anarchistic teachings: observation of any recognized Anarchistic teaching shows that in one sense or another it negates the State for our future.
Furthermore, as regards the specialties that they exhibit in their relation to the State the teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of Anarchistic teachings without limitation. For the specialties represented among them can be arranged as a system which affords no room for any more co-ordinate specialties, but only for subordinate. No Anarchistic teaching, therefore, can have any specialty that will not be subordinate to these specialties.
Therefore, what is true of the seven teachings here presented is true of the Anarchistic teachings altogether. In their relation to the State they have in common their negating the State for our future; and with regard to the differences in what they affirm for our future in contrast to the State they are to be divided as shown in the table on page 280.
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-9.jpg f]]
I. In their relation to propertyâthat is, to that legal relation by virtue of which some one has within a certain group of men the exclusive privilege of ultimately disposing of a thingâthe seven teachings here presented have nothing in common.
1. One part of them negate property for our future; these teachings may be characterized as **indoministic**. The other part affirm it for our future; these teachings may be called **doministic**. Indoministic are the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, and Tolstoi; doministic the teachings of Bakunin, Kropotkin, and Tucker.
There cannot be given a more precise definition of what is common to the indoministic teachings on the one hand and to the doministic on the other, and what is peculiar to the one group as against the other, than has here been given. For both the affirmation and the negation of property for our future have totally different meanings in the different teachings.
In the cases of Godwin, Stirner, and Proudhon, the negation of property for our future means that they reject property unconditionally, and so for our future as well as elsewhere: Godwin because it is always and everywhere contrary to the general happiness, Stirner because it is always and everywhere contrary to the individualâs happiness, Proudhon because it always and everywhere offends against justice.
In Tolstoiâs case the meaning of the negation of property for our future is that he rejects property, though not absolutely, yet for our future, because it is, though not at all times and in all places, yet under our circumstances, in a higher degree repugnant to love than is its non-existence.
In Tuckerâs case the affirmation of property for our future means that he approves property as such (though certainly not every particular form of property) unconditionally, and hence for our future as well as elsewhere, because property as such is never and nowhere contrary to the individualâs happiness.[1168]
Finally, in the cases of Bakunin and Kropotkin the affirmation of property for our future is as much as to say that they foresee that in our future the progress of evolution will leave in existence property as such, even though not the present particular form of property: Bakunin meaning mankindâs progress from a less perfect existence to one as perfect as possible, Kropotkin its progress from a less happy existence to one as happy as possible.
2. The indoministic teachings part company again as to what they affirm for our future (in the same different senses in which they negate property for our future) in contrast to property.
According to Proudhon, a distribution of goods determined by a voluntary legal relation, and based on the legal norm that contracts ought to be lived up to, ought to take the place of property.
According to Godwin, Stirner, and Tolstoi, the place of property ought to be taken by a distribution without any legal relation, based rather on the same rule of action that is affirmed by them in contrast to law.
According to Godwin, therefore, that distribution of goods which is to take the place of property ought to be based on what is prescribed to each one by the general happiness.
According to Stirner it ought to be based on what is prescribed to each one by his own happiness.
According to Tolstoi it ought to be based on what is prescribed to each one by love.
3. The doministic teachings on their side part company again as to the particular form of property that they affirm for our future.
According to Tucker there ought to exist in future, as at present, both property of the individual and property of the collectivity, in all things indiscriminately.[1169] This teaching may be called **individualistic**.
According to Bakunin, in future there will exist property of the individual and of the entire community only in goods for consumption, indiscriminately, while in the materials and instruments of production there will be solely property of the collectivity. This teaching may be characterized as **collectivistic**.
According to Kropotkin, in future there will exist solely property of the collectivity in all things indiscriminately. This teaching may be called **communistic**.
II. With regard to what they have in common in their relation to property, the seven Anarchistic teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings. They have nothing in common in their relation to property. All the more is it impossible, therefore, that the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings should in their relation to property have anything in common.
Furthermore, in regard to the specialties that they exhibit in their relation to property the teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of Anarchistic teachings without limitation. For the specialties represented among them can be arranged as a system in which there is no room left for any more co-ordinate specialties, but only for subordinate. No Anarchistic teaching, therefore, can have any specialty that will not be subordinate to these specialties.
