This article originally appeared in Vol. VII, No. 4, Summer 1950 of
ETC., a journal by and for those whose interest lies with General
Semantics. The content of the article, however, is of wider interest, to
be sure.
Maynard Whitlow *
ANY BOOK that lays bare the limitations and fallacies of prevailing
doctrines can be called a dangerous bookdangerous to the
spokesmen for those doctrines. From such a standpoint Korzybskis
Science and Sanity is dangerous; so is P. W.
Bridgmans The Intelligent Individual and Society; and a
third, Max Stirners The Ego and His Own;1 the object of this study, long ago was called
dangerous in every sense of the word, and the most
revolutionary ever written. 2 To
link Stirner, an obscure nineteenth-century Berlin schoolmaster, with two
contemporary non-aristotelians, and then to call them all
heretics, would be meaningless for our purposes, were that the
only thing they had in common. But behind their heresies lie
evaluative systems all formulated on the same basis: on how to help you,
as Stirner puts it, to Get the value out of thyself.
(419)
Not only is Stirner
extensional, in Korzybskis sense of the word, and
operational in ways corresponding consistently to
Bridgmans, but his dynamic use of languageincluding
extensional devices: etc., italics, quotation marks,
etc.suggests that he tried to extend its range in order to increase
the probability of communicating his ideas. While lacking the full sweep
of knowledge available today, Stirner starts with a premise, terminology
and insight which are surprisingly modern. His
non-aristotelian ethical evaluations, based upon a theory of sanity, read,
page after page, like an uncanny paraphrase of Bridgmans application
of his operational technique to ethics.
No analysis of Stirners
method for helping the individual to get the value out of himself will be
properly placed unless it is considered in the light of historical
reaction to what he said. For like Nietzsche, Stirner has been all things
to all men. He is known as the founder of egoism as a way of
life (invariably with elementalistic connotations of selfish
or inhuman); 3 as the
father of
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anarchism, as a nominalist, as a subjective
idealist, whose only appeal is to the decadent
bourgeoisie, as a spokesman for the young atheist
school, as a petty bourgeois in revolt; 4 as a positivist living as the
only Individual in the misty region of
Cloud-cuckoo-land ; 5 as
a nihilist; 6 as a
prophet of a rebellion of the working classes that may give for the first
time a plebeian tone to philosophy; 7 as one who will convince only those
unscientific and half-educated minds who after having surrendered their
traditional faith find themselves without any authority in either religion
or politics; 8 etc., etc.
Another contribution to this
historical misunderstanding, especially when Stirner is read in English,
is made by an almost total confusion over the terms, ego,
egoist, and egoism; invariably they are read to
mean the opposite of altruism, and therefore are anathema in
the eyes of all moral people. Actually, ego is the
English translators reluctant rendition of Stirners
Einzige, which means approximately a unique but not superior
individual. Stirners American publisher makes this point explicit:
Stirners Einzigkeit is admirable in his eyes only as
such, it being no part of the purpose of his book to distinguish a
particular Einzigkeit as more excellent than another. (p. x)
Einzigkeit and Reality
WHEN WILLIAM JAMES said, The axis of reality runs solely through the
egotistic placesthey are strung upon it like so many beads,
9 he was close to Stirners position.
A recent re-appraisal of Nietzsche makes the same point: He wishes
to free men of the bad conscience about egoism induced by the old
morality; to encourage them to undertake that rigorous
selfishness which is the most fundamental condition of thriving
life. 10 A century ago, in
advocating such a corrective egoism, Stirner fell victim to what Erich
Fromm has called the tabu on selfishness which pervades modern
culture.11 And today, as the mills of the
various Absolutes grind individuals exceeding small, we might well launch
a frontal attack on that tabu, if we are to be more than faceless units
grubbing for survival in mass social situations. Stirners
formulations on egoism afford us various clues with which to
go into extensional battle.
In commenting upon the
scientific revolution of which Einstein is commonly considered the leader,
Korzybski points out that at the same time that the universe
of Newton became with Einstein a universe, man
himself was re-
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oriented: The man became a man, otherwise a conceptual construction, one among the infinity of possible ones. 12 Stirner, in 1844, was perfectly aware of the revolutionary nature of this new emphasis:
Man with the great M is only an ideal, the species only something thought of. To be a man is not to realize the ideal of Man, but to present oneself, the individual. It is not how I realize the generally human that needs to be my task, but how I satisfy myself. I am my species, am without norm, am without law, without model, and the like. (238)
Hence my wants too are unique, and my deeds; in short, everything about me is unique. And it is only as this unique I that I take everything for my own, as I set myself to work, and develop myself, only as this. I do not develop man, nor as man, but, as I, I developmyself.
