The Ego and his Own, Max Stirner [ebook reader for surface pro .txt] 📗
- Author: Max Stirner
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lord, takes away from family punishment its "sacredness" and profanes it,
decreeing that it is only --"revenge": it restrains punishment, this sacred
family right, because before its, the State's, "sacredness" the subordinate
sacredness of the family always pales and loses its sanctity as soon as it
comes in conflict with this higher sacredness. Without the conflict, the State
lets pass the lesser sacredness of the family; but in the opposite case it
even commands crime against the family, charging, e. g., the son to refuse
obedience to his parents as soon as they want to beguile him to a crime
against the State.
Well, the egoist has broken the ties of the family and found in the State a
lord to shelter him against the grievously affronted spirit of the family. But
where has he run now? Straight into a new society, in which his egoism is
awaited by the same snares and nets that it has just escaped. For the State is
likewise a society, not a union; it is the broadened family ("Father of the
Country -- Mother of the Country -- children of the country").
What is called a State is a tissue and plexus of dependence and adherence; it
is a belonging together, a holding together, in which those who are placed
together fit themselves to each other, or, in short, mutually depend on each
other: it is the order of this dependence. Suppose the king, whose
authority lends authority to all down to the beadle, should vanish: still all
in whom the will for order was awake would keep order erect against the
disorders of bestiality. If disorder were victorious, the State would be at an
end.
But is this thought of love, to fit ourselves to each other, to adhere to each
other and depend on each other, really capable of winning us? According to
this the State should be love realized, the being for each other and living
for each other of all. Is not self-will being lost while we attend to the will
for order? Will people not be satisfied when order is cared for by authority,
i.e. when authority sees to it that no one "gets in the way of" another;
when, then, the herd is judiciously distributed or ordered? Why, then
everything is in "the best order," and it is this best order that is called --
State!
Our societies and States are without our making them, are united without
our uniting, are predestined and established, or have an independent
standing(48) of their own, are the indissolubly established against us
egoists. The fight of the world today is, as it is said, directed against the
"established." Yet people are wont to misunderstand this as if it were only
that what is now established was to be exchanged for another, a better,
established system. But war might rather be declared against establishment
itself, the State, not a particular State, not any such thing as the mere
condition of the State at the time; it is not another State (e. g. a
"people's State") that men aim at, but their union, uniting, this ever-fluid
uniting of everything standing. -- A State exists even without my
co-operation: I am born in it, brought up in it, under obligations to it, and
must "do it homage."(49) It takes me up into its "favor,"(50) and I live by
its "grace." Thus the independent establishment of the State founds my lack of
independence; its condition as a "natural growth," its organism, demands that
my nature do not grow freely, but be cut to fit it. That it may be able to
unfold in natural growth, it applies to me the shears of "civilization"; it
gives me an education and culture adapted to it, not to me, and teaches me *e.
g. to respect the laws, to refrain from injury to State property (i.e.*
private property), to reverence divine and earthly highness, etc.; in short,
it teaches me to be -- unpunishable, "sacrificing" my ownness to
"sacredness" (everything possible is sacred; e. g. property, others' life,
etc.). In this consists the sort of civilization and culture that the State is
able to give me: it brings me up to be a "serviceable instrument," a
"serviceable member of society."
This every State must do, the people's State as well as the absolute or
constitutional one. It must do so as long as we rest in the error that it is
an I, as which it then applies to itself the name of a "moral, mystical, or
political person." I, who really am I, must pull off this lion-skin of the I
from the stalking thistle-eater. What manifold robbery have I not put up with
in the history of the world! There I let sun, moon, and stars, cats and
crocodiles, receive the honor of ranking as I; there Jehovah, Allah, and Our
Father came and were invested with the I; there families, tribes, peoples, and
at last actually mankind, came and were honored as I's; there the Church, the
State, came with the pretension to be I -- and I gazed calmly on all. What
wonder if then there was always a real I too that joined the company and
affirmed in my face that it was not my you but my real I. Why, the Son
of Man par excellence had done the like; why should not a son of man do it
too? So I saw my I always above me and outside me, and could never really come
to myself.
