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    Anarchy: Difference between revisions

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    The word "anarchy" is from the Greek, prefix <b>an</b> (or a), meaning "not", "the want of," "<b>the absence of</b>," or "the lack of", plus <b>archos</b>, meaning "<b>a ruler</b>," "director", "chief," "person in charge," or "authority."
    The word "anarchy" is from the Greek, prefix <b>an</b> (or a), meaning "not", "the want of," "<b>the absence of</b>," or "the lack of", plus <b>archos</b>, meaning "<b>a ruler</b>," "director", "chief," "person in charge," or "authority." (see also [http://www.emacswiki.org/cw/NoLeader community-wiki: no leader])


    Or, as [[Kropotkin|Peter Kropotkin]] put it, Anarchy comes from the Greek words meaning "contrary to authority." [Kropotkin's Revolutionary Pamphlets, p. 284]
    Or, as [[Kropotkin|Peter Kropotkin]] put it, Anarchy comes from the Greek words meaning "contrary to authority." [Kropotkin's Revolutionary Pamphlets, p. 284]

    Revision as of 11:27, 13 March 2005

    Political theory opposed to all forms of government.

    Anarchists believe that the highest attainment of humanity is the freedom of the individual to express himself, unhindered by any form of repression or control from without.

    The belief that all governments rest on violence to control their subjects.

    Source: 1984 Funk & Wagnalls Encyclopedia


    The word "anarchy" is from the Greek, prefix an (or a), meaning "not", "the want of," "the absence of," or "the lack of", plus archos, meaning "a ruler," "director", "chief," "person in charge," or "authority." (see also community-wiki: no leader)

    Or, as Peter Kropotkin put it, Anarchy comes from the Greek words meaning "contrary to authority." [Kropotkin's Revolutionary Pamphlets, p. 284]

    While the Greek words anarchos and anarchia are often taken to mean "having no government" or "being without a government," as can be seen, the strict, original meaning of anarchism was not simply "no government."

    "An-archy" means "without a ruler," or more generally, "without authority," and it is in this sense that anarchists have continually used the word. For example, we find Kropotkin arguing that anarchism "attacks not only capital, but also the main sources of the power of capitalism: law, authority, and the State." [Op. Cit., p. 150] For anarchists, anarchy means "not necessarily absence of order, as is generally supposed, but an absence of rule." [Benjamin Tucker, Instead of a Book, p. 13]


    Hence David Weick's excellent summary:

    "Anarchism can be understood as the generic social and political idea that expresses negation of all power, sovereignty, domination, and hierarchical division, and a will to their dissolution. . . Anarchism is therefore more than anti-statism . . . [even if] government (the state) . . . is, appropriately, the central focus of anarchist critique." [Reinventing Anarchy, p. 139]

    For this reason, rather than being purely anti-government or anti-state, anarchism is primarily a movement against hierarchy. Why? Because hierarchy is the organisational structure that embodies authority. Since the state is the "highest" form of hierarchy, anarchists are, by definition, anti-state; but this is not a sufficient definition of anarchism. This means that real anarchists are opposed to all forms of hierarchical organisation, not only the state. In the words of Brian Morris:

    "The term anarchy comes from the Greek, and essentially means 'no ruler.' Anarchists are people who reject all forms of government or coercive authority, all forms of hierarchy and domination. They are therefore opposed to what the Mexican anarchist Flores Magon called the 'sombre trinity' -- state, capital and the church. Anarchists are thus opposed to both capitalism and to the state, as well as to all forms of religious authority. But anarchists also seek to establish or bring about by varying means, a condition of anarchy, that is, a decentralised society without coercive institutions, a society organised through a federation of voluntary associations." ["Anthropology and Anarchism," Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed, no. 45, p. 38]


    "Anarchism does not mean bloodshed; it does not mean robbery, arson, etc. These monstrosities are, on the contrary, the characteristic features of capitalism. Anarchism means peace and tranquility to all." --August Spies, Haymarket anarchist

    Popular anarchist theorists

    Peter Kropotkin

    Errico Malatesta

    Erich Mühsam

    Michel Bakunin

    Related

    Anarchie (german)

    External Links

    Wikipedia:Crypto-anarchism

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