430 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
430 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
non serviam #13
|
|
***************
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contents: Editor's Word
|
|
S.E. Parker: Preface
|
|
John C. Smith: Last and First Words
|
|
Frank Jordan: In Praise of Max
|
|
Paul Rowlandson: Stirner, Youth and Tradition
|
|
|
|
***********************************************************************
|
|
|
|
Editor's Word
|
|
_____________
|
|
|
|
This issue of Non Serviam is an end and a beginning. This issue
|
|
(#13), and issue 14, do together contain the last issue of Sid Parker's
|
|
"Ego", whose place in the world is now taken over by Non Serviam, and
|
|
it is also a proper demarcation of the establishing of Stirner in
|
|
Cyberspace. As you will see from Sid's preface below, this is the 150th
|
|
year that Der Einzige und Sein Eigentum has existed. It is also one of
|
|
the first years that the English version of the book is available
|
|
electronically [FTP etext.archive.umich.edu, and change directory to
|
|
/Pub/Politics/Non.Serviam].
|
|
The texts below are invited "appreciations" of Stirner's book,
|
|
written for the commemorative issue of "Ego". If it appeals to you,
|
|
you might be interested in knowing that Sid Parker will not lay off
|
|
totally, but continue with some 1-2 A4 page "viewsletters", and will
|
|
send these to interested persons writing to him at 19 St. Stephen's
|
|
Gardens, London W2 5QU.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Svein Olav
|
|
|
|
____________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
PREFACE
|
|
|
|
S.E. Parker
|
|
|
|
|
|
Although the first edition of the Ego and His Own (Der Einzige und
|
|
Sein Eigenthum) bore the date 1845, it in fact appeared towards the end
|
|
of October 1844. This year is therefore the 150th anniversary of its
|
|
publication.
|
|
|
|
Otto Wigand, its Leipzig Publisher, was well aware that such a work
|
|
might feel the weight of the disapproval of the Saxon Censorship Board
|
|
and resorted to a ruse which he hoped would enable the book to be
|
|
distributed even if the censors condemned it. As soon as the copy he
|
|
was legally obliged to deposit at the Government Office was receipted
|
|
Wigand set about delivering the remaining copies to booksellers so that
|
|
any confiscators would find his warehouse empty. To a large degree he
|
|
succeeded. Nonetheless, the censors still managed to seize 250 copies
|
|
of the 1000 printed. After a few days, however, the confiscation order
|
|
was withdrawn on the grounds that Stirner's book was "too absurd" to
|
|
warrant censorship. In other words, the censors could not understand
|
|
it! The Ego and His Own was also banned in Prussia, Kurkessen and
|
|
Mecklenburg Schwerin, but although these bans were never lifted, this
|
|
did not stop copies being obtained and read by anyone interested.
|
|
|
|
Since then The Ego and His Own has been reprinted many times and
|
|
has been translated into many languages. Throughout its existence it
|
|
has provoked outrage and won admiration. All too often, however, both
|
|
the outraged and the admiring have tried to fit Stirner's views into
|
|
the conceptual imperatives of this or that ideology. He has been
|
|
labelled many things, ranging from anarchist to fascist. No doubt
|
|
passages can be found in his book that appear to lend support to each
|
|
of these extremes, but the more one understands what it is that Stirner
|
|
is _actually_ saying, the less these labels can be fixed. The contributors
|
|
to this commemoration fortunately do not indulge in such a futile game.
|
|
They are content to record their own reactions to The Ego and His Own
|
|
and its value for them.
|
|
|
|
Contributors ...
|
|
|
|
WM. FLYGARE: "This 1/5.6 billionth: Swedish-American. Boston '17-'46.
|
|
Chicago '46-'51. Kyoto '51-the end. BA & MA (philosophy and buddhism)
|
|
plus attempts at music and theatre to learn my inabilities. Drafted into
|
|
English teaching '51-'90. Some minor publications along the way. Highly
|
|
independent ... and dependent, enjoy being alone without loneliness, my
|
|
being remarried ('65), with two daughters (25 and 28), two cats, a
|
|
love-bird, and a plum-tree. Eclectic: atheist in fact, animist in
|
|
fancy, affinity for persons, allergic to people. Own house ('69 at
|
|
last) with a window overlooking 'rooves' onto green hills and a variety
|
|
of skies. Retired to studying, versing, digesting my haps, and being
|
|
glad for my failures-n-good fortune."