Therefore, what is true of the seven teachings here presented is true of Anarchistic teachings altogether. They have nothing in common in their relation to property, and are to be divided with respect to the differences of this relation as shown in the table on page 284.
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-10.jpg f]]
I. With regard to the manner in which they conceive their realizationâthat is, the transition from the negated condition to the affirmed conditionâas taking place, the seven teachings here presented have nothing in common.
1. The one part of them conceive their realization as taking place without breach of law: they have in mind a transition from the negated to the affirmed condition merely by the application of legal norms of the negated condition; these teachings may be characterized as **reformatory**. Reformatory are the teachings of Godwin and Proudhon. The other part conceive their realization as a breach of law: they have in mind a transition from the negated to the affirmed condition with violation of legal norms of the negated condition; these teachings may be called **revolutionary**. Revolutionary are the teachings of Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, and Tolstoi.
There cannot be given a more precise definition of what is common to the reformatory teachings on the one hand, to the revolutionary on the other, and what is peculiar to the one group as against the other, than has here been given. For the conceiving the transition from a negated to an affirmed condition as taking place in any given way has totally different meanings in the different teachings.
If Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tucker, and Tolstoi conceive the transition from a negated to an affirmed condition as taking place in any given way, this is as much as to say that they demand that we should in a given way first prepare for, and then effect, the transition from a disapproved to an approved condition.
If, on the contrary, Bakunin and Kropotkin conceive the transition from a negated to an affirmed condition as taking place in any given way, this means that they foresee that in the progress of evolution the transition from a disappearing to a newly-appearing condition will of itself take place in a given way, and that they only demand that we should make a certain sort of preparation for this transition.
2. The revolutionary teachings part company again as to the fashion in which they conceive of the breach of law that helps in the transition from the negated to the affirmed condition.
Some of them conceive of the breach of law as taking place without the employment of force; these teachings may be characterized as **renitent**. Renitent are the teachings of Tucker and Tolstoi: Tucker conceiving the breach of law chiefly as a refusal to pay taxes and rent and an infringement of the banking monopoly, Tolstoi especially as a refusal to do military, police, or jury service, and also to pay taxes.
The other revolutionary teachings conceive of the breach of law that helps in the transition from the negated to the affirmed condition as taking place with the employment of force; these teachings may take the name of **insurgent**. Insurgent are the teachings of Stirner, Bakunin, and Kropotkin: Stirner and Bakunin conceiving only of the transition itself as attended with the use of violence, but Kropotkin also of preparation for it by such acts (propaganda of deed).
II. With regard to what they have in common in respect of the conceived manner of realization, the seven recognized Anarchistic teachings which have been presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings. In respect of the conceived manner of realization they have nothing in common. Much less, therefore, can the entire body of recognized Anarchistic teachings have anything in common in this respect.
Furthermore, as regards the specialties that they exhibit in respect of the conceived manner of realization the teachings here presented may be taken as equivalent to the entire body of Anarchistic teachings without limitation. For the specialties represented among them can be arranged as a system in which there is no room left for any more co-ordinate specialties, but only for subordinate. No Anarchistic teaching, therefore, can have any specialty that will not be subordinate to these specialties.
Therefore, what is true of the seven teachings here presented is true of the Anarchistic teachings altogether. In respect of the conceived manner of realization they have nothing in common, and are to be arranged as follows with reference to the differences therein:
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-11.jpg f]]
[1164] [I shall not indorse this statement till I understand it, and I doubt if Tucker will. Perhaps Eltzbacher might have been content with saying âis in no case more injurious to the happiness of most individuals than its non-existence.â]
[1165] [This, if interpreted by Eltzbacherâs quotations from Tucker, must refer to the right of a voluntary association of any sort to make rules for its own members. But in this sense it seems in the highest degree doubtful whether Eltzbacher is justified in denying the same to all the other six, who have omitted to mention this point (perhaps regarding it as self-evident) while they were talking against laws in the sense of laws compulsorily binding everybody in the land.]
[1166] [But see on Proudhon and Stirner my notes on pages 80 and 97.]