This is the meaning of theunique one. (483)
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outside himself), that superiority would be only the outgrowth of ownness, of extensionality, if you will. This orientation is the basis for Stirners preference for the term un-human instead of human. The latter is not my world. I never execute anything human in the abstract, but always my own things; i.e my human act is diverse from every other human act, and only by this diversity is it a real act belonging to me. The human in it is an abstraction, and, as such, spirit, i.e. abstracted essence. (234-5) But the fact that human is a higher-order abstraction does not mean that Stirner advocates dispensing with it and with other abstractions. Abstractions and thoughts are simply more of his properties, existing on different levels, and to be used for his unique purposes.
The Fiction of Altruism
SINCE STIRNER rejects altruism, as non-existent except as a high-order abstraction, all individuals are by his formulation self-motivated or egoistical. And he recognises two kinds of egoists:14 the transitory and the involuntary. The transitory egoist is our unique, extensional1844 individual, again, but with the further property of being in process, flux, and conscious of that fact. While the involuntary egoist is a fanatical, possessed man, whose intensional 1844 thinking has filled his head with high-order abstractions as absolutes: He who cannot get rid of a thought is so far only man, is a thrall of language, this human institution, this treasury of human thoughts. Language or the word tyrannizes hardest over us, because it brings up against us a whole army of fixed ideas. (462) Besides fixed ideas, Stirner calls these abstractions spooks and ghostly ideas, the unconditional belief in which makes the involuntary egoist a lunatic:
Man, your head is haunted; you have wheels in your head!...
Do not think that I am jesting or speaking figuratively when I regard those persons who cling to the Higher, and (because the vast majority belongs under this head) almost the whole world of men, as veritable fools, fools in a madhouse. What is it, then, that is called a fixed idea? An idea that has subjected the man to itself. (54-5)
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Fixed ideas are represented by
the dignified words of our culture, behind which lurk
prolific misunderstandings. As sacred ideas, as absolutes
before which the individual is powerless and humble, God, Man,
State, Nation, Family, Reason, Truth, etc., must be sought out and exposed
for what they arehigh-order abstractions for which there are no
self-evident operational tests. As long as there still exists even
one institution which the individual may not dissolve, the ownness and
self-appurtenance of Me is still remote. (284) For, continues
Stirner, no thing is sacred of itself, but by my declaring it
sacred, by my declaration, my judgment, my bending the knee; in short,
by myconscience (92) Not that we have no use for thoughts,
formulations, mind, etc.: We are indeed to have
mind, but mind is not to have us. (81) Because possessed men
are dangerous men: Touch the fixed idea of such a fool, and you will
at once have to guard your back against the lunatics stealthy
malice. (55)
The Transitory Egoist
WHILE the involuntary egoist is thus preoccupied with creating sanctuaries that must not be touched, the transitory egoist travels with much less metaphysical baggage. For this reason, Stirner starts and finishes his book with a quotation from Goethe: All things are nothing to me (literally: I have set my affair on nothing). This ability to dispense with all absolutes is Stirners ownness, his extensionality1844, by which he is showing his acute awareness of his central position as a unique individual, whose life experiences consist of a constant process of abstracting from reality:
. . . every judgment which I pass upon an object is the creature of my will, and that discernment again leads me to not losing myself in the creature, the judgment, but remaining the creator, the judger, who is ever creating anew. All predicates of objects are my statements, my judgments, mycreatures. If they want to tear themselves loose from me and be something for themselves, or actually overawe me, then I have nothing more pressing to do than to take them back into their nothing, i.e. into me the creator.... As I once willed and decreed their existence, so I want to have license to will their non-existence too; I must not let them grow over my head, must not have the weakness to let them become something absolute, whereby they would be eternalized and withdrawn from my power and decision. (449-450)
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only when a man hears his flesh along with the rest of him that he hears
him self wholly, and it is only when he hears himself that he is a
hearing or rational being. (81) If it is said that even God
proceeds according to eternal laws that too fits me, since I too cannot
get out of my skin, but have my law in my whole nature, i.e. in
myself. (211)
The transitory egoist must
never forget, however, that he cannot subdue the world entirely; that he
is not seeking absolute freedom, or, necessarily, even particular
freedoms. He should remember that, for his own sake, even
bondagee.g. the gently but irresistibly
commanding look of your loved onemay be more desirable.