I never believed in myself; I never believed in my present, I saw myself only
in the future. The boy believes he will be a proper I, a proper fellow, only
when he has become a man; the man thinks, only in the other world will he be
something proper. And, to enter more closely upon reality at once, even the
best are today still persuading each other that one must have received into
himself the State, his people, mankind, and what not, in order to be a real I,
a "free burgher," a "citizen," a "free or true man"; they too see the truth
and reality of me in the reception of an alien I and devotion to it. And what
sort of an I? An I that is neither an I nor a you, a fancied I, a spook.
While in the Middle Ages the church could well brook many States living united
in it, the States learned after the Reformation, especially after the Thirty
Years' War, to tolerate many churches (confessions) gathering under one crown.
But all States are religious and, as the case may be, "Christian States," and
make it their task to force the intractable, the "egoists," under the bond of
the unnatural, e. g., Christianize them. All arrangements of the Christian
State have the object of Christianizing the people. Thus the court has the
object of forcing people to justice, the school that of forcing them to mental
culture -- in short, the object of protecting those who act Christianly
against those who act un-Christianly, of bringing Christian action to
dominion, of making it powerful. Among these means of force the State
counted the Church too, it demanded a -- particular religion from everybody.
Dupin said lately against the clergy, "Instruction and education belong to the
State."
Certainly everything that regards the principle of morality is a State affair.
Hence it is that the Chinese State meddles so much in family concerns, and one
is nothing there if one is not first of all a good child to his parents.
Family concerns are altogether State concerns with us too, only that our State
-- puts confidence in the families without painful oversight; it holds the
family bound by the marriage tie, and this tie cannot be broken without it.
But that the State makes me responsible for my principles, and demands certain
ones from me, might make me ask, what concern has it with the "wheel in my
head" (principle)? Very much, for the State is the -- ruling principle. It
is supposed that in divorce matters, in marriage law in general, the question
is of the proportion of rights between Church and States. Rather, the question
is of whether anything sacred is to rule over man, be it called faith or
ethical law (morality). The State behaves as the same ruler that the Church
was. The latter rests on godliness, the former on morality.
People talk of the tolerance, the leaving opposite tendencies free, etc., by
which civilized States are distinguished. Certainly some are strong enough to
look with complacency on even the most unrestrained meetings, while others
charge their catchpolls to go hunting for tobacco-pipes. Yet for one State as
for another the play of individuals among themselves, their buzzing to and
fro, their daily life, is an incident which it must be content to leave to
themselves because it can do nothing with this. Many, indeed, still strain out
gnats and swallow camels, while others are shrewder. Individuals are "freer"
in the latter, because less pestered. But I am free in no State. The
lauded tolerance of States is simply a tolerating of the "harmless," the "not
dangerous"; it is only elevation above pettymindedness, only a more estimable,
grander, prouder -- despotism. A certain State seemed for a while to mean to
be pretty well elevated above literary combats, which might be carried on
with all heat; England is elevated above popular turmoil and --
tobacco-smoking. But woe to the literature that deals blows at the State
itself, woe to the mobs that "endanger" the State. In that certain State they
dream of a "free science," in England of a "free popular life."
The State does let individuals play as freely as possible, only they must
not be in earnest, must not forget it. Man must not carry on intercourse
with man unconcernedly, not without "superior oversight and mediation." I
must not execute all that I am able to, but only so much as the State allows;
I must not turn to account my thoughts, nor my work, nor, in general,
anything of mine.
The State always has the sole purpose to limit, tame, subordinate, the
individual -- to make him subject to some generality or other; it lasts only
so long as the individual is not all in all, and it is only the clearly-marked
restriction of me, my limitation, my slavery. Never does a State aim to
bring in the free activity of individuals, but always that which is bound to
the purpose of the State. Through the State nothing in common comes to
pass either, as little as one can call a piece of cloth the common work of all
the individual parts of a machine; it is rather the work of the whole machine
as a unit,
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