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Full Idea
I begin with the ontological premise that the state is a limitation on human existence. I am against the state, law, bureaucracy, and capital. I see anarchism as the only desirable way of organising, politically. ...Its political form is federalist.
Gist of Idea
The state, law, bureaucracy and capital are limitations on life, so I prefer federalist anarchism
Source
Simon Critchley (Impossible Objects: interviews [2012], 3)
Book Ref
Critchley,Simon: 'Impossible Objects: interviews' [Politty 2012], p.50
A Reaction
Hm. Some sympathy, but caution. All systems, even federalist anarchism, are limitations on our lives, so which limitations do we prefer? The law aspires to a calm egalitarian neutrality, which seems promising to me.
Related Idea
Idea 20452 Anarchism used to be libertarian (especially for sexuality), but now concerns responsibility [Critchley]
20446 | Philosophy begins in disappointment, notably in religion and politics [Critchley] |
20448 | Phenomenology uncovers and redescribes the pre-theoretical layer of life [Critchley] |
20449 | Science gives us an excessively theoretical view of life [Critchley] |
20447 | The problems is not justifying ethics, but motivating it. Why should a self seek its good? [Critchley] |
20452 | Anarchism used to be libertarian (especially for sexuality), but now concerns responsibility [Critchley] |
20450 | The state, law, bureaucracy and capital are limitations on life, so I prefer federalist anarchism [Critchley] |
20451 | Belief that humans are wicked leads to authoritarian politics [Critchley] |
20455 | Philosophy really got started as the rival mode of discourse to tragedy [Critchley] |
20454 | Wallace Stevens is the greatest philosophical poet of the twentieth century in English [Critchley] |
20456 | Interesting art is always organised around ethical demands [Critchley] |