You gladly let freedom go when unfreedom, the sweet service of love, suits you; and you take up your freedom again on occasion when it begins to suit you better . . . Therefore turn to yourselves rather than to your gods or idols. Bring out from yourselves what is in you, bring it to the light, bring yourselves to revelation. (210,211)
Operational EthicsThat a society . . . diminishes my liberty offends me little. Why, I have to let my liberty be limited by all sorts of powers and by every one who is stronger; nay, by every fellow-man . . . But ownness I will not have taken from me. And ownness is precisely what every society has designs on, precisely what is to succumb to its power. (407-8)
Consequently my relation to the world is this: I no longer do anything for it for Gods sake, I do nothing for mans sake, but what I do I do for my sake. (425)
IN SHOWING that most of his contemporaries were haunted by verbal and mystical sanctions, Stirner exposed himself to attack. His emphasis upon the things called force, might, and poweras his tools, as egoistic toolsonly added to the number and bitterness of his critics. His insight into the hypocrisy and delusions motivating most people, was considered evidence of a cynical and
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inhuman man. If there were not an extensional idea in his
entire work, a centurys misevaluation of it would still present a
fascinating semantic study. Criticism of Stirner is strewn with evidence
of wholesale signal reactions and confusion of abstraction levels, despite
Stirners effortsunparalleled in his timeto anticipate
and counteract just such confusion. His reception offers an object lesson
to all those persons who are intent upon formulating non-aristotelian
systems, and who are compelled therefore to deal with the life-situations
among which are those named force, might,
power, etc.
The ethical agreement between
Stirner and Bridgman is striking. Both men, in denying the sacredness of
institutions, are simply demanding, in Bridgmans words, that
society be so constructed that it serves the individual, not that
the individual serve society. 15 On
this matter of force, Bridgman is in exact accord with Stirner: The
only compulsion that society can exert on me is the compulsion of superior
and external force. 16 And Bridgman
adds that he will have no part of the conspiracy of silence . . .
which attempts to shield my children from the realization that society
must rest on a background of force. 17 Nor should we lose sight of the fact that the
altruist (an involuntary egoist) assumes that he
has the right to use force to gain his altruistic ends.
Thus, every person is
self-motivated, every person uses force, and, furthermore, the interests
of individuals and groups making up society are not always the same. What,
then, is the individual to do? Having destroyed all institutions as
absolutes, is he to resist all institutional dictums? No, say Bridgman and
Stirner; that would be to replace absolutes with another absolute.
Instead, sometimes we will resist authority, sometimes we will bow to it,
but in the latter case we will be using institutions for our sakes,
and in terms of concrete situations. Our personal force, then,
is relative, conditional, and present in all of our life-situations, by
our own formulation.
The problem becomes one of how
to present these life-situations so as to obtain extensional results,
without causing people to assume that the forces,
mights, and powers are invariably gross, brutish,
barbaric actsphysical in the old-fashioned sense. How to
convey the fact that these terms are many-valued, and that the things they
represent are ubiquitous? How to make palatable the fact that society is
based upon conflicts as much as upon co-operations? Why, for instance,
should not people who study How to Win Friends and Influence
People understand that they are cultivating personal force, so as to
wield personal power? and that for them, as judged by their subsequent
actions, their developed might is right? Why
should they not face the fact that a raised eyebrow or a cleared throat
may exercise a power of oppression more ruinous for other lives than a
thousand trips to the woodshed? And why not emphasize the
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fact that extensionality, as well as Stirners ownness,
is ones basic and most potent property?ones personal
power?
A curious thing about
Stirners reputation is the consistency with which his critics point
out that here was a man who advocated using force, but who in reality
lived a singularly mild and obscure life, thus negating everything he
stood for in his writings. Because ownness, for Stirner, did
not call for a Napoleon-like conquest of Europe, or for some other
manifestation of physical power then he was not a powerful
man; he was purely theoretical and utopian, etc. Nothing could be more
untrue. From such facts of his life as are available, it seems probable
that few men so completely lived their philosophy as Stirner did.
He understood that personal power can be turned to quiet
self-conquest as well as to world-conquest. He makes it very clear, in
fact, that he believes one of the consequences of ownness to
be the ability of the individual to live without subjugating others
through the use of brute force. And, like Bridgman, Stirner insists that
such an awareness of the nature of force induces the
self-conscious egoist to limit his use of it beyond the ability of the
conventional altruist to understand or to follow.
Stirners
non-aristotelian formulations on the nature of self-motivation take on a
fresh significance at a time when Harvard University has just announced an
anti-hate research center, to be headed by Pitirim A. Sorokin.
