Saturday, February 18, 2012

Anarchism Is Not What You Think It Is--And There's a Whole Lot We Can Learn from It

 
Growing up in the 40's and 50's I recall that Anarchism was always viewed as  implying political disorder or lawlessness.  
An anarchist was someone who set out to create havoc and upset our government, replacing it with roving bands of angry mobs. 
It was years before I came to learn that once again I had been misled by the Pied Pipers of the Ruling Class. 
 
Carl Jarvis
*********
 
Anarchism Is Not What You Think It Is--And There's a Whole Lot We Can Learn
from It



By David Morris



On the Commons, Posted on February 13, 2012



http://www.alternet.org/module/printversion/154126



(10 links at the URL above)



On February 8, 1921 twenty thousand people, braving temperatures so low that
musical instruments froze, marched in a funeral procession in the town of
Dimitrov, a suburb of Moscow.  They came to pay their respects to a man,
Petr Kropotkin, and his philosophy, anarchism.



Some 90 years later few know of Kropotkin.  And the word anarchism has been
so stripped of substance that it has come to be equated with chaos and
nihilism.  This is regrettable, for both the man and the philosophy that he
did so much to develop have much to teach us in 2012.



I am astonished Hollywood has yet to discover Kropotkin.  For his life is
the stuff of great movies.  Born to privilege he spent his life fighting
poverty and injustice.  A lifelong revolutionary, he was also a
world-renowned geographer and zoologist.  Indeed, the intersection of
politics and science characterized much of his life.



His struggles against tyranny resulted in years in Russian and French jails.
The first time he was imprisoned in Russia an outcry by many of the world's
best-known scholars led to his release.  The second time he engineered a
spectacular escape and fled the country.  At the end of his life, back in
his native Russia, he enthusiastically supported the overthrow of the Tsar
but equally strongly condemned Lenin's increasingly authoritarian and
violent methods.



In the 1920s Roger N.  Baldwin summed up Kropotkin this way.



"Kropotkin is referred to by scores of people who knew him in all walks of
life as the noblest man they ever knew.  Oscar Wilde called him one of the
two really happy men he had ever met...In the anarchist movement he was held
in the deepest affection by thousands--notre Pierre the French workers
called him.  Never assuming a position of leadership, he nevertheless led by
the moral force of his personality and the breadth of his intellect.  He
combined in extraordinary measure high qualities of character with a fine
mind and passionate social feeling.  His life made a deep impression on a
great range of classes--the whole scientific world, the Russian
revolutionary movement, the radical movements of all schools, and in the
literary world which cared little or nothing for science or revolution."



For our purposes Kropotkin's most enduring legacy is his work on anarchism,
a philosophy of which he was possibly the leading exponent.  He came to the
view that society was heading in the wrong direction and identifying the
right direction using the same scientific method that had led him to shock
the geography profession by proving that the existing maps of Asia had the
mountains running in the wrong direction.



The precipitating event that led Kropotkin to embrace anarchism was the
publication of Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species in 1859.  While Darwin's
thesis that we are descended from the apes was highly controversial, his
thesis that natural selection involved a "survival of the fittest" through a
violent struggle between and among species was enthusiastically adopted by
the 1% of the day to justify every social inequity as an inevitable
byproduct of the struggle for existence.  Andrew Carnegie insisted that the
"law" of competition is "best for the race because it insures the survival
of the fittest in every department."  "We accept and welcome great
inequality (and) the concentration of business...in the hands of a few."
The planet's richest man, John D.  Rockefeller, bluntly asserted, The growth
of a large business is merely a survival of the fittest...the working out of
a law of nature."



In response to a widely distributed essay by Thomas Huxley in The Nineteenth
Century, "The Struggle for Existence in Human Society," Kropotkin wrote a
series of articles for the same magazine that were later published as the
book Mutual Aid.



