131 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
131 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
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On Revisiting "Saint Max"
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by Sidney Parker
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Increasing academic attention to the philosophy of Max Stirner has
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not meant any greater accuracy in interpretation. A case in point is
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an essay by Kathy E. Ferguson which appeared in a recent issue of
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the philosophical review IDEALISTIC STUDIES [1] entitled "Saint Max
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revisited". Ms Ferguson makes some perceptive remarks. She writes of
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Stirner's view of the self as being "not a substantive thing .... but
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rather a process" which cannot be confined within any net of concepts
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or categorical imperatives. It is "an unbroken unity of temporal
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experience that is ontologically prior to any essence later attributed
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to [it] .... or any role, function or belief that [it] .... might
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embrace." Stirner, she says, calls "the irreducible, temporal,
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concrete individual self .... the Unique One; the Unique One is both
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nothing, in the sense of having no predicate affixed to it as a
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defining essence, and everything, in that it is the source of the
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creative power which endows the whole of reality with meaning."
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More's the pity then that these suggestive insights are followed
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by a whole series of misinterpretations os Stirner's ideas. Some of
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these have their origin in that hoary old spook "the human community
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as a whole", others in what appears to be a sheer inability to grasp
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what Stirner's egoism is about. Here are a few examples.
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Ferguson considers that Stirner was an anarchist. As evidence for
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this belief she cites John Carroll's "Break Out From The Crystal
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Palace" and John P. Clark's "Max Stirner's Egoism". Carroll's
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conception of an anarchist, however, embraces not only Stirner but
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also Nietzsche (who called anarchists "decadents" and blood-suckers)
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and Dostoyevsky, although he admits that the latter's anarchism is
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"equivocal".
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As for Clark, he certainly regards Stirner as an anarchist and
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claims that Stirner's "ideal society is the union of egoists, in
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which peaceful egoistic competition would replace the state and
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society" (a piece of doubtful extrapolation). However, he does not
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appear to be very convinced by his own claim for he comments that
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"Stirner's position is a form of anarchism; yet a greatly inadequate
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form" because "he opposes domination of the ego by the state, but
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advises people to seek to dominate others in any other way they can
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manage. Ultimately, might makes right." Since Clark defines
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anarchism as being opposed to _all_ domination of man by man (not to
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mention the domination of "nature" by human beings) it is clear that
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Stirner's "anarchism" is not "greatly inadequate" but, given his
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own definition, _not_anarchism_at_all_.
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It can be seen, therefore, that Ferguson's effort to include
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Stirner in the anarchist tradition is not very plausible. Stirner
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did not claim to be an anarchist. Indeed, the one anarchist
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theoretician with whose writings he was familiar, Proudhon, is one
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of his favourite critical targets. Undoubtedly, there are some
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parallels between certain of Stirner's views and those of the
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anarchists, but, as I discovered after many years of trying to make
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the two fit, in the last analysis they do not and cannot. Anarchism
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is basically a theory of _renunciation_ like Christianity:
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domination is _evil_ and for "true" relations between individuals to
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prevail such a _sin_ must not be committed. Stirner's philosophy has
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nothing against domination of another if that is within my power and
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in my interest. There are no "sacred principles" in conscious egoism
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- not even anarchist ones ....
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Ferguson also falls victim to a common mistake made by
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commentators on Stirner: that of confusing the account he gives of
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ideas he is opposing with his own views. She writes that Stirner
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"speaks with great disdain of .... commodity relations" and gives
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as an example a passage in THE EGO AND HIS OWN containing the words
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"the poor man _needs_the_rich_, the rich the poor .... So no one
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needs another as a person, but needs him as a giver." What she
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ignores is that this passage occurs in a chapter in which Stirner is
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_describing_ the _socialist_ case before subjecting it to his
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piercing criticism. It is not possible, therefore, to deduce from
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this passage that it reflects his "disdain" for "commodity
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relations", any more than it is possible to deduce from his poetic
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description of the argument from design that he believes in a god.
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Ferguson claims that Stirner does not recognize the "sociality" of
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human being and that "anthropologically and psychologically, it must
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be acknowledged that human being are born into groups." But Stirner
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quite clearly _does_ acknowledge this fact. "Not isolation", he
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writes, "or being alone, but society is man's original state ....
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Society is our state of nature." To become one's own it is necessary
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to dissolve this original state of society, as the child does when
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it prefers the company of its playmates to its former "intimate
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conjunction" with its mother. It is not, as Ferguson contends, "our
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connection with others" that "provides us with our initial
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self-definition", but our awareness of _contrast_ to them, our
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consciousness of being _separate_ individuals. In other words,
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"self-definition" is a product of _individuation_, not
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_socialization_.
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Nor is Stirner an advocate of "the solitary" as she implies. Both
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in THE EGO AND HIS OWN and his REPLY TO CRITICS he rejects such an
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interpretation of his ideas. Nor is he a moralist - he is an
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amoralist. Presenting as evidence for his belief in "moral choice"
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an erroneous statement by John Carroll will not do. Nor does he
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reject "all socially (sic) acquired knowledge" if by that is meant
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"culture" (acquired by individuals, not by "society"). On the
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contrary, he states "_I_ receive with thanks what the centuries of
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culture have acquired for me."
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Ferguson questions why the conscious egoist should not "wish to be
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free" from ownness. Why not "take a leap of faith into something
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like Christianity as did St Augustine or Kierkegaard?" Precisely
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because ownness is the _condition_ for what she calls "the ontology
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of the self as process" - that is, ownness is _me_ possessing _me_.
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Were I to abandon it by committing myself to the nonsense of
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Christianity, this would not be _my_ self, but a "redeemed self"
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shaped according to an image prescribed by others.
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In her concluding remark Ferguson backs away from the challenge of
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Stirner's egoism. "Ownness is not a sufficient base for human life,"
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she claims, because "authentic individual life requires that we have
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ties to others." She admits that such ties can become stifling and
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that Stirner sees this danger, but contends that "he does not see
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the necessity or possibility of a liberating sociality." She thus
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ends up indulging in that half-this and half-that waffle that
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Stirner so unerringly dissected 140 years ago. Once one begins to
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think in terms of "authentic individual life" then that
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"authenticity" has to be distinguished from that "inauthentic". Once
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it is defined one is once again subjected to that "rule of concepts"
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that Stirner is so "startling acute" in rejecting. "Liberating
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sociality" based upon "authenticity" is simply a verbalism
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disguising the intent on deciding our lives for us. It is a
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philosophical confidence trick for which no conscious egoist will
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fall.
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[1] Vol XII, No. 3, 1982
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