|
|
|
|
FRANK JORDAN: "A life-loving, aesthetically minded outsider, passing
|
|
from a 'Nietzschean' into a fully conscious 'Stirnerite'."
|
|
|
|
SVEIN OLAV NYBERG: "Born 1966; PhD student in mathematics; editor of
|
|
Non Serviam; almost as selfish as the two cats that own him; has been
|
|
interested in Stirner for the ten years he has known about him."
|
|
|
|
S.E. PARKER: "Born 1929, Birmingham, England. Now retired after thirty
|
|
three years with British Rail. Has worked his way through the Young
|
|
Communist League (1944-1946), the British Federation of Young
|
|
Co-operators (1946-1947), and virtually all the different varieties of
|
|
anarchism (1947-1982), to emerge as his own man, the penny of conscious
|
|
egoism having finally dropped. Editor and publisher of Minus One/Ego/
|
|
The Egoist/Ego 1963-1994."
|
|
|
|
PAUL ROWLANDSON: "Currently earns a living as a lecturer in a pseudo-
|
|
academic subject at a University College on the North West Frontier of
|
|
the United Kingdom."
|
|
|
|
JOHN C. SMITH: "Needs no introduction."
|
|
|
|
|
|
____________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
LAST AND FIRST WORDS
|
|
|
|
John C. Smith
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Ego and His Own didn't exactly take the world by storm when it
|
|
first appeared in 1844 and hasn't since. But its publication certainly
|
|
caused a stir among the Young Hegelian circle in which the author
|
|
moved. Karl Marx, for one, was so provoked by Stirner's book that he,
|
|
together with Engels, devoted some two thirds of their book, The German
|
|
Ideology, to vilifying Stirner, seeing him as a dangerous challenge to
|
|
their creed of social salvation.
|
|
|
|
In this country it is hardly ever mentioned in polite society. Any
|
|
new edition is largely ignored by literary editors. Yet it is reprinted
|
|
regularly and never lacks readers. Some, like the anarchist Herbert
|
|
Read, for example, have to admit "One book in my youth I have never
|
|
wholly forgotten. To say that it had great influence on me would not be
|
|
correct, for influences are absorbed and become part of one's mind.
|
|
This book refused to be digested - to use our vivid English metaphor:
|
|
it stuck in the gizzard, and has been in that uncomfortable position
|
|
ever since. I refer to Max Stirner's Der Einzige und Sein Eigentum, The
|
|
Ego and His Own as it was called in the English translation, published
|
|
in 1913." (The Contrary Experience)
|
|
|
|
The main religio-political ideologies, Christianity and Marxism,
|
|
have failed to provide an answer to the world's ills. The human self-
|
|
ishness they were meant to triumph over has triumphed over them.
|
|
|
|
Christianity, which promised individual salvation (freedom from the
|
|
sin of selfishness) and brotherhood, has lost out to commerce. Shopping
|
|
has replaced going to church. New temples, indoor shopping malls which
|
|
are _usually_ ugly and unnecessary, have sprung up all over Britain.
|
|
The early Christian churches at least served a useful communal purpose
|
|
and were beautiful to look at.
|
|
|
|
In the Soviet Union the very understandable desire for personal
|
|
reward undermined and eventually overthrew the state socialist system.
|
|
There have been the inevitable attempts to explain this away by Marxist
|
|
purists asserting, as did G.K. Chesterton about Christianity, that
|
|
Marxism has not failed because it has never been tried. But, of course,
|
|
it _was_ tried, the theories that were espoused in Russia before the
|
|
1917 Revolution being more or less the same as what these apologists
|
|
would call "real socialism."
|
|
|
|
It need hardly be said that the lesser religions of anarchism and
|
|
national socialism have also failed to deliver the goods. Anarchism,
|
|
offering individual autonomy and group solidarity, is also concerned
|
|
with a perfect society free from the sin of selfishness. It is,
|
|
ostensibly, a morally purer religion than either Marxism or national
|
|
socialism since anarchists reject, in theory, involvement in existing
|
|
political and social structures. They also complicate matters by
|
|
insisting on self rule for the individual. This has ensured that
|
|
anarchism has never enjoyed a mass following.
|
|
|
|
Except for the fact that national socialism originated as a scheme
|
|
for the salvation of white Europeans it is, as Roger Scruton has
|
|
pointed out, very similar to Marxist socialism. Its famous promoter,
|
|
Adolph Hitler, was more than a bit bonkers. This, along with a similar
|
|
obsession with a selfishness-free society, ensured that it has suffered
|
|
the same fate as that of Marxism.