The purpose of this research is to increase the production of
love and to decrease the production of hate in the
world. The center will study the great altruists of history. . . to
find out how these altruists succeeded in becoming altruistic. And
it will study the most efficient techniques of transmutation of
selfishness into unselfishness. The archaic assumptions present in
such a program represent an emphasis, as Stirners viewpoint
suggests, which might prove fatal to accomplishing the improvements in
human relations which are the research centers avowed purpose. To
presume an elementalistic love-hate dichotomy is to perpetuate
the misevaluations usually lumped together under each term in it.
Stirners insights offer an effective antidote to such primitive
misevaluations.
A Union of Egoists
IN CONTRADISTINCTION to those fanatics who love man, the
abstraction, but who torture individual men in order to win converts to
their several faiths, Stirner exposes the hidden hate in the tyranny of
altruism. Love and egoism are to him
many-valued terms, their degrees of intensity being implicit in the
context in which they are used. To love with the consciousness of
egoism is to have a fellow-feeling with all men. Thus
Stirners individualism contains a strong social sense.
He presents a world viewpoint
which, by eliminating fanatical identifications of the self with racial,
national, religious and class groups, serves universally human ends. He
advocates a Union of Egoists made up of individuals with the
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property of ownness, and therefore an organization which is
the property of its members, rather than an Over-State before
which all are to bow and scrape. Utopian, like all good
societies, Stirners Union is rather vaguely
outlined, and was probably dwelt upon at all only to show the logical
outcome of ownness, if universally applied. Stirner himself
obviously felt that Union Now1844 was
unobtainable, and unnecessary for him personally. But even while
dismissing it as visionary, he pointed out that his Union, too, was
entirely conditional, and subject to constant revision or eventual
abandonment, if unsatisfactory. Even so, it was no more visionary than to
imagine a society of extensional individuals who automatically
solve all their problems through the semantic application of their
genius.
Despite the social and
cultural limitations of his age, despite language difficulties, Stirner
makes his position clear enough. That he sometimes uses elementalistic
terms should not disenchant us so much as delight us that he used so few,
and never at the serious expense of his whole man
formulations. If, as an enemy of abstractionism, he was overzealous in
attacking institutions, his repeated qualifications indicate that his
excesses were usually deliberate. His emphasis on egoism may
be repugnant to many, and they in particular should remember that neither
the English word nor its usual meanings conform to Stirners
Einzige, a unique but not superior individual. Toward the end of
his book, Stirner applies his own test to the word, egoist,
and declares it to be nothing more than a piece of nonsense.
The egoist, before whom the humane shudder, is a spook as much as the devil is: he exists only as a bogie and phantasm in their brain. If they were not unsophisticatedly drifting back and forth in the antediluvian opposition of good and evil, to which they have given the modern names human and egoistic, they would not have freshened up the hoary sinner into egoist either, and put a new patch on an old garment. (480)
Self-Abundance
STIRNERS concern with the antediluvian nature of the language that he was forced to use is implicit on every page of his book, and is explicit in dozens of important contexts. Repeatedly, he found that the old words and logic (aristotelian) frustrated the clear expression of his radical process ideas. But since he knew that he must stick to the old sounds (391), he tried to put them to more extensional use. Nevertheless, his contemporaries and subsequent followers, whether friendly or hostile, generally failed to grasp the significance of his work. If it is claimed that the confusion over what Stirner means indicates a failure in communication, that failure can in large part be attributed to linguistic difficulties. Extensional as he was, Stirner could have used more of Korzybskis recommendations. Then his ethical pronouncements might not have assumed such diabolical proportions in the minds of good people.
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And while men today are still
stuck with the old sounds, more and more of them are becoming
aware of the inadequacy of those sounds and their static symbols for
communication in a changing world. Knowing that egoism is not
sin, for example, they are capable of experiencing something
other than outrage at Stirners formulation, Get the value out
of thyself, for such is their aim, too. L. L. Whytes
unitary man, Charles Morris open self, Erich
Fromms man for himself, Oliver L. Reisers
higher egoist, are like Stirners own man:
they all aim at fullness, plenitude of self. They are the antidote to
mans indifference to himself, which Fromm claims is our biggest
moral problem today.
For only when men have found
abundance of self, have they full capacity for including others in their
lives. According to Stirner, this is the individuals only certainty
in a life of uncertainty:
Not till I am certain of myself, and no longer seeking for myself, am I really my property; I have myself, therefore I use and enjoy myself. I am no longer afraid for life, but squander it. (427)