[1167] [It will be seen by consulting the footnotes on pages 46, 47, and 48 that the warrants for this statement about Godwin are drawn exclusively from the first one-fifth of his book, contrary to Eltzbacherâs profession at the top of page 41; that the passages quoted **verbatim** are not in Godwinâs second edition; and that the quotations which are not **verbatim** are of doubtful correctness by the second edition. This makes it appear that Godwinâs sweeping rejection of the principle of contract was one of those over-hasty propositions about which he changed his mind even before they were published (see his words quoted on page 40, and the preface to his second edition). Yet I am not prepared to assert that Godwin would at any time have made contract the basis of his civil order.]
[1168] [On Proudhon, Stirner, Tucker, see my notes on pages 80, 97, 274.]
[1169] [We are getting into an ambiguity of language here. The âcollectivityâ in which Kropotkin vests property is, as I understand, the entire population; the only âcollectivityâ which Tucker could recognize as owning property would be a voluntary association, whose membership, whether large or small, would in general be limited by the arbitrary choice of men.]
It has now become possible to set aside some of the numerous errors about Anarchism and its species.
I. It is said that Anarchism has abolished morality and bases itself upon scientific materialism,[1170] that its ideal of society is determined by its peculiar conception of the way things come to pass in history.[1171] If this were correct, the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tucker, Tolstoi, and very many other recognized Anarchistic teachings, would have to be regarded as not Anarchistic.
2. It is asserted that Anarchism sets up the happiness of the individual as final goal,[1172] that it appraises every human action from the abstract view-point of the unlimited right of the individual,[1173] that to it the supreme law is not the general welfare but every individualâs free preference.[1174] Were this really the case, we should have to look upon the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tolstoi, and a multitude of other recognized Anarchistic teachings, as not Anarchistic.
3. The moral law of justice is set down as Anarchismâs supreme law.[1175] Were this assertion correct, the teachings of Godwin, Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, Tolstoi, and numerous other recognized Anarchistic teachings, could not rank as Anarchistic.
4. It is said that Anarchism culminates in the negation of every programme,[1176] that it has only a negative goal.[1177] If this were in accordance with truth, the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, Tolstoi, and well-nigh all other recognized Anarchistic teachings, would not admit of being regarded as Anarchistic.
5. It is asserted that Anarchism rejects law,[1178] the compulsion of law.[1179] If this were so, the teachings of Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, and very many other recognized Anarchistic teachings, could not rank as Anarchistic.
6. It is declared that Anarchism rejects society,[1180] that its ideal consists in wiping out society to make a fresh start,[1181] that for it fellowship exists only to be combated.[1182] Were this correct, we should have to look upon the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, Tolstoi, and pretty nearly all other recognized Anarchistic teachings, as not Anarchistic.
7. It is said that Anarchism demands the abolition of the State,[1183] wills to destroy the State off the face of the earth,[1184] wills to have the State in no form at all,[1185] wills to have no government.[1186] If this were correct, the teachings of Bakunin and Kropotkin, and all the other recognized Anarchistic teachings which only foresee the abolition of the State but do not demand it, could not rank as Anarchistic.
8. It is asserted that in Anarchismâs future society the individualâs consent binds him only so long as he is disposed to keep it up.[1187] Were this really so, then the teachings of Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, and very many other recognized Anarchistic teachings, would have to be looked upon as not Anarchistic.
9. It is said that Anarchism wills to put a federation in the place of the State,[1188] that what it is striving for is the ordering of all public affairs by free contracts among federalistically instituted communes and societies.[1189] Were this in accordance with truth, the teachings of Godwin, Stirner, Tolstoi, and very many other recognized Anarchistic teachings, would not admit of being regarded as Anarchistic, and no more would the teachings of Bakunin and Kropotkin and the rest of the recognized Anarchistic teachings that do not demand, but only foresee, a fellowship of contract.
10. It is declared that Anarchism rejects property.[1190] If this were correct, we should have to rate the teachings of Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker, and all the other recognized Anarchistic teachings that affirm property either unconditionally or at any rate in some particular form, as not Anarchistic.