|
|
|
|
If the _collectivist_ panaceas have been tried and seriously found
|
|
wanting, what about the 'individualist' answers? Of these,
|
|
existentialism of the kind propounded by Jean-Paul Sartre in his
|
|
earlier, non-political phase appears to have the most in common with
|
|
Stirner's ideas. Sartre rejected the Christian God and the Hegelian
|
|
Absolute, his central doctrine being that man is what he makes of
|
|
himself and "an insistence on the actual _existence_ of the individual
|
|
as the basic and important fact instead of a reliance on theories and
|
|
abstractions." (Readers' Companion To World Literature)
|
|
|
|
As Stirner himself was more concerned with the projectionist rather
|
|
than what was projected he would not have found too much to disagree
|
|
with in this, but a closer examination of Sartre's position reveals
|
|
that he and Stirner are worlds apart. For instance, Stirner confidently
|
|
abandoned God whereas Sartre found it "extremely embarrassing that God
|
|
does not exist ... man is in consequence forlorn, for he cannot find
|
|
anything to depend on either within or outside himself."
|
|
(Existentialism and Humanism)
|
|
|
|
Sartre later sought to overcome this "embarrassing" forlornness by
|
|
committing himself to the collectivism of Marxism while still clinging
|
|
to the shell of his individualist existentialism. He hovered
|
|
uncertainly between the two for the rest of his life. Stirner never
|
|
made this mistake. He stubbornly, famously and usefully refused to be
|
|
anything other than himself.
|
|
|
|
The fact is, as Stirner himself could have pointed out, all of the
|
|
foregoing answers are based on a flawed analysis - the lack of
|
|
understanding of the difference between "egoistic" and "egotistic".
|
|
Recently, Brian Walden observed that the utopian mentality reveals a
|
|
faulty perception of individuality. And more recently Matt Ridley
|
|
commented that most utopians are hopelessly naive about human nature:
|
|
"I believe that ... human beings are and always have been driven by
|
|
three cardinal ambitions - for wealth, for reputation and for status -
|
|
and that you ignore such facts at your peril. Look no further than
|
|
Russia for proof. Marxism fails precisely because it indulges a fantasy
|
|
that human beings will abandon these three and replace them with the
|
|
greatest good of the greatest number."
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, Ridley has left out something important. It is the
|
|
perennial appetite for self-delusion - to be other than what you are -
|
|
that mostly fuel these power drives. Most people, as Nigella Lawson
|
|
observes, "need to escape the resented meagreness of their own
|
|
existence ... They want magic and mysticism. They want to have others -
|
|
other worlds, other beings - dictate what is, what they are and not to
|
|
have any responsibility for themselves." Given these facts it is not
|
|
therefore surprising that Max Stirner's impassioned defence and
|
|
celebration of _his_ individuality is unique. Based as it is on the
|
|
revolutionary stance that self interest is the basis of _all_ human
|
|
endeavour The Ego and His Own may not be that last word on the subject
|
|
of human selfishness, but it contains some essential first words
|
|
without which we would be even more in the dark than we are.
|
|
|
|
|
|
____________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
IN PRAISE OF MAX
|
|
|
|
Frank Jordan
|
|
|
|
|
|
What is arguably the most iconoclastic work of philosophy ever
|
|
written was published in the year 1844. This work was entitled The Ego
|
|
and His Own (In original German: Der Einzige und Sein Eigenthum). The
|
|
author of this seminal work called himself Max Stirner, which was a
|
|
pseudonym of Johann Caspar Schmidt. Stirner was a member of the Young
|
|
Hegelians, but the ideas he put forward in Der Einzige, his one major
|
|
work, easily outstripped and went far beyond anything that his friends
|
|
and contemporaries had to say in their criticisms of the various
|
|
idealistic trends in society, as they understood it.
|
|
|
|
Whether the subject be God, Spirit, Family, Morality, The People,
|
|
The State, and so on, all of these Stirner ruthlessly and logically
|
|
breaks down and shows they are nothing more than idealistic 'spooks,'
|
|
falsely created in substitution for the true needs of the ego, and
|
|
usually interpreted in altruistic fashion. Only Nietzsche, in his many
|
|
writings, approaches anywhere near the same 'dizzying' extremes and
|
|
idol-smashing that is a constant theme in Stirner's book. The main
|
|
difference between the two thinkers, I believe, is that Stirner's book
|
|
is a complete statement, consistent within itself, whereas Nietzsche's
|
|
insights have to be dug out from beneath his overall works, and they
|
|
are usually aphoristic in style and content.
