Part IV of Benjamin Tucker’s Instead of a Book, by a Man Too Busy To Write One, on Socialism, is now available in full in the Fair Use Repository‘s online edition of the work. This adds several newly transcribed essays focusing on the meaning of socialism,
arguing that Anarchistic Socialism is the most consistent form of socialism and arguing against the common assumption that socialism is synonymous with State monopoly over production. The essays newly available are:
- Socialism: What It Is, which argues that the word
Socialism
should be proudly claimed, or reclaimed, by Anarchists, in spite of the appropriation of the word by State Socialists. Tucker argues that Anarchistic Socialism is the most consistent form of socialism.
- Armies That Overlap, in which Tucker claims (against the claims of the paper Twentieth Century) that Anarchism and Socialism, properly defined, are neither coextensive nor exclusive; they are two overlapping struggles.
- Socialism and the Lexicographers, which compiles a large list of dictionary and encyclopaedia definitions of the word
Socialism
in response to State Socialists’ recent attempts to use a dictionary definition to read Anarchists out of the socialist movement.
- The Sin of Herbert Spencer, discussing the apparent class bias in Spencer’s later work, which Tucker interprets as attacking only government privilege for the poor, while remaining silent about government privilege for the rich. Tucker also praises the work of Spencer’s English followers, especially Auberon Herbert, as more consistent.
- Will Professor Sumner Choose? addresses remarks by the liberal political economist William Graham Sumner, arguing that while his arguments against State Socialism are quite telling, consistency demands that he should endorse the radical laissez-faire position of Anarchistic Socialism.
- After Freiheit, Der Sozialist responds to a polemical attack on the German edition of Liberty by a State Socialist newspaper.
- State Socialism and Liberty argues that State monopoly over the means of production necessarily involves tyranny, and that free individual people must be able to withdraw and form their own arrangements at will.
- On Picket Duty discusses arguments from the English Marxist Edward Aveling on the tyranny of State Socialism, the relationship between individualist anarchism and communist anarchism, the relationship between individualist anarchism and laissez-faire classical liberalism, gradualists who see State Socialism as part of a transition to Anarchism, and Terence Powderly’s attacks on Oscar Wilde.
posted 12:28 pm by Rad Geek | 1 comment
Part III of Benjamin Tucker’s Instead of a Book, by a Man Too Busy to Write One, on Land and Rent, is now available in full in the Fair Use Repository’s online edition. This adds the following new transcribed essays.
There are a series of articles setting out basic principles and defending the occupancy-and-use standard for land ownership, including discussions with Edgeworth
and Auberon Herbert:
Next come a series of discussions on Henry George‘s theories on land tenure and the single tax:
Followed by a long debate with the correspondent Egoist,
on the abolition of the State and the merits of Georgist theory:
Then an exchange with Stephen T. Byington, later a major translator of anarchist works into English, on whether a free market will eliminate economic rent; if so, how; and if not, whether Georgist confiscation of rent is permissible. Tucker makes clear that the notion of liberty that he defends is intimately connected with a defense of private property:
And two short articles in which Tucker argues that Georgist land-tax schemes would result in homesteaders being unjustly evicted from their homes due to increasing population in their neighborhood:
Finally, a collection of short remarks from the On Picket Duty columns of Liberty, focusing almost entirely on debates with Henry George:
posted 11:56 pm by Rad Geek | 1 comment
Part II of Bertrand Russell’s The Principles of Mathematics, on the theory of cardinal numbers, is now available in full in the Fair Use Repository’s online edition. This Part includes Russell’s definitions of the cardinal numbers and basic arithmetical operators, and discussions of the mathematical treatment of infinite cardinals, the relation of part to whole, and the theory of ratios and fractions. Its completion adds eight new chapters to the online edition:
- Chapter XI. Definition of Cardinal Numbers.
- Chapter XII. Addition and Multiplication.
- Chapter XIII. Finite and Infinite.
- Chapter XIV. Theory of Finite Numbers.
- Chapter XV. Addition of Terms and Addition of Classes.
- Chapter XVI. Whole and Part.
- Chapter XVII. Infinite Wholes.
- Chapter XVIII. Ratios and Fractions.
Enjoy!
posted 7:36 pm by Rad Geek | no comments
Part II of Benjamin Tucker’s Instead of a Book, by a Man Too Busy to Write One, on Money and Interest, is now available in full in the Fair Use Repository’s online edition. This adds a number of newly transcribed essays:
Here is Benjamin Tucker’s second exchange with Lucien Penny of the Winsted Press, on the money monopoly and government fiat currency:
An exchange concerning mutual banking advocate Alfred B. Westrup’s claims that mutual money need not serve as a standard of value.
A discussion on the likely effects of a dramatic increase in the gold supply due to new technology:
A positive but critical review of Hugo Bilgram’s book Involuntary Idleness, and an ensuing exchange over Bilgram’s proposals for government-run mutual banking:
A discussion of free banking with Joshua K. Ingalls:
A discussion with J. M. M’Gregor of the Detroit Labor Leaf on the priority of free banking over other reforms:
And other essays:
posted 11:29 am by Rad Geek | 1 comment
The following essays have been newly transcribed for our online edition of Benjamin Tucker’s Instead of a Book, by a Man Too Busy to Write One, offering an exchange between Benjamin Tucker and J. Greevz Fisher over money, banking, the gold standard, and the labor theory of value:
posted 10:17 am by Rad Geek | no comments
The first issue of the journal Mind: A Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy (Vol. 1, No. 1, January 1876), is now available in full at the Fair Use Repository. Featured articles include:
- Prefatory Words, by the editor, George Croom Robertson, discussing the context and aims of the new journal
- The Comparative Psychology of Man, by Herbert Spencer
- Physiological Psychology in Germany, by James Sully
- Consistency and Real Inference, by John Venn
- The Theory of Evolution in its application to Practice, by Henry Sidgwick
- Philosophy and Science, I by Shadworth Hodgson
- Philosophy at Oxford, by Mark Pattison, Rector of Lincoln College
- The Early Life of James Mill, by Alexander Bain
- Critical Notices, Reports on journals, short Notes on research, New Books, and News.
posted 1:51 pm by Rad Geek | no comments
The following essays have been newly transcribed for our online edition of Benjamin Tucker’s Instead of a Book, by a Man Too Busy to Write One:
- Economic Hodge-Podge, on Henry George and the Georgist view of interest
- An Unwarranted Question, on Auberon Herbert and the English Individualist criticism of Anarchist views on interest
- An Alleged Flaw in Anarchy, continuing the dialogue with Auberon Herbert on interest
- Shall the Transfer Papers Be Taxed?, a discussion with J. Herbert Foster on banking discount and interest
- Money and Capital, continuing the dialogue with J. Herbert Foster on money, capital, and interest
- To-day’s View of Interest, discussing an article in the English Individualist journal To-day defending interest
- To-day’s Excellent Fooling, criticizing To-day‘s response to the prior article as an evasion
- Government and Value, arguing, in response to a claim by J. Greevz Fisher, that government monopoly inflates the value of gold and silver, and suppresses the value of other commodities that might be used for money.
posted 1:35 pm by Rad Geek | 1 comment