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  <metadata cathegory="anarchism" language="EN">
    <description>Anarchist Morality</description>
    <author>Peter Kropotkin</author>
    <keywords>anarkism, fundamentals of anarchism, mutual aid, morality, Charles Darwin, Peter, Pjotr, Krapotkin, Kropotkin</keywords>
    <published>199810171235</published>
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  <h1 align="center">Anarchist Morality<br />by Peter Kropotkin</h1>

          <h2>Note For "Anarchist Morality"</h2>

          <p>This study of the origin and function of what we call
          "morality" was written for pamphlet publication as a result
          of an amusing situation. An anarchist who ran a store in
          England found that his comrades in the movement regarded it
          as perfectly right to take his goods without paying for them.
          "To each according to his need" seemed to them to justify
          letting those who were best able foot the bills. Kropotkin
          was appealed to, with the result that he not only condemned
          such doctrine, but was moved to write the comrades this
          sermon.</p>

          <p>Its conception of morality is
          based on the ideas set forth in Mutual Aid and later
          developed in his Ethics. Here they are given special
          application to "right and wrong" in the business of social
          living. The job is done with fine feeling and with acute
          shafts at the shams of current morality.</p>

          <p>Kropotkin<footnote>Kropotkin is one of the great
	  anarchist thinkers</footnote> sees the source of
          all socalled moral ideas in primitive superstitions. The real
          moral sense which guides our social behavior is instinctive,
          based on the sympathy and unity inherent in group life.
          Mutual aid is the condition of successful social living. The
          moral base is therefore the good old golden rule "Do to
          others as you would have others do to you in the same
          circumstances," - which disposed of the ethics of the
          shopkeeper's anarchist customers.</p>

          <p>This natural moral sense was
          perverted, Kropotkin says, by the superstitions surrounding
          law, religion and authority, deliberately cultivated by
          conquerors, exploiters and priests for their own benefit.
          Morality has therefore become the instrument of ruling
          classes to protect their privileges.</p>

          <p>He defends the morality of
          killing for the benefit of mankind - as in the assassination
          of tyrants - but never for self. Love and hate he regards as
          greater social forces for controlling wrong-doing than
          punishment, which he rejects as useless and evil.
          Account-book morality - doing right only to receive a benefit
          - he scores roundly, urging instead the satisfactions and joy
          of "sowing life around you" by giving yourself to the
          uttermost to your fellowmen. Not of course to do them good,
          in the spirit of philanthropy, but to be one with them, equal
          and sharing.</p>


          <h2 align="center">ANARCHIST MORALITY</h2>

          <p align="center">by P. Kropotkin</p>

          <p>The history of human thought recalls the swinging of a
          pendulum which takes centuries to swing. After a long period
          of slumber comes a moment of awakening. Then thought frees
          herself from the chains with which those interested - rulers,
          lawyers, clerics - have carefully enwound her.</p>

          <p>She shatters the chains. She
          subjects to severe criticism all that has been taught her,
          and lays bare the emptiness of the religious political,
          legal, and social prejudices amid which she has vegetated.
          She starts research in new paths, enriches our knowledge with
          new discoveries, creates new sciences.</p>

          <p>But the inveterate enemies of
          thought - the government, the lawgiver, and the priest - soon
          recover from their defeat. By degrees they gather together
          their scattered forces, and remodel their faith and their
          code of laws to adapt them to the new needs. Then, profiting
          by the servility of thought and of character, which they
          themselves have so effectually cultivated; profiting, too, by
          the momentary disorganization of society, taking advantage of
          the laziness of some, the greed of others, the best hopes of
          many, they softly creep back to their work by first of all
          taking possession of childhood through education.</p>

          <p>A child's spirit is weak. It
          is so easy to coerce it by fear. This they do. They make the
          child timid, and then they talk to him of the torments of
          hell. They conjure up before him the sufferings of the
          condemned, the vengeance of an implacable god. The next
          minute they will be chattering of the horrors of revolution,
          and using some excess of the revolutionists to make the child
          "a friend of order." The priest accustoms the child to the
          idea of law, to make it obey better what he calls the "divine
          law," and the lawyer prates of divine law, that the civil law
          may be the better obeyed.</p>

          <p>And by that habit of
          submission, with which we are only too familiar, the thought
          of the next generation retains this religious twist, which is
          at once servile and authoritative, for authority and
          servility walk ever hand in hand. During these slumbrous
          interludes, morals are rarely discussed. Religious practices
          and judicial hypocrisy take their place. People do not
          criticize, they let themselves be drawn by habit, or
          indifference.They do not put themselves out for or against
          the established morality. They do their best to make their
          actions appear to accord with their professions.</p>

          <p>All that was good, great,
          generous or independent in man, little by little becomes
          mossgrown; rusts like a disused knife. A lie becomes a
          virtue, a platitude a duty. To enrich oneself, to seize one's
          opportunities, to exhaust one's intelligence, zeal and
          energy, no matter how, become the watchwords of the
          comfortable classes, as well as of the crowd of poor folk
          whose ideal is to appear bourgeois. Then the degradation of
          the ruler and of the judge, of the clergy and of the more or
          less comfortable classes becomes so revolting that the
          pendulum begins to swing the other way.</p>

          <p>Little by little, youth frees
          itself. It flings overboard its prejudices, and it begins to
          criticize. Thought reawakens, at first among the few; but
          insensibly the awakening reaches the majority. The impulse is
          given, the revolution follows. And each time the question of
          morality comes up again. "Why should I follow the principles
          of this hypocritical morality?" asks the brain, released from
          religious terrors. Why should any morality be obligatory?"</p>

          <p>Then people try to account for
          the moral sentiment that they meet at every turn without
          having explained it to themselves. And they will never
          explain it so long as they believe it a privilege of human
          nature, so long as they do not descend to animals, plants and
          rocks to understand it. They seek the answer, however, in the
          science of the hour.</p>

          <p>And, if we may venture to say
          so, the more the basis of conventional morality, or rather of
          the hypocrisy that fills its place is sapped, the more the
          moral plane of society is raised. It is above all at such
          times precisely when folks are criticizing and denying it,
          that moral sentiment makes the most progress. It is then that
          it grows, that it is raised and refined.</p>

          <p>Years ago the youth of Russia
          were passionately agitated by this very question. "I will be
          immoral!" a young nihilist came and said to his friend, thus
          translating into action the thoughts that gave him no rest.
          "I will be immoral, and why should I not? Because the Bible
          wills it? But the Bible is only a collection of Babylonian
          and Hebrew traditions, traditions collected and put together
          like the Homeric poems, or as is being done still with Basque
          poems and Mongolian legends. Must I then go back to the state
          of mind of the halfcivilized peoples of the East?</p>

          <blockquote>

            <p>"Must I be moral because Kant tells me of a categoric
            imperative, of a mysterious command which comes to me from
            the depths of my own being and bids me be moral? But why
            should this 'categoric imperative' exercise a greater
            authority over my actions than that other imperative, which
            at times may command me to get drunk. A word, nothing but a
            word, like the words 'Providence,' or 'Destiny,' invented
            to conceal our ignorance.</p>

            <p>Or perhaps I am to be moral
            to oblige Bentham, who wants me to believe that I shall be
            happier if I drown to save a passerby who has fallen into
            the river than if I watched him drown?</p>

            <p>Or perhaps because such has
            been my education? Because my mother taught me morality?
            Shall I then go and kneel down in a church, honor the
            Queen, bow before the judge I know for a scoundrel, simply
            because our mothers, our good ignorant mothers, have taught
            us such a pack of nonsense ? "I am prejudiced, - like
            everyone else. I will try to rid myself of prejudice! Even
            though immorality be distasteful, I will yet force myself
            to be immoral, as when I was a boy I forced myself to give
            up fearing the dark, the churchyard, ghosts and dead people
            - all of which I had been taught to fear.</p>