11. It is asserted that Anarchism rejects private property,[1191] endeavors to establish community of goods,[1192] is necessarily communistic.[1193] Were Anarchism necessarily communistic, then, in the first place, the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tolstoi, and all the other recognized Anarchistic teachings which negate property in every form, even as the property of society, could not rank as Anarchistic; and furthermore, neither could the teachings of Tucker and Bakunin, and such other recognized Anarchistic teachings as affirm private property either in all things or at least in goods for direct consumption. And if in addition to this it were a matter of rejection or endeavor, then not even Kropotkinâs teaching, and the rest of the recognized Anarchistic teachings which do not demand, but foresee, a communistic form of property, could be regarded as Anarchistic.
12. A distinction is made between Communist, Collectivist, and Individualist Anarchism,[1194] or simply between Communist and Individualist Anarchism.[1195] Were the first division a complete one, the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tolstoi, and all the other recognized Anarchistic teachings that do not affirm property in any form, could not rank as Anarchistic; were the second complete, these again could not, nor yet could Bakuninâs teaching and such other recognized Anarchistic teachings as affirm a property in the means of production only for society, but in the supplies of consumption for individuals also.
13. It is said that Anarchism preaches crime,[1196] looks to a violent revolution for the initiation of the new condition,[1197] seeks to attain its goal with the help of all agencies, even theft and murder.[1198] If Anarchism conceived of its realization as taking place by crime, we should have to look upon the teachings of Godwin and Proudhon and very many more recognized Anarchistic teachings as not Anarchistic; and, if it conceived of its realization as taking place by criminal acts of violence, the teachings of Tucker and Tolstoi and numerous other recognized Anarchistic teachings would also have to be regarded as not Anarchistic.
14. It is asserted that Anarchism recognizes the propaganda of deed as a means toward its realization.[1199] If this were correct, the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Bakunin, Tucker, Tolstoi, and most of the other recognized Anarchistic teachings, could not rank as Anarchistic.
It is now possible, furthermore, to determine the common and special qualities of the Anarchistic teachings, to assign them a place in the total realm of our experience, and thus to define conceptually Anarchism and its species.
I. **The common and special qualities of the Anarchistic teachings.**
1. The Anarchistic teachings have in common only this, that they negate the State for our future. In the cases of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, and Tucker, the negation means that they reject the State unconditionally, and so for our future as well as elsewhere; in the case of Tolstoi it means that he rejects the State, though not unconditionally, yet for our future; in the cases of Bakunin and Kropotkin it means that they foresee that in future the progress of evolution will do away with the State.
2. As to their basis, the Anarchistic teachings are classifiable as **genetic**, recognizing as the supreme law of human procedure merely a law of nature (Bakunin, Kropotkin) and **critical**, regarding a norm as the supreme law of human procedure. The critical teachings, again, are classifiable as **idealistic**, whose supreme law is a duty (Proudhon, Tolstoi), and **eudemonistic**, whose supreme law is happiness. The eudemonistic teachings, finally, are on their part further classifiable as **altruistic**, for which the general happiness is supreme law (Godwin), and **egoistic**, for which the individualâs happiness takes this rank (Stirner, Tucker).
As to what they affirm for our future in contrast to the State, the Anarchistic teachings are either **federalistic**âthat is, they affirm for our future a social human life on the basis of the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to (Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker)âor **spontanistic**âthat is, they affirm for our future a social human life on the basis of a non-juridical controlling principle (Godwin, Stirner, Tolstoi).
As to their relation to law, a part of the Anarchistic teachings are **anomistic**, negating law for our future (Godwin, Stirner, Tolstoi); the other part are **nomistic**, affirming it for our future (Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker).
As to their relation to property, the Anarchistic teachings are partly **indoministic**, negating property for our future (Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tolstoi), partly **doministic**, affirming it for our future. The doministic teachings, again, are partly **individualistic**, affirming property, without limitation, for the individual as well as for the collectivity (Tucker), partly **collectivistic**, affirming as to supplies for direct consumption a property that will sometimes be the individualâs, but as to the means of production a property that is only for the collectivity (Bakunin), and, finally, partly **communistic**, affirming property solely for the collectivity (Kropotkin).
