Philosophical
Egoism: Book Review
The following is a review from Freedom
S.E. Parker sent to me of the titleThe Ego and His Own: Selections from
Max Stirnerselected and introduced by John Carroll.
Anarchism, Angst, and Max Stirner
After many years of neglect the philosophy of Max Stirner is at last
receiving attention in British academic circles. [This title and another,
The Egoist Nihilist Max Stirner by R.W.K. Paterson] mark his
public début into the world of professional savants and it
will be very interesting to see what kind of reception this intellectual
vagabond will get.
Mr. Carroll's choice of extracts
is as good as one can expect another man's to be. He includes many of
Stirner's most pungent passages which amply support his claim that "Stirner
is the only writer to develop fully the implication of a total rejection of
external authority. In his book the anarcho-egoist stands before us in
full view." He also contributes a lengthy and valuable introductory essay
and a number of informative footnotes.
So far, so good. The question
remains, however, what is Max Stirner doing in a series called "Roots of
the Right" which is described as "readings in fascist, racist, and elitist
ideology"?
Mr. Carroll himself seems uneasy
at having to justify the inclusion. He confesses that "in the end we have
to admit that the case for including Stirner in the 'Roots of the Right' is
not watertight" and that "to be fair to him, we accept that his work is
categorically anti-authoritarian, that there is no suggestion of racism,
and that he had nothing but contempt for German nationalism." He is also
severely critical of Hans G. Helms' recent Marxist attempt to represent
Stirner as "the first ideologist of the middle class and one of the
precursors of fascism."
Nonetheless, Mr. Carroll claims
that Stirner "presents himself as an important contributor to the growth of
European fascism" and it is necessary to look at his reasons for making
such a claim. Just what relationship, if any, has "the philosopher of the
self" to the collectivist doctrine fascism which urges self-sacrifice and
the subordination of the individual to the group ideal?
Mr. Carroll's case is a poor one.
He gives no clearly delineated causal connection between Stirner's
conscious egoism and the altruism of fascism. He can only suggest, for
example, that Stirner's ideas had a direct influence on Mussolini and
perhaps and indirect influence on Hitler. Since he admits that Hitler was
probably ignorant of Stirner his conjectures about are too tenuous to
consider.
Mussolini is a different matter.
He wrote enthusiastically "why shouldn't Stirner become significant again"
and praised individualism as late as 1919. But, as Mr. Carroll says, his
"notorious exhibitionism made him less a passionate follower of ideas than
an intellectual opportunist, freely swapping them to suit the cause of the
moment.
True to form, once he was in
authority, Mussolini dropped his sympathy for individualism like a hot
potato. At the Fascist Party Congress of 1929 he declared that the
individual only existed as part of the State and subordinate to its
necessities [those darn egoists are slippery types, to be sure--ed.] And
in his "The Political and Social Doctrines of Fascism" he wrote: "The
foundation of Fascism conceives of the State as an absolute, in comparison
with which all individuals or groups are relative, only to be conceived of
in their relation to the State..." It would take a medieval schoolman or a
Marxist theoretician to find any trace of Stirner in such statements as
these.
The rest of Mr. Carroll's examples
are little more than unsupported insinuations. For instance, when Stirner
argues that it is not enough for the press to be free, that it must become
his own, and concluded "writing is free only when it is my own,
dictated to me by no power or authority, by no faith, no dread: the press
must not be free--that is too little--it must be mine--ownness of the
press or property in the press, that is what I will
take"--Mr. Carroll notes that this is "an anticipation of...fascist
attitudes to the press"! Such an assertion is frankly absurd. No fascist
favours uncontrolled individual ownership of the press, nor believes in the
freedom of the writer from authority.
Despite these unconvincing efforts
to connect Stirner with fascism, this attractively-produced volume is a
useful introduction to the unique world of "The Ego and His Own." The
price, however, is extortionate and those who are willing to sample the
original without preliminaries can still obtain a hard-backed edition for
about the same money.