            <p>It will be immoral to snap a
            weapon abused by religion; I will do it, were it only to
            protect against the hypocrisy imposed on us in the name of
            a word to which the name morality has been given!"</p>

          </blockquote>
 
          <p>Such was the way in which the youth of Russia reasoned when
          they broke with old-world prejudices, and unfurled this
          banner of nihilist or rather of anarchist philosophy: to bend
          the knee to no authority whatsoever, however respected; to
          accept no principle so long as it is unestablished by reason.</p>

          <p>Need we add, that after
          pitching into the wastepaper basket the teachings of their
          fathers, and burning all systems of morality, the nihilist
          youth developed in their midst a nucleus of moral customs,
          infinitely superior to anything that their fathers had
          practiced under the control of the "Gospel," of the
          "Conscience," of the "Categoric Imperative," or of the
          "Recognized Advantage" of the utilitarian. But before
          answering the question, "Why am I to be moral ?" let us see
          if the question is well put; let us analyze the motives of
          human action.</p>


          <h2 align="center">II</h2>

          <p>When our ancestors wished to account for what led men to
          act in one way or another, they did so in a very simple
          fashion. Down to the present day, certain catholic images may
          be seen that represent this explanation. A man is going on
          his way, and without being in the least aware of it, carries
          a devil on his left shoulder and an angel on his right. The
          devil prompts him to do evil, the angel tries to keep him
          back. And if the angel gets the best of it and the man
          remains virtuous, three other angels catch him up and carry
          him to heaven. In this way everything is explained wondrously
          well.</p>

          <p>Old Russian nurses full of
          such lore will tell you never to put a child to bed without
          unbuttoning the collar of its shirt. A warm spot at the
          bottom of the neck should be left bare, where the guardian
          angel may nestle. Otherwise the devil will worry the child
          even in its sleep.</p>

          <p>These artless conceptions are
          passing away. But though the old words disappear, the
          essential idea remains the same.</p>

          <p>Well brought up folks no
          longer believe in the devil, but as their ideas are no more
          rational than those of our nurses, they do but disguise devil
          and angel under a pedantic wordiness honored with the name of
          philosophy. They do not say "devil" nowadays, but "the
          flesh," or "the passions." The"angel" is replaced by the
          words "conscience" or "soul," by "reflection of the thought
          of a divine creator" or "the Great Architect," as the
          Freemasons say. But man's action is still represented as the
          result of a struggle between two hostile elements. And a man
          is always considered virtuous just in the degree to which one
          of these two elements - the soul or conscience - is
          victorious over the other - the flesh or passions.</p>

          <p>It is easy to understand the
          astonishment of our great-grandfathers when the English
          philosophers, and later the Encyclopedists, began to affirm
          in opposition to these primitive ideas that the devil and the
          angel had nothing to do with human action, but that all acts
          of man, good or bad, useful or baneful, arise from a single
          motive: the lust for pleasure.</p>

          <p>The whole religious
          confraternity, and, above all, the numerous sects of the
          pharisees shouted "immorality." They covered the thinkers
          with insult, they excommunicated them. And when later on in
          the course of the century the same ideas were again taken up
          by Bentham, John Stuart Mill, Tchernischevsky, and a host of
          others, and when these thinkers began to affirm and prove
          that egoism, or the lust for pleasure, is the true motive of
          all our actions, the maledictions redoubled. The books were
          banned by a conspiracy of silence; the authors were treated
          as dunces.</p>

          <p>And yet what can be more true
          than the assertion they made? Here is a man who snatches its
          last mouthful of bread from a child. Every one agrees in
          saying that he is a horrible egoist, that he is guided solely
          by self-love.</p>


          <p>But now here is another man,
          whom every one agrees to recognize as virtuous. He shares his
          last bit of bread with the hungry, and strips off his coat to
          clothe the naked. And the moralists, sticking to their
          religious jargon, hasten to say that this man carries the
          love of his neighbor to the point of self-abnegation, that he
          obeys a wholly different passion from that of the egoist. And
          yet with a little reflection we soon discover that however
          great the difference between the two actions in their result
          for humanity, the motive has still been the same. It is the
          quest of pleasure.</p>

          <p>If the man who gives away his
          last shirt found no pleasure in doing so, he would not do it.
          If he found pleasure in taking bread from a child, he would
          do that but this is distasteful to him. He finds pleasure in
          giving, and so he gives. If it were not inconvenient to cause
          confusion by employing in a new sense words that have a
          recognized meaning, it might be said that in both cases the
          men acted under the impulse of their egoism. Some have
          actually said this, to give prominence to the thought and
          precision to the idea by presenting it in a form that strikes
          the imagination, and at the same time to destroy the myth
          which asserts that these two acts have two different motives.
          They have the same motive, the quest of pleasure, or the
          avoidance of pain, which comes to the same thing.</p>

          <p>Take for example the worst of
          scoundrels: a Thiers, who massacres thirty-five thousand
          Parisians, or an assassin who butchers a whole family in
          order that he may wallow in debauchery. They do it because
          for the moment the desire of glory or of money gains in their
          minds the upper hand of every other desire. Even pity and
          compassion are extinguished for the moment by this other
          desire, this other thirst. They act almost automatically to
          satisfy a craving of their nature. Or again, putting aside
          the stronger passions, take the petty man who deceives his
          friends, who lies at every step to get out of somebody the
          price of a pot of beer, or from sheer love of brag, or from
          cunning. Take the employer who cheats his workmen to buy
          jewels for his wife or his mistress. Take any petty scoundrel
          you like. He again only obeys an impulse. He seeks the
          satisfaction of a craving, or he seeks to escape what would
          give him trouble.</p>

          <p>We are almost ashamed to
          compare such petty scoundrels with one who sacrifices his
          whole existence to free the oppressed, and like a Russian
          nihilist mounts the scaffold. So vastly different for
          humanity are the results of these two lives; so much do we
          feel ourselves drawn towards the one and repelled by the
          other.</p>

          <p>And yet were you to talk to
          such a martyr, to the woman who is about to be hanged, even
          just as she nears the gallows, she would tell you that she
          would not exchange either her life or her death for the life
          of the petty scoundrel who lives on the money stolen from his
          workpeople. In her life, in the struggle against monstrous
          might, she finds her highest joys. Everything else outside
          the struggle, all the little joys of the bourgeois and his
          little troubles seem to her so contemptible, so tiresome, so
          pitiable! "You do not live, you vegetate," she would reply;
          "I have lived."</p>

          <p>We are speaking of course of
          the deliberate, conscious acts of men, reserving for the
          present what we have to say about that immense series of
          unconscious, all but mechanical acts, which occupy so large a
          portion of our life. In his deliberate, conscious acts man
          always seeks what will give him pleasure.</p>

          <p>One man gets drunk, and every
          day lowers himself to the condition of a brute because he
          seeks in liquor the nervous excitement that he cannot obtain
          from his own nervous system. Another does not get drunk; he
          takes no liquor, even though he finds it pleasant, because he
          wants to keep the freshness of his thoughts and the
          plentitude of his powers, that he may be able to taste other
          pleasures which he prefers to drink. But how does he act if
          not like the judge of good living who, after glancing at the
          menu of an elaborate dinner rejects one dish that he likes
          very well to eat his fill of another that he likes better.</p>

          <p>When a woman deprives herself
          of her last piece of bread to give it to the first comer,
          when she takes off her own scanty rags to cover another woman
          who is cold, while she herself shivers on the deck of a
          vessel, she does so because she would suffer infinitely more
          in seeing a hungry man, or a woman starved with cold, than in
          shivering or feeling hungry herself. She escapes a pain of
          which only those who have felt it know the intensity.</p>