As to how they conceive their realization, the Anarchistic teachings divide into the **reformatory**, which conceive the transition from the negated to the affirmed condition as without breach of law (Godwin, Proudhon), and **revolutionary**, which conceive this transition as a breach of law. The revolutionary teachings, again, divide into **renitent**, which conceive the breach of law as without the use of force (Tucker, Tolstoi) and **insurgent**, which conceive it as attended by the use of force (Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin).
II. **The place of the Anarchistic teachings in the total realm of our experience.**
1. There must be distinguished three lines of thought in the philosophy of law: that is, three fashions of judging law.
The first is **jurisprudential dogmatism**. It judges whether a legal institution ought to exist or not, and it judges quite unconditionally, solely by what the institution consists of, without regard to its effect under this or that particular set of circumstances. It embraces, therefore, the doctrines of a **proper law**: that is, the schools that seek to determine what lawâfor instance, whether the legal institution of marriageâis under all circumstances to be approved or to be disapproved. Its best known form is ânatural law.â
The weakness of jurisprudential dogmatism lies in its not taking account of the fact that our judgment of legal institutions must depend on their effects, and that one and the same legal institution has under different circumstances altogether different effects.
The second line of thought is **jurisprudential skepticism**. In view of the weakness of jurisprudential dogmatism it foregoes judgment on whether a legal institution ought to exist or not, and pronounces judgment only on whether the tendency of evolution gives ground for expecting that a legal institution will persist or disappear, arise or remain non-existent. It embraces, therefore, the doctrines of the **evolution of law**: that is, the schools that undertake to inform us what sort of law is to be expected in futureâfor instance, whether the legal institution of marriage has a prospect of remaining in force among us. Its best-known forms are the historical school in the science of law, and Marxism.
The weakness of jurisprudential skepticism consists in its not meeting our want of a scientific basis that shall enable us to recognize as correct or incorrect the incessantly-appearing judgments on the value of legal institutions, and to approve or disapprove the manifold propositions for changes in law.
The third line of thought is **jurisprudential criticism**. In view of the weakness of jurisprudential dogmatism it foregoes passing judgment, without regard to the particular circumstances under which a legal institution operates, on whether that institution ought to exist or not; but yet in view of the weakness of jurisprudential skepticism it does not forego answering the question whether a legal institution ought to exist or not. It therefore sets up a supreme governing principle by which legal institutions are to be judged with regard to the particular circumstances under which they operate, the point being whether, under the particular circumstances under which a legal institution operates, it fulfils that supreme governing principle as well as is possible under these circumstances, or at least better than any other legal institution. It embraces, therefore, the doctrines of **the propriety of law**: that is, the schools that set up fundamental principles by which it is to be determined what lawâfor instance, whether the legal institution of marriageâought under any particular circumstances to exist or not to exist.
2. With respect to the State these three lines of thought in the philosophy of law may arrive at different judgments, each one from its standpoint.
First, to the **affirmation of the State**.
So far as the schools of jurisprudential dogmatism affirm the State, they approve of it unconditionally, and so for our future as well as elsewhere, without any regard to its effects under this or that particular set of circumstances.
Among the numerous affirmative doctrines of the State in the sense of jurisprudential dogmatism, the teachings of Hobbes, Hegel, and Jhering may perhaps be selected for emphasis as belonging to different sections of history.
So far as the doctrines of jurisprudential skepticism affirm the State, they foresee, looking to the course evolution is taking, that in our future the State will continue to exist.
The most notable representatives of jurisprudential skepticism, such as Puchta and Merkel, have offered no teaching regarding the State; but affirmative doctrines of the State in the sense of jurisprudential skepticism may be found, for instance, in Montaigne and Bernstein.
Finally, so far as the doctrines of jurisprudential criticism affirm the State, they commend it for our future in consideration of the particular circumstances that at present prevail in our case.
Jurisprudential criticism has thus far been most clearly set forth by Stammler, who, however, has offered no teaching with regard to the State; but, for instance, Spencerâs teaching may rank as an affirmative doctrine of the State in the sense of jurisprudential criticism.
Second, the three lines of thought in the philosophy of law may arrive at the **negation of the State**, each one from its standpoint.
