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Ego i njegovo vlasništvo, predgovori
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<P> For more than twenty years I have entertained the design of publishing an English translation of "Der Einzige und Sein Eigentum." When I formed this design, the number of English-speaking persons who had ever heard of the book was very limited. The memory of Max Stirner had been virtually extinct for an entire generation. But in the last two decades there has been a remarkable revival of interest both in the book and in its author. It began in this country with a discussion in the pages of the Anarchist periodical, "Liberty," in which Stirner's thought was clearly expounded and vigorously championed by Dr. James L. Walker, who adopted for this discussion the pseudonym "Tak Kak." At that time Dr. Walker was the chief editorial writer for the Galveston "News." Some years later he became a practicing physician in Mexico, where he died in 1904. A series of essays which he began in an Anarchist periodical, "Egoism," and which he lived to complete, was published after his death in a small volume, "The Philosophy of Egoism." It is a very able and convincing exposition of Stirner's teachings, and almost the only one that exists in the English language. But the chief instrument in the revival of Stirnerism was and is the German poet, John Henry Mackay. Very early in his career he met Stirner's name in Lange's "History of Materialism," and was moved thereby to read his book. The work made such an impression on him that he resolved to devote a portion of his life to the rediscovery and rehabilitation of the lost and forgotten genius. Through years of toil and correspondence and travel, and triumphing over tremendous ob- </td> | </td></tr> | |
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<P>viii <P> stacles, he carried his task to completion, and his biography of Stirner appeared in Berlin in 1898. It is a tribute to the thoroughness of Mackay's work that since its publication not one important fact about Stirner has been discovered by anybody. During his years of investigation Mackay's advertising for information had created a new interest in Stirner, which was enhanced by the
sudden fame of the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, an author
whose intellectual kinship with Stirner has been a subject of
much controversy. "Der Einzige,"
previously obtainable only in an expensive
form, was included in Philipp Reclam's Universal-Bibliothek, and
this cheap edition has enjoyed a wide and ever-increasing circulation.
During the last dozen years the book has been translated twice
into French, once into Italian, once into Russian, and possibly
into other languages. The Scandinavian critic, Brandes, has written
on Stirner. A large and appreciative volume, entitled "L'Individualisme
Anarchiste: Max Stirner," from the
pen of Prof Victor Basch, of the University of Rennes, has appeared
in Paris. Another large and sympathetic volume, "Max Stirner,"
written by Dr. Anselm Ruest, has been published very recently
in Berlin. Dr. Paul Eltzbacher, in his work, "Der
Anarchismus," gives a chapter to
Stirner, making him one of the seven typical Anarchists, beginning
with William Godwin and ending with Tolstoi, of whom his book
treats. There is hardly a notable magazine or a review on the
Continent that has not given at least one leading article to the
subject of Stirner. Upon the initiative of Mackay and with the
aid of other admirers a suitable stone has been placed above the
philosopher's previously neglected grave, and a memorial tablet
upon the house in Berlin where he died in 1856; and this spring
another is to be placed upon the house in Bayreuth where he was
born in 1806. As a result of these various efforts, and though
but little has been written about Stirner in the English language,
his name is now known at least to thousands in America and England
where formerly it was known only to hundreds. <A NAME="ppix"></A> </td> | </td></tr> |
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<P align=right>ix
<P>
Therefore conditions are now more favorable for the reception
of this volume than they were when I formed the design of publishing
it, more than twenty years ago. Einzige und Sein Eigentum." But then, there is no exact
English equivalent. Perhaps the nearest is "The Unique One
and His Property." But the unique one is <A NAME="ppx"></A> </td> | </td></tr> |
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<P>x <P> not strictly the Einzige, for uniqueness connotes not only singleness but an admirable singleness, while Stirner's 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. Moreover, "The Unique One and His Property " has no graces to compel our forgiveness of its slight inaccuracy. It is clumsy and unattractive. And the same objections may be urged with still greater force against all the other renderings that have been suggested, -- "The Single One and His Property," "The Only One and His Property," "The Lone One and His Property," "The Unit and His Property," and, last and least and worst, "The Individual and His Prerogative." " The Ego and His Own," on the other hand, if not a precise rendering, is at least an
excellent title in itself; excellent by its euphony, its monosyllabic
incisiveness, and its telling -- Einzigkeit. Another
strong argument in its favor is the emphatic correspondence of
the phrase "his own" with Mr. Byington's renderings
of the kindred words, Eigenheit and Eigner. Moreover,
no reader will be led astray who bears in mind Stirner's distinction:
"I am not an ego along with other egos, but the sole ego;
I am unique." And, to help the reader to bear this in mind,
the various renderings of the word Einzige that occur
through the volume are often accompanied by foot-notes showing
that, in the German, one and the same word does duty for all.