          <p>When the Australian, quoted by
          Guyau, wasted away beneath the idea that he has not yet
          revenged his kinsman's death; when he grows thin and pale, a
          prey to the consciousness of his cowardice, and does not
          return to life till he has done the deed of vengeance, he
          performs this action, a heroic one sometimes, to free himself
          of a feeling which possesses him, to regain that inward peace
          which is the highest of pleasures.</p>

          <p>When a troupe of monkeys has
          seen one of its members fall in consequence of a hunter's
          shot, and comes to besiege his tent and claim the body
          despite the threatening gun; when at length the Elder of the
          band goes right in, first threatens the hunter, then implores
          him, and finally by his lamentations induces him to give up
          the corpse, which the groaning troupe carry off into the
          forest, these monkeys obey a feeling of compassion stronger
          than all considerations of personal security. This feeling in
          them exceeds all others. Life itself loses its attraction for
          them while they are not sure whether they can restore life to
          their comrade or not. This feeling becomes so oppressive that
          the poor brutes do everything to get rid of it.</p>

          <p>When the ants rush by
          thousands into the flames of the burning anthill, which that
          evil beast, man, has set on fire, and perish by hundreds to
          rescue their larvae, they again obey a craving to save their
          offspring. They risk everything for the sake of bringing away
          the larvae that they have brought up with more care than many
          women bestow on their children.</p>

          <p>To seek pleasure, to avoid
          pain, is the general line of action (some would say law) of
          the organic world.</p>

          <p>Without this quest of the
          agreeable, life itself would be impossible. Organisms would
          disintegrate, life cease.</p>

          <p>Thus whatever a man's actions
          and line of conduct may be, he does what he does in obedience
          to a craving of his nature. The most repulsive actions, no
          less than actions which are indifferent or most attractive,
          are all equally dictated by a need of the individual who
          performs them. Let him act as he may, the individual acts as
          he does because he finds a pleasure in it, or avoids, or
          thinks he avoids, a pain.</p>

          <p>Here we have a
          well-established fact. Here we have the essence of what has
          been called the egoistic theory.</p>

          <p>Very well, are we any better
          off for having reached this general conclusion?</p>

          <p>Yes, certainly we are. We have
          conquered a truth and destroyed a prejudice which lies at the
          root of all prejudices. All materialist philosophy in its
          relation to man is implied in this conclusion. But does it
          follow that all the actions of the individual are
          indifferent, as some have hastened to conclude? This is what
          we have now to see.</p>


          <h2 align="center">III</h2>

          <p>We have seen that men's actions (their deliberate and
          conscious actions, for we will speak afterwards of
          unconscious habits) all have the same origin. Those that are
          called virtuous and those that are designated as vicious,
          great devotions and petty knaveries, acts that attract and
          acts that repel, all spring from a common source. All are
          performed in answer to some need of the individual's nature.
          all have for their end the quest of pleasure, the desire to
          avoid pain.</p>

          <p>We have seen this in the last
          section, which is but a very succinct summary of a mass of
          facts that might be brought forward in support of this view.</p>

          <p>It is easy to understand how
          this explanation makes those still imbued with religious
          principles cry out. It leaves no room for the supernatural.
          It throws over the idea of an immortal soul. If man only acts
          in obedience to the needs of his nature, if he is, so to say,
          but a "conscious automaton," what becomes of the immortal
          soul? What of immortality, that last refuge of those who have
          known too few pleasures and too many sufferings, and who
          dream of finding some compensation in another world?</p>

          <p>It is easy to understand how
          people who have grown up in prejudice and with but little
          confidence in science, which has so often deceived them,
          people who are led by feeling rather than thought, reject an
          explanation which takes from them their last hope.</p>


          <h2 align="center">IV</h2>

          <p>Mosaic, Buddhist, Christian and Mussulman theologians
          have had recourse to divine inspiration to distinguish
          between good and evil. They have seen that man, be he savage
          or civilized, ignorant or learned, perverse or kindly and
          honest, always knows if he is acting well or ill, especially
          always knows if he is acting ill. And as they have found no
          explanation of this general fact, they have put it down to
          divine inspiration. Metaphysical philosophers, on their side,
          have told us of conscience, of a mystic "imperative," and,
          after all, have changed nothing but the phrases.</p>

          <p>But neither have known how to
          estimate the very simple and very striking fact that animals
          living in societies are also able to distinguish between good
          and evil, just as man does. Moreover, their conceptions of
          good and evil are of the same nature as those of man.</p>

          <p>Among the best developed
          representatives of each separate class, - fish, insects,
          birds, mammals, - they are even identical.</p>

          <p>Forel, that inimitable
          observer of ants, has shown by a mass of observations and
          facts that when an ant who has her crop well filled with
          honey meets other ants with empty stomachs, the latter
          immediately ask her for food. And amongst these little
          insects it is the duty of the satisfied ant to disgorge the
          honey that her hungry friends may also be satisfied. Ask the
          ants if it would be right to refuse food to other ants of the
          same anthill when one has had one's share. They will answer,
          by actions impossible to mistake, that it would be extremely
          wrong. So selfish an ant would be more harshly treated than
          enemies of another species. If such a thing happens during a
          battle between two different species, the ants would stop
          fighting to fall upon their selfish comrade. This fact has
          been proved by experiments which exclude all doubt.</p>

          <p>Or again, ask the sparrows
          living in your garden if it is right not to give notice to
          all the little society when some crumbs are thrown out, so
          that all may come and share in the meal. Ask them if that
          hedge sparrow has done right in stealing from his neighbor's
          nest those straws he had picked up, straws which the thief
          was too lazy to go and collect himself. The sparrows will
          answer that he is very wrong, by flying at the robber and
          pecking him.</p>

          <p>Or ask the marmots if it is
          right for one to refuse access to his underground storehouse
          to other marmots of the same colony. they will answer that it
          is very wrong, by quarrelling in all sorts of ways with the
          miser.</p>

          <p>Finally, ask primitive man if
          it is right to take food in the tent of a member of the tribe
          during his absence. He will answer that, if the man could get
          his food for himself, it was very wrong. On the other hand,
          if he was weary or in want, he ought to take food where he
          finds it; but in such a case, he will do well to leave his
          cap or his knife, or even a bit of knotted string, so that
          the absent hunter may know on his return that a friend has
          been there, not a robber. Such a precaution will save him the
          anxiety caused by the possible presence of a marauder near
          his tent.</p>

          <p>Thousands of similar facts
          might be quoted, whole books might be written, to show how
          identical are the conceptions of good and evil amongst men
          and the other animals.</p>

          <p>The ant, the bird, the marmot,
          the savage have read neither Kant nor the fathers of the
          Church nor even Moses. And yet all have the same idea of good
          and evil. And if you reflect for a moment on what lies at the
          bottom of this idea, you will see directly that what is
          considered good among ants, marmots, and Christian or atheist
          moralists is that which is useful for the preservation of the
          race; and that which is considered evil is that which is
          hurtful for race preservation. Not for the individual, as
          Bentham and Mill put it, but fair and good for the whole
          race.</p>

          <p>The idea of good and evil has
          thus nothing to do with religion or a mystic conscience. It
          is a natural need of animal races. And when founders of
          religions, philosophers, and moralists tell us of divine or
          metaphysical entities, they are only recasting what each ant,
          each sparrow practices in its little society.</p>

          <p>Is this useful to society?
          Then it is good. Is this hurtful? Then it is bad.</p>

          <p>This idea may be extremely
          restricted among inferior animals, it may be enlarged among
          the more advanced animals; but its essence always remains the
          same.</p>

