'Everything Changes in Nature': Kropotkin's Process Philosophy
A frequent misunderstanding about Peter Kropotkin, and anarchism more generally, is that by emphasising mutual aid as a factor of evolution and history, he advocates a view of human nature as essentially benign. This essay aims to disprove that claim by showing that Kropotkin explicitly rejects any...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Anarchist Studies 2023-09, Vol.31 (2), p.16-33 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A frequent misunderstanding about Peter Kropotkin, and anarchism more generally, is that by emphasising mutual aid as a factor of evolution and history, he advocates a view of human nature as essentially benign. This essay aims to disprove that claim by showing that Kropotkin explicitly
rejects any notion of a fixed human essence and insists that we are composed of a multitude of autonomous but interacting faculties with no authentic or essential centre. This view of the human psyche reflects his view of the world in general: for Kropotkin, philosophy and science were not
about finding universal mechanisms and eternal substances. Instead, he advances a view of the world that can only be described as process-thinking: a philosophical tendency that prioritises difference over identity and change over stability. Kropotkin's process ontology also informs his view
of politics, which rejects the idea of a harmonious social end state free of conflict and embraces diversity as a factor that promotes progress and movement. Kropotkin's process philosophy has relevance to debates in such diverse fields as philosophy and metaphysics, political and social theory,
and biology and ecology. |
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ISSN: | 2633-8270 0967-3393 |
DOI: | 10.3898/AS.31.2.01 |