So far as the doctrines of jurisprudential dogmatism negate the State, they reject it unconditionally, and so for our future as well as elsewhere, without any regard to its effects under this or that particular set of circumstances.
Negative doctrines of the State in the sense of jurisprudential dogmatism are the teachings of Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, and Tucker.
So far as the doctrines of jurisprudential skepticism negate the State, they foresee, looking to the course evolution is taking, that in our future the State will disappear.
Negative doctrines of the State in the sense of jurisprudential skepticism are the teachings of Bakunin and Kropotkin.
So far as the doctrines of jurisprudential criticism negate the State, they reject it for our future in consideration of the particular circumstances that at present prevail in our case.
A negative doctrine of the State in the sense of jurisprudential criticism is Tolstoiâs teaching.
3. Therefore, the place of the Anarchistic teachings in the total realm of our experience is defined by the fact that they, as a species of doctrine about the State in the philosophy of law,âto wit, as negative doctrines of the State,âstand in opposition to the other species of doctrine about the State, the affirmative doctrines of the State.
This may be represented as shown in the table on the following page.
III. **The concepts of Anarchism and its species.**
1. Anarchism is the negation of the State in the philosophy of law: that is, it is that species of jurisprudential doctrine of the State which negates the State.
2. An Anarchistic teaching cannot be complete without stating on what basis it rests, what condition it affirms in contrast to the State, and how it conceives the transition to this condition as taking place. A basis, an affirmative side, and a conception of the transition to that which it affirms, are necessary constituents of any Anarchistic teaching. With regard to these constituents the following species of Anarchism may be distinguished.
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-12.jpg f]]
First, as to basis, **genetic Anarchism**, which recognizes as supreme law of human procedure only a law of nature (Bakunin, Kropotkin), and **critical Anarchism**, which regards a norm as supreme law of human procedure; as subspecies of critical Anarchism, **idealistic Anarchism**, whose supreme law is a duty (Proudhon, Tolstoi), and **eudemonistic Anarchism**, whose supreme law is happiness; and, finally, as subspecies of eudemonistic Anarchism, **altruistic Anarchism**, for which the supreme law is the general happiness (Godwin), and **egoistic Anarchism**, for which the supreme law is the individualâs happiness (Stirner, Tucker).
Second, as to the condition affirmed in contrast to the State, there may be distinguished **federalistic Anarchism**, which affirms for our future a social human life according to the legal norm that contracts must be lived up to (Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker), and **spontanistic Anarchism**, which affirms for our future a social life according to a non-juridical governing principle (Godwin, Stirner, Tolstoi).
Third, as to the conception of the transition to the affirmed condition, there may be distinguished **reformatory Anarchism**, which conceives the transition from the State to the condition affirmed in contrast thereto as taking place without breach of law (Godwin, Proudhon), and **revolutionary Anarchism**, which conceives this transition as a breach of law; as subspecies of revolutionary Anarchism, **renitent Anarchism**, which conceives the breach of law as without the use of violence (Tucker, Tolstoi), and **insurgent Anarchism**, which conceives it as attended by the use of violence (Stirner, Bakunin, Kropotkin).
3. An Anarchistic teaching may be complete without taking up a position toward law or property. Whenever, therefore, an Anarchistic teaching takes up a position toward the one or the other, it contains an accidental adjunct. The Anarchistic teachings that contain this adjunct may be classified according to its character; but, since Anarchism as such can be classified only according to the character of the necessary constituents of every Anarchistic teaching, such a classification **does not give us species of Anarchism**.
So far as the Anarchistic teachings take up a position toward law, they are either **anomistic**âthat is, they negate law for our future (Godwin, Stirner, Tolstoi)âor **nomistic**âthat is, they affirm it for our future (Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Tucker).
So far as they take up a position toward property, they are either **indoministic**, negating property for our future (Godwin, Proudhon, Stirner, Tolstoi), or **doministic**, affirming it for our future; the doministic teachings, again, are either **individualistic**, affirming property, without limitation, for the individual as well as for the collectivity (Tucker), or **collectivistic**, affirming as to supplies for direct consumption a property which may be the individualâs, but as to the means of production a property that is only for the collectivity (Bakunin), or, last of all, **communistic**, affirming property for the collectivity alone (Kropotkin).