          <p>Among ants it does not extend
          beyond the anthill. All sociable customs, all rules of good
          behavior are applicable only to the individuals in that one
          anthill, not to any others. One anthill will not consider
          another as belonging to the same family, unless under some
          exceptional circumstances, such as a common distress falling
          upon both. In the same way the sparrows in the Luxembourg
          Gardens in Paris, though they will mutually aid one another
          in a striking manner, will fight to the death with another
          sparrow from the Monge Square who may dare to venture into
          the Luxembourg. And the savage will look upon a savage of
          another tribe as a person to whom the usages of his own tribe
          do not apply. It is even allowable to sell to him, and to
          sell is always to rob the buyer more or less; buyer or
          seller, one or other is always "sold." A Tchoutche would
          think it a crime to sell to the members of his tribe: to them
          he gives without any reckoning. And civilized man, when at
          last he understands the relations between himself Ind the
          simplest Papuan, close relations, though imperceptible at the
          first glance, will extend his principles of solidarity to the
          whole human race, and even to the animals. The idea enlarges,
          but its foundation remains the same.</p>

          <p>On the other hand, the
          conception of good or evil varies according to the degree of
          intelligence or of knowledge acquired. There is nothing
          unchangeable about it.</p>

          <p>Primitive man may have thought
          it very right - that is, useful to the race - to eat his aged
          parents when they became a charge upon the community - a very
          heavy charge in the main. He may have also thought it useful
          to the community to kill his newborn children, and only keep
          two or three in each family, so that the mother could suckle
          them until they were three years old and lavish more of her
          tenderness upon them.</p>

          <p>In our days ideas have
          changed, but the means of subsistence are no longer what they
          were in the Stone Age. Civilized man is not in the position
          of the savage family who have to choose between two evils:
          either to eat the aged parents or else all to get
          insufficient nourishment and soon find themselves unable to
          feed both the aged parents and the young children. We must
          transport ourselves into those ages, which we can scarcely
          call up in our mind, before we can understand that in the
          circumstances then existing, half-savage man may have
          reasoned rightly enough.</p>

          <p>Ways of thinking may change.
          The estimate of what is useful or hurtful to the race
          changes, but the foundation remains the same. And if we
          wished to sum up the whole philosophy of the animal kingdom
          in a single phrase, we should see that ants, birds, marmots,
          and men are agreed on one point.</p>

          <p>The morality which emerges
          from the observation of the whole animal kingdom may be
          summed up in the words: "Do to others what you would have
          them do to you in the same circumstances.</p>

          <p>And it adds: "Take note that
          this is merely a piece of advice; but this advice is the
          fruit of the long experience of animals in society. And among
          the great mass of social animals, man included, it has become
          habitual to act on this principle. Indeed without this no
          society could exist, no race could have vanquished the
          natural obstacles against which it must struggle."</p>

          <p>Is it really this very simple
          principle which emerges from the observation of social
          animals and human societies? Is it applicable? And how does
          this principle pass into a habit and continually develop?
          This is what we are now going to see.</p>

          <h2 align="center">V</h2>

          <p>The idea of good and evil exists within humanity itself.
          Man, whatever degree of intellectual development he may have
          attained, however his ideas may be obscured by prejudices and
          personal interest in general, considers as good that which is
          useful to the society wherein he lives, and as evil that
          which is hurtful to it.</p>

          <p>But whence comes this
          conception, often so vague that it can scarcely be
          distinguished from a feeling? There are millions and millions
          of human beings who have never reflected about the human
          race. They know for the most part only the clan or family,
          rarely the nation, still more rarely mankind. How can it be
          that they should consider what is useful for the human race
          as good, or even attain a feeling of solidarity with their
          clan, in spite of all their narrow, selfish interests?</p>

          <p>This fact has greatly occupied
          thinkers at all times, and it continues to occupy them still.
          We are going in our turn to give our view of the matter. But
          let us remark in passing that though the explanations of the
          fact may vary, the fact itself remains none the less
          incontestable. And should our explanation not be the true
          one, or should it be incomplete, the fact with its
          consequences to humanity will still remain. We may not be
          able fully to explain the origin of the planets revolving
          round the sun, but the planets revolve none the less, and one
          of them carries us with it in space.</p>

          <p>We have already spoken of the
          religious explanation. If man distinguishes between good and
          evil, say theologians, it is God who has inspired him with
          this idea. Useful or hurtful is not for him to inquire; he
          must merely obey the fiat of his creator. We will not stop at
          this explanation, fruit of the ignorance and terrors of the
          savage. We pass on.</p>

          <p>Others have tried to explain
          the fact by law. It must have been law that developed in man
          the sense of just and unjust, right and wrong. Our readers
          may judge of this explanation for themselves. They know that
          law has merely utilized the social feelings of man, to slip
          in, among the moral precepts he accepts, various mandates
          useful to an exploiting minority, to which his nature refuses
          obedience. Law has perverted the feeling of justice instead
          of developing it. Again let us pass on.</p>

          <p>Neither let us pause at the
          explanation of the Utilitarians. They will have it that man
          acts morally from self-interest, and they forget his feelings
          of solidarity with the whole race, which exist, whatever be
          their origin. There is some truth in the Utilitarian
          explanation. But it is not the whole truth. Therefore, let us
          go further.</p>

          <p>It is again to the thinkers of
          the eighteenth century that we are indebted for having
          guessed, in part at all events, the origin of the moral
          sentiment.</p>

          <p>In a fine work, The Theory of
          Moral Sentiment, left to slumber in silence by religious
          prejudice, and indeed but little known even among
          anti-religious thinkers, Adam Smith has laid his finger on
          the true origin of the moral sentiment. He does not seek it
          in mystic religious feelings; he finds it simply in the
          feeling of sympathy.</p>

          <p>You see a man beat a child.
          You know that the beaten child suffers. Your imagination
          causes you yourself to suffer the pain inflicted upon the
          child; or perhaps its tears, its little suffering face tell
          you. And if you are not a coward, you rush at the brute who
          is beating it and rescue it from him.</p>

          <p>This example by itself
          explains almost all the moral sentiments. The more powerful
          your imagination, the better you can picture to yourself what
          any being feels when it is made to suffer, and the more
          intense and delicate will your moral sense be. The more you
          are drawn to put yourself in the place of the other person,
          the more you feel the pain inflicted upon him, the insult
          offered him, the injustice of which he is a victim, the more
          will you be urged to act so that you may prevent the pain,
          insult, or injustice. And the more you are accustomed by
          circumstances, by those surrounding you, or by the intensity
          of your own thought and your own imagination, to act as your
          thought and imagination urge, the more will the moral
          sentiment grow in you, the more will it become habitual.</p>

          <p>This is what Adam Smith
          develops with a wealth of examples. He was young when he
          wrote this book which is far superior to the work of his old
          age upon political economy. Free from religious prejudice, he
          sought the explanation of morality in a physical fact of
          human nature, and this is why official and non-official
          theological prejudice has put the treatise on the Black List
          for a century.</p>

          <p>Adam Smith's only mistake was
          not to have understood that this same feeling of sympathy in
          its habitual stage exists among animals as well as among men.</p>

          <p>The feeling of solidarity is
          the leading characteristic of all animals living in society.
          The eagle devours the sparrow, the wolf devours the marmot.
          But the eagles and the wolves respectively aid each other in
          hunting, the sparrow and the marmot unite among themselves
          against the beasts and birds of prey so effectually that only
          the very clumsy ones are caught. In all animal societies
          solidarity is a natural law of far greater importance than
          that struggle for existence, the virtue of which is sung by
          the ruling classes in every strain that may best serve to
          stultify us.</p>

          <p>When we study the animal world
          and try to explain to ourselves that struggle for existence
          maintained by each living being against adverse circumstances
          and against its enemies, we realize that the more the
          principles of solidarity and equality are developed in an
          animal society and have become habitual to it, the more
          chance has it of surviving and coming triumphantly out of the
          struggle against hardships and foes. The more thoroughly each
          member of the society feels his solidarity with each other
          member of the society, the more completely are developed in
          all of them those two qualities which are the main factors of
          all progress: courage on the one hand, md on the other, free
          individual initiative. And on the contrary, the more any
          animal society or little group of animals loses this feeling
          of solidarity - which may chance as the result of exceptional
          scarcity or else of exceptional plenty - the more do the two
          other factors of progress courage and individual initiative,
          diminish. In the end they disappear, and the society falls
          into decay and sinks before its foes. Without mutual
          confidence no struggle is possible; there is no courage, no
          initiative, no solidarity - and no victory! Defeat is
          certain.</p>

