Politic Anarchy
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Anarchy means the absence of coercion, not the absence of order. The mistaken notion that anarchy is synonymous with chaos became popular between the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, through the media and advertising employers, kept by political and religious institutions. During this period, due to the high degree of organization of workers segments, libertarian background, there were numerous anti-anarchist campaign.
Another misconception is commonplace to consider anarchy as the absence of solidarity ties (indifference) among men. In the absence of order - an idea foreign to anarchist principles - is given the name of "anomie."
Turning the concept of anarchism to the consolidation of its ideals, there is a series of debates on the most appropriate way to achieve and maintain an anarchic society. They pass along whether or not the existence of a moral anarchist, a platform organizational issues concerning the determinism of human nature, educational standards and technical implications, scientific, and social policies of the post-revolution. In this sense, each strand of anarchism has a line of understanding, analysis, action and building specific policy, but all bound by the basic ideals of Anarchism. What really varies according to the theoretical emphases are operational.
Well-known Anarchists:
- Anselme Bellegarrigue
- Benjamin Tucker (1854 - 1939), great advocate of individualist anarchism
- Buenaventura Durruti (1896 - 1936), militant anarcho-syndicalist Spanish, perhaps the best known anarchist revolutionary of the twentieth century.
- Élisée Reclus (1830 - 1905), French geographer.
- Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940), anarcho-syndicalist and anarcho-main theoretical feminist
- Errico Malatesta (1853 - 1932), Italian anarchist
- Friedrich Nietzsche - (1844 - 1900), veja niilismo.
- Henry David Thoreau, author of the book called "Civil Disobedience"
- Kate Sharpley - (1895 - 1978)
- Leon Tolstói (1828 - 1910) , Russian writer, Christian anarchist.
- Louise Michel (1833 - 1905), teacher, militant anarchist and communard
- Mary Wollstonecraft - (1759 - 1797), libertarian activist and a precursor of feminism
- Max Stirner (1806 - 1856), individualist anarchist
- Mikhail Bakunin (1814 - 1876),known anarchist socialist
- Noam Chomsky (1928 - ),linguist, supporter of libertarian socialism
- Pierre Joseph Proudhon (1809 - 1865), Considered the 'father' of anarchism and anarchist mutualism.
- Piotr Kropotkin (1842 - 1921), anarquista-comunista
- Ricardo Flores Magón (1873 - 1922),theoretical Mexican see Magonism.
- Rudolf Rocker (1873 - 1958), anarco-sindicalista
- Voltairine de Cleyre (1866 - 1912)
Sheds Anarchism
• Buddhist
• Christian
• Communist
• Crypto
• Feminist
• Specifies
• Girochin
• Individualistic
• Insurrectionary
• Magonista
• Pacifist
• Platformist
• Post-leftist
• Primitivist
• Punk
• Queer
• Unionist
• Social
• Green
• Yamaguishi
• Without adjectives
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dohn121 Level 3 Commenter 2 years ago
Gosh. You certainly know your stuff! Thank you for defining anarchy, as it is misconstrued time and again. Awesome job.