All this is brought before the eye in the table on page 302.
â [The table is given as compiled by Eltzbacher. For correction of errors either certain or probable, see footnotes to pages 80, 97, 278; note also that under âcondition affirmedâ the distinction is excessively fine between Stirner, who would have men agree on the terms of a union which they are to stick to as long as they find it advisable, and Bakunin and Tucker, who would have them bound together by a contract limited by the inalienable right of secession.]
[[p-e-paul-eltzbacher-anarchism-14.jpg f]]
[1170] â**Der Anarchismus und seine TrĂ€ger**â pp. 127, 124, 125.
[1171] Reichesberg p. 27.
[1172] Lenz p. 3.
[1173] Plechanow p. 80.
[1174] Rienzi p. 43.
[1175] Bernatzik pp. 2, 3.
[1176] Lenz p. 5.
[1177] Crispi p. 4.
[1178] Stammler pp. 2, 4, 34, 36.
[1179] Lenz pp. 1, 4.
[1180] Garraud p. 12, Tripels p. 253.
[1181] SiliĂł p. 145.
[1182] Reichesberg pp. 14, 16.
[1183] Bernstein p. 359.
[1184] Lenz p. 5.
[1185] Bernatzik p. 3.
[1186] â**HintermĂ€nner**â p. 14.
[1187] Reichesberg p. 30.
[1188] â**HintermĂ€nner**â p. 14.
[1189] Lombroso p. 31.
[1190] SiliĂł p. 145, Dubois p. 213.
[1191] Proal p. 50.
[1192] Lombroso p. 31.
[1193] Sernicoli vol. 2 p. 67, Garraud pp. 3, 4.
[1194] â**Die historische Entwickelung des Anarchismus**â p. 16; Zenker p. 161.
[1195] Rienzi p. 9; Stammler pp. 28â31; Merlino pp. 18, 27; Shaw p. 23.
[1196] Garraud p. 6; Lenz p. 5.
[1197] Sernicoli vol. 2 p. 116; Garraud p. 2; Reichesberg p. 38; Van Hamel p. 113.
[1198] Lombroso pp. 31, 35.
[1199] Garraud pp. 10â11; Lombroso p. 34; Ferri p. 257.
1. The personal want that impelled us toward a scientific knowledge of Anarchism has met with some satisfaction.
The concepts of Anarchism and its species have been defined; the most important errors have been removed; the most prominent Anarchistic teachings of earlier and recent times have been presented in detail. We have become acquainted with Anarchismâs armory. We have seen all that can be objected against the State from all possible standpoints. We have been shown the most diverse orders of life as destined to take the Stateâs place in future. The transition from the State to these orders of life has been represented to us in the most manifold ways.
He who would know Anarchism still more intimately, investigate the less notable teachings as well as the most prominent, and assign to both these and those their place in the causal nexus of historical events, will now find at least the foundation laid for his work. He knows with what sorts of teachings, and what parts of these teachings, he must concern himself, and what questions he must put to each of them. In this investigation he must expect many surprises: the teaching of the unknown Pisacane will astonish him by its originality, and that of the much-talked-of Most will show itself to be only a coarsened form of Kropotkinâs. But on the whole it is hardly likely that the investigation will be worth the trouble it takes: the special ideas that Anarchism has to offer are given with tolerable completeness in the seven teachings here presented.
2. The external want on account of which Anarchism had to be scientifically known may now also be satisfied.
One thing we must at any rate do with regard to Anarchism: examine its teachings, as to their soundness or unsoundness, with courage, composure, and impartiality. But success in this task can be expected only if we no longer wander about aimlessly in the night of jurisprudential skepticism, or try to light it up with the lantern of dogmatism, but rather keep our eye fixed upon the guiding star of criticism.
Whether, besides this, it is requisite to oppose Anarchism or at least one or another of its species by especial instrumentalities of power,âwhether, in particular, crime committed for the realization of Anarchistic teachings is a more serious misdeed than any political or even ordinary crime,âas to this the legislators of each country must decide with a view to the special conditions existing therein.