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<P align=right>xi <P> therefore put him on his guard. The other difficulties lie, as
a rule, in the structure of the work. As to these I can hardly
do better than translate the following passage from Prof. Basch's
book, alluded to above: "There is nothing more disconcerting
than the first approach to this strange work. Stirner does not
condescend to inform us as to the architecture of his edifice,
or furnish us the slightest guiding thread. The apparent divisions
of the book are few and misleading. From the first page to the
last a unique thought circulates, but it divides itself among
an infinity of vessels and arteries in each of which runs a blood
so rich in ferments that one is tempted to describe them all.
There is no progress in the development, and the repetitions are
innumerable....The reader who is not deterred by this oddity,
or rather absence, of composition gives proof of genuine intellectual
courage. At first one seems to be confronted with a collection
of essays strung together, with a throng of aphorisms....But,
if you read this book several times; if, after having penetrated
the intimacy of each of its parts, you then traverse it as a whole,
-- gradually the fragments weld themselves together, and Stirner's
thought is revealed in all its unity, in all its force, and in
all its depth." Happy as I am in the appearance
of this book, my joy is not unmixed with sorrow. The cherished
project was as dear to the heart of Dr. Walker as to mine, and
I deeply grieve that he is no longer with us to share our delight
in the fruition. Nothing, however, can rob us of the masterly
introduction that he wrote for this volume (in 1903, or perhaps
earlier), from which I will not longer keep the reader. This introduction,
no more than the book itself, shall that Einzige, Death,
make his Eigentum. | </td></tr> |
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<P>xii
<P>
<P> <P>
Fifty years sooner
or later can make little difference in the case of a book so
revolutionary as this. It saw the light when a so-called revolutionary
movement was preparing in men's minds which agitation was, however,
only a disturbance due to desires to participate in government,
and to govern and to be governed, in a manner different to that
which prevails. The "revolutionists" of 1848 were bewitched
with an idea. They were not at all the masters of ideas. Most
of those who since that time have prided themselves upon being
revolutionists have been and are likewise but the bondmen of an
idea, -- that of the different lodgment of authority. <A NAME="ppxiii"></A> </td> | </td></tr> |
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<P> <P align=right> xiii <P>
standing. The system-makers and system-believers
thus far cannot get it out of their heads that any discourse about
the nature of an ego must turn upon the common characteristics
of egos, to make a systematic scheme of what they share as a generality.
The critics inquire what kind of man the author is talking about.
They repeat the question: What does he believe in? They fail to
grasp the purport of the recorded answer: "I believe in myself";
which is attributed to a common soldier long before the time of
Stirner. They ask, what is the principle of the self-conscious
egoist, the Einzige? To this perplexity Stirner says: Change the
question; put "who?" instead of "what?" and
an answer can then be given by naming him! This, of course, is too simple for
persons governed by ideas, and for persons in quest of new governing
ideas. They wish to classify the man. Now, that in me which you
can classify is not my distinguishing self. "Man" is
the horizon or zero of my existence as an individual. Over that
I rise as I can. At least I am something more than "man in
general." Pre-existing worship of ideals and disrespect for
self had made of the ego at the very most a Somebody, oftener
an empty vessel to be filled with the grace or the leavings of
a tyrannous doctrine; thus a Nobody. Stirner dispels the morbid
subjection, and recognizes each one who knows and feels himself
as his own property to be neither humble Nobody nor befogged Somebody,
but henceforth flat-footed and level-headed Mr. Thisbody, who
has a character and good pleasure of his own, just as he has a
name of his own. The critics who attacked this work and were answered
in the author's minor writings, rescued from oblivion by John
Henry Mackay, nearly all display the most astonishing triviality
and impotent malice. | </td></tr> |
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<P> xiv <P> think the admirers of Stirner's teaching must quite appreciate
one thing which Von Hartmann did at a much later date. In "Der
Eigene" of August 10, 1896, there appeared a letter written
by him and giving, among other things, certain data from which
to judge that, when Friedrich Nietzsche wrote his later essays,
Nietzsche was not ignorant of Stirner's book. is somewise Hartmann, and thus Hartmann is "I"; but
I am not Hartmann, and Hartmann is not -- I. Neither am I the
"I" of Stirner; only Stirner himself was Stirner's "I."
