Well, but then why not call it by its name and call it direct democracy instead of anarchy? In the 21st century we even have a realistic technological chance to make that happen. After all, there is power / might and decisions to be managed, as you are admitting. And what would then be a correct label for the current political organization of the world, if not 'Anarchy' (no-rule)? No-rule and collective decision making (I assume this includes collective enforcement of the rules) are not the same. So we need to call one anarchy and another direct democracy.anarchism is not about people just doing what they want without rules, but collective decision making between equals. — boethius
Well, but then why not call it by its name and call it direct democracy instead of anarchy? — TheArchitectOfTheGods
After all, there is power / might and decisions to be managed, as you are admitting. — TheArchitectOfTheGods
And what would then be a correct label for the current political organization of the world, if not 'Anarchy' (no-rule)? No-rule and collective decision making (I assume this includes collective enforcement of the rules) are not the same. — TheArchitectOfTheGods
The question “Which anarchist proposes this formula?“. — NOS4A2
I am talking about the kind of socialism that Marx and Engels propounded that sees the state as, in effect, an executive committee for the management of the affairs of the bourgeoisie, and the disappearance of which is a necessary step to reach the final goal of human freedom. — jkg20
People can have property under socialism and anarchism, that I understand, after all, who would want to share my toothbrush with me? So perhaps we need to distinguish also between what we might call personal property, on the one hand, and private property on the other. — jkg20
The distinction is a little difficult to define, particularly in boundary cases, but for a socialist the key idea would be that with the idea of private property comes the idea of private ownership of the means of production in a society, which includes arable land as much as it does nuclear power plants, and it is private ownership of those means of production that is anathematic to socialism. — jkg20
From what you say, private ownerhip of means of production is compatible with anarchism. — jkg20
However, since the so called left wing of any movement covers a much broader church than the right wing, I wonder if there is room within anarchism for the rejection of the principle of private property as well? Or is it on that specific point that you think we really boil down to the essential difference between socialism and all forms of anarchism? — jkg20
Yes, so my question in the context of how ↪TheArchitectOfTheGods was using "government", so answering my question would have required addressing the meaning of the word as relevant to my question and used by Bukanin, and not just the meaning in English in the 19th century but also in Russian.
The difference between "state power" and an "anarchist collective power of political equals" is that state power [...] is coercive, whereas anarchist power is not coercive. — boethius
Just as an example, in such a society, how exactly would a murderer be punished if not by coercion of the collective power? The murderer, even if he knows he is guilty and was proven to be guilty, does not want to go to jail, much less receive a death penalty. How does the collective anarchy enforce a punishment here if not by coercion?It is the coercive nature of the state that anarchists have issue with, not any of it's legitimate functions. Statist argue that the legitimate functions of the state cannot be carried out without the coercive nature of the state, whereas anarchists argue there is another way to get things done — boethius
However, the issue of using the failure of states to competently organize to solve problems (as we see with Coronavirus, over fishing, global warming, soil depletion, famines, poverty, on-top of the preventable wars) anarchists would argue is a failure precisely due to the corrupt nature of the state. — boethius
Thank you for these explanations, appreciated. — TheArchitectOfTheGods
When you take a starting point at Weber's definition of relative Power as the probability (chance) to achieve ones own will even against the resistance of others, regardless of the underlying causes of this probability, then it is hard to see how Power could exist without a means of being enforced / coerced. Logically, a power that cannot be enforced is not a power at all, but I am happy to hear further arguments to the contrary. — TheArchitectOfTheGods
Just as an example, in such a society, how exactly would a murderer be punished if not by coercion of the collective power? — TheArchitectOfTheGods
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