Pagey said:
I'm curious as to what people's opinions on this are. I tend to agree with Hobbes on this subject, ie. that in the state of nature - where each individual is entirely free to do what he pleases - humans are incapable of controlling their urges and violence would be at the center of their lives, some kind of institutionalised society thus being necessary for our survival.
Well, you might want to take into account the context in which Hobbes was writing. He authored the
Leviathan during the English civil war, a period when many Protestant factions were at war, each struggling to establish an English theocracy. Of course he would have developed a dismal view of human nature and have been desperate to plot out a path to curtail its ills. Since Hobbes' argument is rooted in a particular, substantive conception of human nature, it's not too convincing if you don't share his view on the matter.
in the state of nature - where each individual is entirely free to do what he pleases - humans are incapable of controlling their urges and violence would be at the center of their lives, some kind of institutionalised society thus being necessary for our survival.
But this 'state of nature' is not a literal condition in which humans existed; rather, it is a hypothetical scenario based on Hobbes' idea of human nature that stands at odd with evidence describing the lives of paleolithic tribes (this is not to say that tribal warfare doesn't exist). The violence that follows 'state failure' (eg, Somalia) doesn't provide relevant evidence either, as such dynamics emerge from contexts of civil war and involve individuals who were shaped to rely on state administration now reckoning with its sudden absence (and combatants from a civil war channeling their violent tactics toward naked self-interest).
history seems to have taught us that as soon as communities become sizable enough, some kind of political format is necessary.
Empirically, history has just shown us that states (and state-like organizations) cooccur with large increases in size and density of population and intensity of interaction. It's a bit of a leap to argue that these states were (and are)
necessary to maintain order. Causally, these state were not established to effect order but rather to consolidate the power of elites who held the greatest military might (vis-a-vis competing nobles).
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I think that contemporary, complex and technological anarchic societies would be possible, but it would require a concerted effort by numerous individuals working toward that goal. I think that internalization of social norms does most of the work toward curtailing aggression and disorder. If the police disappeared instantly, would you embark on a career of robbery (yes, I know I'm running close to relying on a conception of human nature just as Hobbes does)? In a hypothetical anarchist society, enforcement of social norms would need to be implemented via radically decentralized processes, and use of violence would need be minimized and employed with extreme care and reluctance.
It
is indeed possible for large, complex organizations to organize themselves without recourse to coercive hierarchy--the existence of cooperative economic firms attests to such. These hypothetical anarchists would face daunting challenges though: care would need be taken to set up appropriate tactics and organizations to resolve conflict non-violently. I imagine this taking a variety of shapes depending on the organizations and issues at hand, including a diverse set of democratic, consensus based, and rotating representative systems. Appropriate relations of federation would also need to be established, mitigating the incidence of irreconcilable differences. Now how do we get from here to there? Of that, I'm not sure...
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You might want to check out the work of Norbert Elias. In
The Civilizing Process, Elias argues that the development of modern cities and political centralization of the means of violence cooccurred with a transformation in the dispositions and manners of individuals, namely an internalization and suppression of aggressive urges. He thinks that this socio-structural change set individuals in far denser relationships of interdependence, in turn shaping the psyches of individual citizens set in these relations (at the level of unconscious dynamics) in a way that renders them congruent with life in the city. The fact that armed robberies that often lead to death are no longer routine attests to this. Whether or not you buy his argument, it's a whole lot more nuanced than Hobbes' writings on the matter.
ebola
(cool topic!)