          <p>We can prove with a wealth of
          examples how in the animal and human worlds the law of mutual
          aid is the law of progress, and how mutual aid with the
          courage and individual initiative which follow from it
          secures victory to the species most capable of practicing it.
          Now let us imagine this feeling of solidarity acting during
          the millions of ages which have succeeded one another since
          the first beginnings of animal life appeared upon the globe.
          Let us imagine how this feeling little by little became a
          habit, and was transmitted by heredity from the simplest
          microscopic organism to its descendants - insects, birds,
          reptiles, mammals, man - and we shall comprehend the origin
          of the moral sentiment, which is a necessity to the animal
          like food or the organ for digesting it.</p>

          <p>Without going further back and
          speaking of complex animals springing from colonies of
          extremely simple little beings, here is the origin of the
          moral sentiment. We have been obliged to be extremely brief
          in order to compress this great question within the limits of
          a few pages, but enough has already been said to show that
          there is nothing mysterious or sentimental about it. Without
          this solidarity of the individual with the species, the
          animal kingdom would never have developed or reached its
          present perfection. The most advanced being upon the earth
          would still be one of those tiny specks swimming in the water
          and scarcely perceptible under a microscope. Would even this
          exist? For are not the earliest aggregations of cellules
          themselves an instance of association in the struggle?</p>


          <h2 align="center">VI</h2>

          <p>Thus by an unprejudiced observation of the animal
          kingdom, we reach the conclusion that wherever society exists
          at all, this principle may be found: Treat others as you
          would like them to treat you under similar circumstances.</p>

          <p>And when we study closely the
          evolution of the animal world, we discover that the aforesaid
          principle, translated by the one word Solidarity, has played
          an infinitely larger part in the development of the animal
          kingdom than all the adaptations that have resulted from a
          struggle between individuals to acquire personal advantages.</p>

          <p>It is evident that in human
          societies a still greater degree of solidarity is to be met
          with. Even the societies of monkeys highest in the animal
          scale offer a striking example of practical solidarity, and
          man has taken a step further in the same direction. This and
          this alone has enabled him to preserve his puny race amid the
          obstacles cast by nature in his way, and to develop his
          intelligence.</p>

          <p>A careful observation of those
          primitive societies still remaining at the level of the Stone
          Age shows to what a great extent the members of the same
          community practice solidarity among themselves.</p>

          <p>This is the reason why
          practical solidarity never ceases; not even during the worst
          periods of history. Even when temporary circumstances of
          domination, servitude, exploitation cause the principle to be
          disowned, it still lives deep in the thoughts of the many,
          ready to bring about a strong recoil against evil
          institutions, a revolution. If it were otherwise society
          would perish. For the vast majority of animals and men this
          feeling remains, and must remain an acquired habit, a
          principle always present to the mind even when it is
          continually ignored in action.</p>

          <p>It is the whole evolution of
          the animal kingdom speaking in us. And this evolution has
          lasted long, very long. It counts by hundreds of millions of
          years.</p>

          <p>Even if we wished to get rid
          of it we could not. It would be easier for a man to accustom
          himself to walk on fours than to get rid of the moral
          sentiment. It is anterior in - animal evolution to the
          upright posture of man. The moral sense is a natural faculty
          in us like the sense of smell or of touch.</p>

          <p>As for law and religion, which
          also have preached this principle, they have simply filched
          it to cloak their own wares, their injunctions for the
          benefit of the conqueror, the exploiter, the priest. Without
          this principle of solidarity, the justice of which is so
          generally recognized, how could they have laid hold on men's
          minds?</p>

          <p>Each of them covered
          themselves with it as with a garment; like authority which
          made good its position by posing as the protector of the weak
          against the strong. By flinging overboard law, religion and
          authority, mankind can regain possession of the moral
          principle which has been taken from them. Regain that they
          may criticize it, and purge it from the adulterations
          wherewith priest, judge and ruler have poisoned it and are
          poisoning it yet.</p>

          <p>Besides this principle of
          treating others as one wishes to be treated oneself, what is
          it but the very same principle as equality, the fundamental
          principle of anarchism? And how can any one manage to believe
          himself an anarchist unless he practices it?</p>

          <p>We do not wish to be ruled.
          And by this very fact, do we not declare that we ourselves
          wish to rule nobody? We do not wish to be deceived, we wish
          always to be told nothing but the truth. And by this very
          fact, do we not declare that we ourselves do not wish to
          deceive anybody, that we promise to always tell the truth,
          nothing but the truth, the whole truth? We do not wish to
          have the fruits of our labor stolen from us. And by that very
          fact, do we not declare that we respect the fruits of others'
          labor?</p>

          <p>By what right indeed can we
          demand that we should be treated in one fashion, reserving it
          to ourselves to treat others in a fashion entirely different?
          Our sense of equality revolts at such an idea.</p>

          <p>Equality in mutual relations
          with the solidarity arising from it, this is the most
          powerful weapon of the animal world in the struggle for
          existence. And equality is equity. By proclaiming ourselves
          anarchists, we proclaim beforehand that we disavow any way of
          treating others in which we should not like them to treat us;
          that we will no longer tolerate the inequality that has
          allowed some among us to use their strength, their cunning or
          their ability after a fashion in which it would annoy us to
          have such qualities used against ourselves. Equality in all
          things, the synonym of equity, this is anarchism in very
          deed. It is not only against the abstract trinity of law,
          religion, and authority that we declare war. By becoming
          anarchists we declare war against all this wave of deceit,
          cunning, exploitation, depravity, vice - in a word,
          inequality - which they have poured into all our hearts. We
          declare war against their way of acting, against their way of
          thinking. The governed, the deceived, the exploited, the
          prostitute, wound above all else our sense of equality. It is
          in the name of equality that we are determined to have no
          more prostituted, exploited, deceived and governed men and
          women.</p>

          <p>Perhaps it may be said - it
          has been said sometimes "But if you think that you must
          always treat others as you would be treated yourself, what
          right have you to use force under any circumstances whatever?
          What right have you to level a cannon at any barbarous or
          civilized invaders of your country? What right have you to
          dispossess the exploiter? What right to kill not only a
          tyrant but a mere viper?"</p>

          <p>What right? What do you mean
          by that singular word, borrowed from the law? Do you wish to
          know if I shall feel conscious of having acted well in doing
          this ? If those I esteem will think I have done well? Is this
          what you ask? If so the answer is simple.</p>

          <p>Yes, certainly! Because we
          ourselves should ask to be killed like venomous beasts if we
          went to invade Burmese or Zulus who have done us no harm. We
          should say to our son or our friend: "Kill me, if I ever take
          part in the invasion!"</p>

          <p>Yes, certainly! Because we
          ourselves should ask to be dispossessed, if giving the lie to
          our principles, we seized upon an inheritance, did it fall
          from on high, to use it for the exploitation of others.</p>

          <p>Yes, certainly! Because any
          man with a heart asks beforehand that he may be slain if ever
          he becomes venomous; that a dagger may be plunged into his
          heart if ever he should take the place of a dethroned tyrant.</p>

          <p>Ninety-nine men out of a
          hundred who have a wife and children would try to commit
          suicide for fear they should do harm to those they love, if
          they felt themselves going mad. Whenever a good-hearted man
          feels himself becoming dangerous to those he loves, he wishes
          to die before he is so.</p>

