[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: John's: In anarchy -everyone responsible
Attila T. Hun wrote:
> on or about 970204:2343 jim bell <[email protected]> said:
> +At 09:05 PM 2/4/97 +0000, Attila T. Hun wrote:
> +> In a "popular" anarchy, Jim Bell's assassination politics make
> +> perfectly good sense; but, a "popular" anarchy is not an _anarchy_.
> +I guess I don't understand the distinction you are trying to make,
> +between a "popular anarchy" and an "anarchy." Maybe you were trying
> +to distinguish between "dictatorship of the few (or one)" and
> +"dictatorship of the many (perhaps a majority)" but it didn't come out
> +very understandably. Put simply, "anarchy is not the lack of order.
> +It is the lack of _orders_."
> disagree. pure anarchy is not the lack of "orders" --pure anarchy
> implies that everyone is imbued with that perfect sense of responsibility.
I don't know where these implications come from. Start with a primitive
example, such as animals in the wild. Is that a perfect anarchy?
Where do the differences come in for humans? Are they neo-religious
perceptions, which could never find universal agreement? Or are they
set in stone, in immutable, universal laws?