He found the view of the social Darwinists contradicted by his own empirical
research.  After five years examining wildlife in Siberia, Kropotkin wrote,
"I failed to find--although I was eagerly looking for it--that bitter
struggle for the means of existence...which was considered by most
Darwinists...as the dominant characteristic--and the main factory of
evolution."



Kropotkin honored Darwin's insights about natural selection but believed the
governing principle of natural selection was cooperation, not competition.
The fittest were those who cooperated.



"The animal species, in which individual struggle has been reduced to its
narrowest limits, and the practice of mutual aid has attained the greatest
development, are invariably the most numerous, the most prosperous, and the
most open to further progress....  The unsociable species, on the contrary,
are doomed to decay."



He spent the rest of his life promoting that concept and the theory of
social structure known as anarchism.  To Americans anarchism is synonymous
with a lack of order.  But to Kropotkin anarchist societies don't lack order
but the order emerges from rules designed by those who feel their impact,
rules that encourage humanly scaled production systems and maximize
individual freedom and social cohesion.



In his article on Anarchy in the 1910 Encyclopedia Britannica Kropotkin
defines anarchism as a society "without government--harmony in such a
society being obtained, not by submission to law, or by obedience to any
authority, but by free agreements concluded between the various groups,
territorial and professional, freely constituted for the sake of production
and consumption..."



Mutual Aid was published in 1902.  With chapters on animal societies,
tribes, medieval cities and modern societies, it makes the scientific case
for cooperation.  Readers in 2012 may find the chapter on medieval cities
the most compelling.



In the 12th to 14th centuries, hundreds of cities emerged around newly
formed marketplaces.  These marketplaces were so important that laws
embraced by kings, bishops and towns protected their providers and
customers.  As the markets grew, the cities gained autonomy, and organized
themselves into political, economic and social structures that to Kropotkin
made them an instructive working model of anarchism.



The medieval city was not a centralized state.  It was a confederation,
divided into four quarters or five to seven sections radiating from a
center.  In some respects it was structured as a double federation.  One
consisted of all householders united into small territorial units the
street, the parish the section.  The other was of individuals united by oath
into guilds according to their professions.



The guilds established the economic rules.  But the guild itself consisted
of many interests.  "The fact is, that the medieval guild...was a union of
all men connected with a given trade jurate buyers of raw produce, sellers
of manufactured goods, and artisans--masters, 'compaynes,' and apprentices."
It was sovereign in its own sphere, but could not develop rules that
interfered with the workings of other guilds.



Four hundred years before Adam Smith, medieval cities had developed rules
that allowed the pursuit of self-interest to support the public interest.
Unlike Adam Smith's proposal, their tool was a very visible hand indeed.



This mini world of cooperation resulted in remarkable achievements.  From
cities of 20,000-90,000 people emerged technological as well as artistic
developments that still astonish us.



Life in these cities was not nearly as primitive as the Dark Ages to which
our history books assign them.  Laborers in these medieval cities earned a
living wage.  Many cities had an 8-hour workday.



Florence in 1336 had 90,000 inhabitants.  Some 8 to 10,000 boys and girls
(yes girls) attended primary schools and there were 600 students in four
universities.  The city boasted 30 hospitals with over 1000 beds.



Indeed, Kropotkin writes, "the more we learn about the medieval city, the
more we are convinced that at no time has labor enjoyed such conditions of
prosperity and such respect as when city life stood at its highest."



Mutual Aid is rarely read today.  No one remembers Petr Kropotkin.  But his
message and his empirical evidence, that cooperation, not competition, is
the driving force behind natural selection, that decentralization is
superior to centralization in both governance and economies and that mutual
aid and social cohesion should be encouraged over massive social inequity
and the exaltation of the individual over society is as relevant to the
central debates of our time as it was to the debates of his time.



On the anniversary of Kropotkin's death it would be salutary for the world
to rediscover his remarkable writings, all of which are freely available
online, and revisit his philosophy.



David Morris is co-founder and vice president of the Institute for Local
Self Reliance in Minneapolis, Minn., and director of its New Rules project.

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