          <p>Perovskaya and her comrades
          killed the Russian Czar. And all mankind, despite the
          repugnance to the spilling of blood, despite the sympathy for
          one who had allowed the serfs to be liberated, recognized
          their right to do as they did. Why? Not because the act was
          generally recognized as useful; two out of three still doubt
          if it were so. But because it was felt that not for all the
          gold in the world would Perovskaya and her comrades have
          consented to become tyrants themselves. Even those who know
          nothing of the drama are certain that it was no youthful
          bravado, no palace conspiracy, no attempt to gain power. It
          was hatred of tyranny, even to the scorn of self, even to the
          death.</p>

          <p>"These men and women," it was
          said, "had conquered the right to kill"; as it was said of
          Louise Michel, "She had the right to rob." Or again, "They
          have the right to steal," in speaking of those terrorists who
          lived on dry bread, and stole a million or two of the
          Kishineff treasure.</p>

          <p>Mankind has never refused the
          right to use force on those who have conquered that right, be
          it exercised upon the barricades or in the shadow of a
          cross-way. But if such an act is to produce a deep impression
          upon men's minds, the right must be conquered. Without this,
          such an act whether useful or not will remain merely a brutal
          fact, of no importance in the progress of ideas. People will
          see in it nothing but a displacement of force, simply the
          substitution of one exploiter for another.</p>

          <h2 align="center">VII</h2>

          <p>We have hitherto been speaking of the conscious,
          deliberate actions of man, those performed intentionally. But
          side by side with our conscious life we have an unconscious
          life which is very much wider. Yet we have only to notice how
          we dress in the morning, trying to fasten a button that we
          know we lost last night, or stretching out our hand to take
          something that we ourselves have moved away, to obtain an
          idea of this unconscious life and realize the enormous part
          it plays in our existence.</p>

          <p>It makes up three-fourths of
          our relations with others. Our ways of speaking, smiling,
          frowning, getting heated or keeping cool in a discussion, are
          unintentional, the result of habits, inherited from our human
          or prehuman ancestors (only notice the likeness in expression
          between an angry man and an angry beast), or else consciously
          or unconsciously acquired.</p>

          <p>Our manner of acting towards
          others thus tends to become habitual. To treat others as he
          would wish to be treated himself becomes with man and all
          sociable animals, simply a habit. So much so that a person
          does not generally even ask himself how he must act under
          such and such circumstances. It is only when the
          circumstances are exceptional, in some complex case or under
          the impulse of strong passion that he hesitates, and a
          struggle takes place between the various portions of his
          brain - for the brain is a very complex organ, the various
          portions of which act to a certain degree independently. When
          this happens, the man substitutes himself in imagination for
          the person opposed to him; he asks himself if he would like
          to be treated in such a way, and the better he has identified
          himself with the person whose dignity or interests he has
          been on the point of injuring, the more moral will his
          decision be. Or maybe a friend steps in and says to him:
          "Fancy yourself in his place; should you have suffered from
          being treated by him as he has been treated by you? And this
          is enough.</p>

          <p>Thus we only appeal to the
          principle of equality in moments of hesitation, and in
          ninety-nine cases out of a hundred act morally from habit. It
          must have been obvious that in all we have hitherto said, we
          have not attempted to enjoin anything,we have only set forth
          the manner in which things happen in the animal world and
          amongst mankind.</p>

          <p>Formerly the church threatened
          men with hell to moralize them, and she succeeded in
          demoralizing them instead. The judge threatens with
          imprisonment, flogging, the gallows, in the name of those
          social principles he has filched from society; and he
          demoralizes them. And yet the very idea that the judge may
          disappear from the earth at the same time as the priest
          causes authoritarians of every shade to cry out about peril
          to society.</p>

          <p>But we are not afraid to
          forego judges and their sentences. We forego sanctions of all
          kinds, even obligations to morality. We are not afraid to
          say: "Do what you will; act as you will"; because we are
          persuaded that the great majority of mankind, in proportion
          to their degree of enlightenment and the completeness with
          which they free themselves from existing fetters will behave
          and act always in a direction useful to society just as we
          are persuaded beforehand that a child will one day walk on
          its two feet and not on all fours simply because it is born
          of parents belonging to the genus Homo.</p>

          <p>All we can do is to give
          advice. And again while giving it we add: "This advice will
          be valueless if your own experience and observation do not
          lead you to recognize that it is worth following." When we
          see a youth stooping and so contracting his chest and lungs
          we advise him to straighten himself, hold up his head and
          open his chest. We advise him to fill his lungs and take long
          breaths, because this will be his best safeguard against
          consumption. But at the same time we teach him physiology
          that he may understand the functions of his lungs, and
          himself choose the posture he knows to be the best.</p>

          <p>And this is all we can do in
          the case of morals. And this is all we can do in the case of
          morals. We have only a right to give advice, to which we add:
          "Follow it if it seems good to you."</p>

          <p>But while leaving to each the
          right to act as he thinks best; while utterly denying the
          right of society to punish one in any way for any anti-social
          act he may have committed, we do not forego our own capacity
          to love what seems to us good and to hate what seems to us
          bad. Love and hate; for only those who know how to hate know
          how to love. We keep this capacity; and as this alone serves
          to maintain and develop the moral sentiments in every animal
          society, so much the more will it be enough for the human
          race.</p>

          <p>We only ask one thing, to
          eliminate all that impedes the free development of these two
          feelings in the present society, all that perverts our
          judgment: - the State, the church, exploitation; judges,
          priests, governments, exploiters.</p>

          <p>Today when we see a Jack the
          Ripper murder one after another some of the poorest and most
          miserable of women, our first feeling is one of hatred.</p>

          <p>If we had met him the day when
          he murdered that woman who asked him to pay her for her slum
          lodging, we should have put a bullet through his head,
          without reflecting that the bullet might have been better
          bestowed in the brain of the owner of that wretched den.</p>

          <p>But when we recall to mind all
          the infamies which have brought him to this; when we think of
          the darkness in which he prowls haunted by images drawn from
          indecent books or thoughts suggested by stupid books, our
          feeling is divided. And if some day we hear that Jack is in
          the hands of some judge who has slain in cold blood a far
          greater number of men, women and children than all the Jacks
          together; if we see him in the hands of one of those
          deliberate maniacs then all our hatred of Jack the Ripper
          will vanish. It will be transformed into hatred of a cowardly
          and hypocritical society and its recognized representatives.
          All the infamies of a Ripper disappear before that long
          series of infamies committed in the name of law. It is these
          we hate.</p>

          <p>At the present day our
          feelings are continually thus divided. We feel that all of us
          are more or less, voluntarily or involuntarily, abettors of
          this society. We do not dare to hate. Do we even dare to
          love? In a society based on exploitation and servitude human
          nature is degraded.</p>

          <p>But as servitude disappears we
          shall regain our rights. We shall feel within ourselves
          strength to hate and to love, even in such complicated cases
          as that we have just cited.</p>

          <p>In our daily life we do
          already give free scope to our feelings of sympathy or
          antipathy; we are doing so every moment. We all love moral
          strength we all despise moral weakness and cowardice. Every
          moment our words, looks, smiles express our joy in seeing
          actions useful to the human race, those which we think good.
          Every moment our looks and words show the repugnance we feel
          towards cowardice, deceit, intrigue, want of moral courage.
          We betray our disgust, even when under the influence of a
          worldly education we try to hide our contempt beneath those
          lying appearances which will vanish as equal relations are
          established among us.</p>

          <p>This alone is enough to keep
          the conception of good and ill at a certain level and to
          communicate it one to another.</p>

          <p>It will be still more
          efficient when there is no longer judge or priest in society,
          when moral principles have lost their obligatory character
          and are considered merely as relations between equals.</p>

          <p>Moreover, in proportion to the
          establishment of these relations, a loftier moral conception
          will arise in society. It is this conception which we are
          about to analyze.</p>


