Anarchism and Herbert Spencer
The discussion in regard
to anarchism, as it has appeared in its various forms of expression
from the daily paper to the President’s message, has passed through
a somewhat hysterical stage. It seems to take for granted that some
new crisis has come in the world of thought and action, and that
public safety demands that drastic measures be taken for the annihilation
of the anarchists and of anarchism. Before it is decided to cut
him off from the earth it might be well to see who he is and where
he is to be found so that means may be used commensurate with the
task, for it may appear that a large number of people, many of them
of considerable standing, would be involved in the proposed destruction.
For many years Herbert Spencer was,
perhaps, the most influential among the English philosophers. His
teachings are the essential doctrines of anarchism, and all his
followers are logical anarchists. To make this evident one need
only compare the writings of an anarchist thinker, such as Bakounine,
with those of the great English individualist.
It gives us a fair conception of the
relation of the two systems if we compare their ideas of God, of
government and of law. The anarchist argues that there is no God
whose will controls the world of men and matter. Reversing Robespierre’s
sentiment, “If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent
him,” Bakounine says: “If God existed it would be necessary to abolish
him.” “If God is, then man is a slave; now, man can and must be
free; then, God does not exist.” The anarchist holds that there
is no will above that of the individual else man is a slave. Over
against this, Herbert Spencer maintains that God is the unknowable,
and between Spencer’s absentee God and none at all there is little
choice.
In regard to the nature of law, the
systems are in cordial agreement. Through men and matter there run
certain universal, inevitable laws. They are the constitution of
man and the universe. Unmodified by any controlling will, these
laws are absolute and men have no alternative but to conform to
them or perish. As both systems are materialistic, these universal
laws are physical in kind. Immortal spirit there is none either
above the earth or in it. Spencer argues that man’s law of progress
is the “survival of the fittest,” and while the anarchist is more
optimistic in regard to the nature of man, both agree that competition
is the only natural law among men. Interference with the working
of this law can result only in disaster. This leads us to consider
the third point, the government. In making the state only a physical
organism, Spencer denied that it had any mind, and, consequently,
any will. As government is the expression of the will of the state,
and as the state had no will, there is no place for government.
He says that governments exist to-day as an incident of evil conditions,
such as war and other like crimes against society, but as these
pass away governments shall likewise cease to exist. “Be it or be
it not true,” says Spencer, “that man is shapen in iniquity and
conceived in sin, it is unquestionably true that government is begotten
of aggression and by aggression.”
This expresses the faith of the anarchist.
He is opposed to government because he claims that it produces disorder.
There is no will above the will of the individual, so that any attempt
to govern is the attempt of one individual or a number of them combined
to impose their individual will on others. If Herbert Spencer is
right in his position, so is the anarchist. It is worth remembering
that we are dealing with a philosophy of social life, and not simply
with a few criminals.
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