Sunday, October 20, 2013

Stirner vs. Nietzsche

Compared to N, Max Stirner was far less talented a writer but he was also, in a nutshell, far less mad.

He was more consistently a frank amoralist and less - though not quite to no extent - a would-be prophet of a new morality for a new society and even a new humanity.

His egoism was not an ethical egoism.

Nor, for that matter, a rational or economic egoism.

Nor even, strictly, a psychological egoism.

It seems, in the end, he was only defending the sort of egoism to which humans are generally and spontaneously given - the sort I have before referred to as "empirical egoism."

If defending is truly what he was doing.

On the other hand, the anarchist ideal of a society without coercion is an absurd utopia.

Logically or metaphysically possible though it is alleged to be -  as the Christian philosophers say a world of humans who in complete and uncoerced freedom always choose to do right is logically or metaphysically possible - belief in it and pursuit of it are even more fantastic than the delusions S attacks.

And equally fantastic is a society without a rich elaboration of pious fraud in reciprocal support with machinery of coercion.

In truth, for normal humans no such world is possible, at all.

No more than a world in which chickens in summertime do Shakespeare in the Park is possible for normal chickens.

But maybe it would be possible for chickens from outer space.

Yes, that was a joke. 

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