|
|
|
|
The impact of Stirner's book provoked a most virulent attack
|
|
against it by no less a thinker than Karl Marx, along with Engels. In
|
|
their massive work, The German Ideology, they devoted two thirds of it
|
|
to attacking line by line, and blow by blow, Stirner's book. They
|
|
constantly refer to him as 'Saint Max', 'Don Quixote', and other rather
|
|
absurd appellations, all to try to exorcise him and his book. But, in
|
|
the end, they fail miserably, after having tried every intellectual
|
|
trick they had in their mental store, hoping to promote Marxist
|
|
socialism and discredit Stirner's pure egoism.
|
|
|
|
Various theorists have proven, quite consistently, that Marxism as
|
|
it eventually developed would not have been possible without Marx and
|
|
Engels psychologically reacting against the egoistic philosophy of
|
|
Stirner in the way that they did. As recent history shows, Marxism can
|
|
now be seen as a failed attempt at trying to mould the individual
|
|
psyche into a social-procrustrean bed of ideology.
|
|
|
|
Beside the effect Stirner had on Marxism, various other thinkers
|
|
and theorists have tried to adapt the views expressed in Der Einzige to
|
|
bolster their own causes. For examples: anarchists, fascists
|
|
(especially the case of Mussolini), the situationists of the swinging
|
|
Sixties, surrealistic and dadaistic artists like Max Ernst,
|
|
psychologists like Erich Fromm. Even the very popular science fiction
|
|
trilogy of Wilson and Shea called Illuminatus acknowledges a great debt
|
|
to Stirner throughout the plot. And we must not forget the
|
|
existentialist tag Stirner has been given!
|
|
|
|
Ultimately, of course, despite the diverse thinkers who are
|
|
attracted to, and 'turned on', by Stirner, the uniqueness of The Ego
|
|
and His Own stands like a lone mountain which cannot be levelled down
|
|
to fulfil some else's rather shallow and hollow-sounding ideals.
|
|
|
|
As long as men can, and will, think and act for themselves there
|
|
will always be a place for Max Stirner's uplifting and stirring book.
|
|
His work speaks from the position of a _unique one_ to all other
|
|
receptive _unique ones_.
|
|
|
|
I thank you, Max Stirner.
|
|
|
|
|
|
____________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
STIRNER, YOUTH AND TRADITION
|
|
|
|
Paul Rowlandson
|
|
|
|
|
|
Young people are subject to the psychological malady of 'militant
|
|
enthusiasm'. It strikes between the ages of 16 and 25, the time of life
|
|
when we are most keen to sacrifice our all for a Cause, the particular
|
|
cause being determined by the fashionable enthusiasms of the day. That
|
|
is why young men are useful in armies - they are easily fired up to go
|
|
over the top. They are useful too, in religious organizations, because
|
|
they will go out and proselytize in the rain, or sign away their lives
|
|
to religious orders.
|
|
|
|
Stirner described this period, when the boy has become a youth:
|
|
"One must obey God rather than man ... from this high stand-point
|
|
everything 'earthly' recedes into contemptible remoteness; for the
|
|
stand-point is the heavenly."
|
|
|
|
As a youth in the late 60s and early 70s I was influenced by the
|
|
passions of the time.
|
|
|
|
As a child I was packed off to the fire and brimstone "washed in
|
|
the blood of the Lamb" Congregational church in Oak Vale, Liverpool, by
|
|
my parents, who themselves never went to a church except for weddings
|
|
and funerals.
|
|
|
|
I remember a visiting preacher throttling a live chicken in the
|
|
pulpit to make a point I had long forgotten. It was a church parade day
|
|
and I was a member of the church scout troop, which I hated. Some of
|
|
the Church elders must have thought that the preacher had overdone it
|
|
because I remember we were asked by some of them what we thought of the
|
|
chicken-throttling. I can't remember being upset by it, which is
|
|
surprising. It was shortly after this incident that I was sent off to
|
|
the local Anglican church for some civilized religion.
|
|
|
|
I wasted a lot of time during my school years by my involvement
|
|
with CND, the Young Communist League, the Syndicalist Workers
|
|
Federation, and other radical organisations. I took part in various
|
|
silly demonstrations, including the then obligatory Aldermaston marches
|
|
and some sort of anti-Vietnam war demo from Hyde Park to Trafalgar
|
|
Square.