          <h2 align="center">VIII</h2>

          <p>Thus far our analysis has only set forth the simple
          principles of equality. We have revolted and invited others
          to revolt against those who assume the right to treat their
          fellows otherwise than they would be treated themselves;
          against those who, not themselves wishing to be deceived,
          exploited, prostituted or ill-used, yet behave thus to
          others. Lying, and brutality are repulsive, we have said, not
          because they are disapproved by codes of morality, but
          because such conduct revolts the sense of equality in
          everyone to whom equality is not an empty word. And above all
          does it revolt him who is a true anarchist in his way of
          thinking and acting.</p>

          <p>If nothing but this simple,
          natural, obvious principle were generally applied in life, a
          very lofty morality would be the result; a morality
          comprising all that moralists have taught.</p>

          <p>The principle of equality sums
          up the teachings of moralists. But it also contains something
          more. This something more is respect for the individual. By
          proclaiming our morality of equality, or anarchism, we refuse
          to assume a right which moralists have always taken upon
          themselves to claim, that of mutilating the individual in the
          name of some ideal. We do not recognize this right at all,
          for ourselves or anyone else. We recognize the full and
          complete liberty of the individual; we desire for him
          plentitude of existence, the free development of all his
          faculties. We wish to impose nothing upon him; thus returning
          to the principle which Fourier placed in opposition to
          religious morality when he said:</p>

          <blockquote>
            "Leave men absolutely free. Do not mutilate them as
            religions have done enough and to spare. Do not fear even
            their passions. In a free society these are not dangerous."
          </blockquote>

          <p>Provided that you yourself do not abdicate your freedom,
          provided that you yourself do not allow others to enslave
          you; and provided that to the violent and antisocial passions
          of this or that person you oppose your equally vigorous
          social passions, you have nothing to fear from liberty.</p>

          <p>We renounce the idea of
          mutilating the individual in the name of any ideal
          whatsoever. All we reserve to ourselves is the frank
          expression of our sympathies and antipathies towards what
          seems to us good or bad. A man deceives his friends. It is
          his bent, his character to do so. Very well, it is our
          character, our bent to despise liars. And as this is our
          character, let us be frank. Do not let us rush and press him
          to our bosom or cordially shake hands with him, as is
          sometimes done today. Let us vigorously oppose our active
          passion to his.</p>

          <p>This is all we have the right
          to do, this is all the duty we have to perform to keep up the
          principle of equality in society. It is the principle of
          equality in practice. But what of the murderer, the man who
          debauches children? The murderer who kills from sheer thirst
          for blood is excessively rare. He is a madman to be cured or
          avoided. As for the debauchee, let us first of all look to it
          that society does not pervert our children's feelings, then
          we shall have little to fear from rakes. All this it must be
          understood is not completely applicable until the great
          sources of moral depravity - capitalism, religion, justice,
          government - shall have ceased to exist. But the greater part
          of it may be put in practice from this day forth. It is in
          practice already.</p>

          <p>And yet if societies knew only
          this principle of equality; if each man practiced merely the
          equity of a trader, taking care all day long not to give
          others anything more than he was receiving from them, society
          would die of it. The very principle of equality itself would
          disappear from our relations. For, if it is to be maintained,
          something grander, more lovely, more vigorous than mere
          equity must perpetually find a place in life.</p>

          <p>And this greater than justice
          is here.</p>

          <p>Until now humanity has never
          been without large natures overflowing with tenderness, with
          intelligence, with goodwill, and using their feeling, their
          intellect, their active force in the service of the human
          race without asking anything in return.</p>

          <p>This fertility of mind, of
          feeling or of goodwill takes all possible forms. It is in the
          passionate seeker after truth, who renounces all other
          pleasures to throw his energy into the search for what he
          believes true and right contrary to the affirmations of the
          ignoramuses around him. It is in the inventor who lives from
          day to day forgetting even his food, scarcely touching the
          bread with which perhaps some woman devoted to him feeds him
          like a child, while he follows out the intention he thinks
          destined to change the face of the world. It is in the ardent
          revolutionist to whom the joys of art, of science, even of
          family life, seem bitter, so long as they cannot be shared by
          all, and who works despite misery and persecution for the
          regeneration of the world. It is in the youth who, hearing of
          the atrocities of invasion, and taking literally the heroic
          legends of patriotism, inscribes himself in a volunteer corps
          and marches bravely through snow and hunger until he falls
          beneath the bullets. It was in the Paris street arab, with
          his quick intelligence and bright choice of aversions and
          sympathies, who ran to the ramparts with his little brother,
          stood steady amid the rain of shells, and died murmuring:
          "Long live the Commune!" It is in the man who is revolted at
          the sight of a wrong without waiting to ask what will be its
          result to himself, and when all backs are bent stands up to
          unmask the iniquity and brand the exploiter, the petty despot
          of a factory or great tyrant of an empire. Finally it is in
          all those numberless acts of devotion less striking and
          therefore unknown and almost always misprized, which may be
          continually observed, especially among women, if we will take
          the trouble to open our eyes and notice what lies at the very
          foundation of human life, and enables it to enfold itself one
          way or another in spite of the exploitation and oppression it
          undergoes.</p>

          <p>Such men and women as these,
          some in obscurity, some within a larger arena, creates the
          progress of mankind. And mankind is aware of it. This is why
          it encompasses such lives with reverence, with myths. It
          adorns them, makes them the subject of its stories, songs,
          romances. It adores in them the courage, goodness, love and
          devotion which are lacking in most of us. It transmits their
          memory to the young. It recalls even those who have acted
          only in the narrow circle of home and friends, and reveres
          their memory in family tradition.</p>

          <p>Such men and women as these
          make true morality, the only morality worthy the name. All
          the rest is merely equality in relations. Without their
          courage, their devotion, humanity would remain besotted in
          the mire of petty calculations. It is such men and women as
          these who prepare the morality of the future, that which will
          come when our children have ceased to reckon, and have grown
          up to the idea that the best use for all energy, courage and
          love is to expend it where the need of such a force is most
          strongly felt.</p>

          <p>Such courage, such devotion
          has existed in every age. It is to be met with among sociable
          animals. It is to be found among men, even during the most
          degraded epochs.</p>

          <p>And religions have always
          sought to appropriate it, to turn it into current coin for
          their own benefit. In fact if religions are still alive, it
          is because - ignorance apart - they have always appealed to
          this very devotion and courage. And it is to this that
          revolutionists appeal.</p>

          <p>The moral sentiment of duty
          which each man has felt in his life, and which it has been
          attempted to explain by every sort of mysticism, the
          unconsciously anarchist Guyau says, "is nothing but a
          superabundance of life, which demands to be exercised, to
          give itself; at the same time, it is the consciousness of a
          power."</p>

          <p>All accumulated force creates
          a pressure upon the obstacles placed before it. Power to act
          is duty to act. And moral "obligation" of which so much has
          been said or written is reduced to the conception: the
          condition of the maintenance of life is its expansion.</p>

          <p>"The plant cannot prevent
          itself from flowering. Sometimes to flower means to die.
          Never mind, the sap mounts the same," concludes the young
          anarchist philosopher.</p>

          <p>It is the same with the human
          being when he is full of force and energy. Force accumulates
          in him. He expands his life. He gives without calculation,
          otherwise he could not live. If he must die like the flower
          when it blooms, never mind. The sap rises, if sap there be.</p>

          <p>Be strong. Overflow with
          emotional and intellectual energy, and you will spread your
          intelligence, your love, your energy of action broadcast
          among others! This is what all moral teaching comes to.</p>


          <h2 align="center">IX</h2>

          <p>That which mankind admires in a truly moral man is his
          energy, the exuberance of life which urges him to give his
          intelligence, his feeling, his action, asking nothing in
          return.</p>

          <p>The strong thinker, the man
          overflowing with intellectual life, naturally seeks to
          diffuse his ideas. There is no pleasure in thinking unless
          the thought is communicated to others. It is only the
          mentally povertystricken man, who after he has painfully
          hunted up some idea, carefully hides it that later on he may
          label it with his own name. The man of powerful intellect
          runs over with ideas; he scatters them by the handful. He is
          wretched if he cannot share them with others, cannot scatter
          them to the four winds, for in this is his life.</p>