|
|
|
|
Most of my reading was of the radical sort - Marx, Alexander
|
|
Berkman, Proudhon, Anarchy magazine, Direct Action, Solidarity, and
|
|
such. I left school with two 'O' levels as a result.
|
|
|
|
The young mind is bombarded by other people's thoughts. From
|
|
childhood to adolescence we absorb ideas and viewpoints from other
|
|
people, whether in person, through print, or through radio and
|
|
television. The selection of what goes in is more or less random,
|
|
within certain limits, varying according to time, culture and
|
|
geography.
|
|
|
|
Christianity was perhaps the major ingredient in my case, as it was
|
|
(and still is, though less so) with most English youths.
|
|
|
|
It is an easy thing for an uninformed mind to contrast the
|
|
"idealism" of Christianity with the "injustices" of the world. I
|
|
remember thinking how like Christianity Marxism was, and how
|
|
hypocritical of Christian society to deny us the benefits of communism.
|
|
|
|
However, there was a growing realisation of a divergence of
|
|
interests, an awareness that I had reservations and doubts about the
|
|
activities and enthusiasms with which I was then engaged. For example,
|
|
as a teenager I was a pirate radio enthusiast, which I found hard to
|
|
reconcile with my anarcho-communist beliefs. There were several other
|
|
discrepancies. I was a strange sort of anarchist for I always had a
|
|
high regard for the Police, and frequently found myself uncomfortable
|
|
with my comrades' description of them as 'pigs'.
|
|
|
|
I have always been an enthusiast for quirky or idiosyncratic
|
|
publications. As a youth I favoured the iconoclastic. As an older man I
|
|
now seek the reactionary, the traditional, the ultra conservative
|
|
publications. Revolutions pleased me then, Tradition pleases me now.
|
|
|
|
The most unusual journal I ever came across was Minus One (the
|
|
precursor of Ego - Ed). I subscribed immediately. Here was something
|
|
different.
|
|
|
|
I very soon thereafter acquired from Minus One a copy of the
|
|
Libertarian Book Club 1963 edition of The Ego and His Own. Even the
|
|
physical attributes of the book are extraordinary. It is a substantial
|
|
book, printed on high quality paper, bound in signatures, with a plain
|
|
thick green cover, and a plain typeface. It looks and feels a _serious_
|
|
book.
|
|
|
|
My reading of The Ego and His Own had a powerful and continuing
|
|
influence. Here was a mind I connected with straight away. Its effect
|
|
was that of a mental spring cleaning. The "wheels in the head", the
|
|
ideas and opinions which I had accumulated, lost their power, although,
|
|
as Stirner says, "Daily experience confirms the truth that the
|
|
understanding may have renounced a thing many years before the heart
|
|
has ceased to beat for it." Nevertheless, the effect was that I now
|
|
possessed the wheels in the head rather than them possessing me.
|
|
|
|
Stirner takes no hostages. The demolition is thorough: "the Good
|
|
cause, God's cause, the cause of mankind, of truth, of freedom, of
|
|
humanity, of justice, my people, my prince, my fatherland, even the
|
|
cause of Mind, and a thousand other causes."
|
|
|
|
For a time I was cause-less, but eventually started restocking. I
|
|
acquired some causes of my own, but this time they belonged to me. I
|
|
could run with them or discard them as I wished.
|
|
|
|
It is probably as difficult to go without causes as it is to do
|
|
without interests. A cause is, after all, simply a compelling interest
|
|
grown large. But one of the benefits derived from reading Stirner is
|
|
the ability to prevent their possession of their owner. My final
|
|
authority is myself.
|
|
|
|
There are occasions in life we think of as watersheds. Nothing is
|
|
ever quite the same again. My discovery of The Ego and His Own was such
|
|
an event. It became impossible to think again in the way I thought
|
|
before I read the book. There is no other book like it.
|
|
|
|
Pope John Paul II once commented that the faithful have a right not
|
|
to be disturbed by the speculations of the so-called radical
|
|
theologians. Should the man or woman in the street be exposed to Max
|
|
Stirner? I think not. People will go to almost any lengths to avoid
|
|
thinking for themselves. The Ego and His Own would no doubt unhinge
|
|
many of them, which might make life more difficult for the rest of us.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately there appears to be a small elite which can absorb and
|
|
benefit from Stirner without going off the rails - those who can see
|
|
through not just the Emperor's new clothes but the old ones as well.
|
|
|