          <p>The same with regard to
          feeling. "We are not enough for ourselves: we have more tears
          than our own sufferings claim, more capacity for joy than our
          own existence can justify," says Guyau, thus summing up the
          whole question of morality in a few admirable lines, caught
          from nature. The solitary being is wretched, restless,
          because he cannot share his thoughts and feelings with
          others. When we feel some great pleasure, we wish to let
          others know that we exist, we feel, we love, we live, we
          struggle, we fight.</p>

          <p>At the same time, we feel the
          need to exercise our will, our active energy. To act, to work
          has become a need for the vast majority of mankind. So much
          so that when absurd conditions divorce a man or woman from
          useful work, they invent something to do, some futile and
          senseless obligations whereby to open out a field for their
          active energy. They invent a theory, a religion, a "social
          duty" - to persuade themselves that they are doing something
          useful. When they dance, it is for a charity. When they ruin
          themselves with expensive dresses, it is to keep up the
          position of the aristocracy. When they do nothing, it is on
          principle.</p>

          <p>"We need to help our fellows,
          to lend a hand to the coach laboriously dragged along by
          humanity; in any case, we buzz round it," says Guyau. This
          need of lending a hand is so great that it is found among all
          sociable animals, however low in the scale. What is all the
          enormous amount of activity spent uselessly in politics every
          day but an expression of the need to lend a hand to the coach
          of humanity, or at least to buzz around it.</p>

          <p>Of course this "fecundity of
          will," this thirst for action, when accompanied by poverty of
          feeling and an intellect incapable of creation, will produce
          nothing but a Napoleon I or a Bismarck, wiseacres who try to
          force the world to progress backwards. While on the other
          hand, mental fertility destitute of well developed
          sensibility will bring forth such barren fruits as literary
          and scientific pedants who only hinder the advance of
          knowledge. Finally, sensibility unguided by large
          intelligence will produce such persons as the woman ready to
          sacrifice everything for some brute of a man, upon whom she
          pours forth all her love.</p>

          <p>If life to be really fruitful,
          it must be so at once in intelligence, in feeling and in
          will. This fertility in every direction is life; the only
          thing worthy the name. For one moment of this life, those who
          have obtained a glimpse of it give years of vegetative
          existence. Without this overflowing life, a man is old before
          his time, an impotent being, a plant that withers before it
          has ever flowered.</p>

          <p>"Let us leave to latter-day
          corruption this life that is no life," cries youth, the true
          youth full of sap that longs to live and scatter life around.
          Every time a society falls into decay, a thrust from such
          youth as this shatters ancient economic, and political and
          moral forms to make room for the up-springing of a new life.
          What matter if one or another fall in the struggle! Still the
          sap rises. For youth to live is to blossom whatever the
          consequences! It does not regret them.</p>

          <p>But without speaking of the
          heroic periods of mankind, taking every-day existence, is it
          life to live in disagreement with one's ideal ?</p>

          <p>Now-a-days it is often said
          that men scoff at the ideal. And it is easy to understand
          why. The word has so often been used to cheat the
          simple-hearted that a reaction is inevitable and healthy. We
          too should like to replace the word "ideal," so often blotted
          and stained, by a new word more in conformity with new ideas.
          But whatever the word, the fact remains; every human being
          has his ideal. Bismarck had his - however strange - ; a
          government of blood and iron. Even every philistine has his
          ideal, however low.</p>

          <p>But besides these, there is
          the human being who has conceived a loftier ideal. The life
          of a beast cannot satisfy him. Servility, lying, bad faith,
          intrigue, inequality in human relations fill him with
          loathing. How can he in his turn become servile, be a liar,
          and intriguer, lord it over others? He catches a glimpse of
          how lovely life might be if better relations existed among
          men; he feels in himself the power to succeed in establishing
          these better relations with those he may meet on his way. He
          conceives what is called an ideal. Whence comes this ideal?
          How is it fashioned by heredity on one side and the
          impressions of life on the other? We know not. At most we
          could tell the story of it more or less truly in our own
          biographies. But it is an actual fact - variable,
          progressive, open to outside influences but always living. It
          is a largely unconscious feeling of what would give the
          greatest amount of vitality, of the joy of life.</p>

          <p>Life is vigorous, fertile.
          rich in sensation only on condition of answering to this
          feeling of the ideal. Act against this feeling, and you feel
          your life bent back on itself. It is no longer at one, it
          loses its vigor. Be untrue often to your ideal and you will
          end by paralyzing your will, your active energy. Soon you
          will no longer regain the vigor, the spontaneity of decision
          you formerly knew. You are a broken man.</p>

          <p>Nothing mysterious in all
          this, once you look upon a human being as a compound of
          nervous and cerebral centers acting independently. Waver
          between the various feelings striving within you, and you
          will soon end by breaking the harmony of the organism; you
          will be a sick person without will. The intensity of your
          life will decrease. In vain will you seek for compromises.
          Never more will you be the complete, strong, vigorous being
          you were when your acts were in accordance with the ideal
          conceptions of your brain.</p>

          <p>There are epochs in which the
          moral conception changes entirely. A man perceives that what
          he had considered moral is the deepest immorality. In some
          instances it is a custom, a venerated tradition, that is
          fundamentally immoral. In others we find a moral system
          framed in the interests of a single class. We cast them
          overboard and raise the cry "Down with morality!" It becomes
          a duty to act "immorally."</p>

          <p>Let us welcome such epochs for
          they are epochs of criticism. They are an infallible sign
          that thought is working in society. A higher morality has
          begun to be wrought out.</p>

          <p>What this morality will be we
          have sought to formulate, taking as our basis the study of
          man and animal.</p>

          <p>We have seen the kind of
          morality which is even now shaping itself in the ideas of the
          masses and of the thinkers. This morality will issue no
          commands. It will refuse once and for all to model
          individuals according to an abstract idea, as it will refuse
          to mutilate them by religion, law or government. It will
          leave to the individual man full and perfect liberty. It will
          be but a simple record of facts, a science. And this science
          will say to man: "If you are not conscious of strength within
          you, if your energies are only just sufficient to maintain a
          colorless, monotonous life, without strong impressions,
          without deep joys, but also without deep sorrows, well then,
          keep to the simple principles of a just equality. In
          relations of equality you will find probably the maximum of
          happiness possible to your feeble energies.</p>

          <blockquote>

            <p>"But if you feel within you the strength of youth, if you
            wish to live, if you wish to enjoy a perfect, full and
            overflowing life - that is, know the highest pleasure which
            a living being can desire - be strong, be great, be
            vigorous in all you do.</p>

            <p>Sow life around you. Take
            heed that if you deceive, lie, intrigue, cheat, you thereby
            demean yourself. belittle yourself, confess your own
            weakness beforehand, play the part of the slave of the
            harem who feels himself the inferior of his master. Do this
            if it so pleases you, but know that humanity will regard
            you as petty, contemptible and feeble, and treat you as
            such. Having no evidence of your strength, it will act
            towards you as one worthy of pity - and pity only. Do not
            blame humanity if of your own accord you thus paralyze your
            energies. Be strong on the other hand, and once you have
            seen unrighteousness and recognized it as such - inequity
            in life, a lie in science, or suffering inflicted by
            another - rise in revolt against the iniquity, the lie or
            the injustice.</p>

            <p>Struggle! To struggle is to
            live, and the fiercer the struggle the intenser the life.
            Then you will have lived; and a few hours of such life are
            worth years spent vegetating.</p>

            <p>Struggle so that all may
            live this rich, overflowing life. And be sure that in this
            struggle you will find a joy greater than anything else can
            give."</p>

          </blockquote>

          <p>This is all that the science of morality can tell you.
          <br />
          Yours is the choice.</p>
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