Note how comparatively indifferent a matter it is with Stirner
that one is an ego, but how all-important it is that one be a
self-conscious ego, -- a self-conscious, self-willed person. | </td></tr> |
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<P ALIGN=RIGHT> xv <P> and pronounced, and harmonizes perfectly with the economic philosophy
of Josiah Warren. Allowing for difference of temperament and language,
there is a substantial agreement between Stirner and Proudhon.
Each would be free, and sees in every increase of the number of
free people and their intelligence an auxiliary force against
the oppressor. But, on the other hand, will any one for a moment
seriously contend that Nietzsche and Proudhon march together in
general aim and tendency, -- that they have anything in common
except the daring to profane the shrine and sepulchre of superstition?
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<P>xvi <P> predatory barons to do justice. They will find it convenient for
their own welfare to make terms with men who have learned of Stirner
what a man can be who worships nothing, bears allegiance to nothing.
To Nietzsche's rhodomontade of eagles in baronial form, born to
prey on industrial lambs, we rather tauntingly oppose the ironical
question: Where are your claws? What if the "eagles"
are found to be plain barn-yard fowls on which more silly fowls
have fastened steel spurs to hack the victims, who, however, have
the power to disarm the sham "eagles" between two suns?
Stirner shows that men make their tyrants as they make their gods,
and his purpose is to unmake tyrants.
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<P ALIGN=RIGHT> xvii <P>
dividual if she can be, not handicapped by anything he says, feels,
thinks, or plans. This was more fully exemplified in his life
than even in this book; but there is not a line in the book to
put or keep woman in an inferior position to man, neither is there
anything of caste or aristocracy in the book. Likewise there is
nothing of obscurantism or affected mysticism about it. Everything
in it is made as plain as the author could make it. He who does
not so is not Stirner's disciple nor successor nor co-worker.
Some one may ask: How does plumb-line Anarchism train with the
unbridled egoism proclaimed by Stirner? The plumb-line is not
a fetish, but an intellectual conviction, and egoism is a universal
fact of animal life. Nothing could seem clearer to my mind than
that the reality of egoism must first come into the consciousness
of men, before we can have the unbiased Einzige in place of the
prejudiced biped who lends himself to the support of tyrannies
a million times stronger over me than the natural self-interest
of any individual. When plumb-line doctrine is misconceived as
duty between unequal-minded men, -- as a religion of humanity,
-- it is indeed the confusion of trying to read without knowing
the alphabet and of putting philanthropy in place of contract.
But, if the plumb-line be scientific, it is or can be my possession,
my property, and I choose it for its use -- when circumstances
admit of its use. I do not feel bound to use it because it is
scientific, in building my house; but, as my will, to be intelligent,
is not to be merely wilful, the adoption of the plumb-line follows
the discarding of incantations. There is no plumb-line without
the unvarying lead at the end of the line; not a fluttering bird
or a clawing cat. | </td></tr> |
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<P> xviii <P> I am content if others individually live for themselves, and thus
cease in so many ways to act in opposition to my living for myself,
-- to our living for ourselves. If Christianity has failed to turn
the world from evil, it is not to be dreamed that rationalism
of a pious moral stamp will succeed in the same task. Christianity,
or all philanthropic love, is tested in non-resistance. It is
a dream that example will change the hearts of rulers, tyrants,
mobs. If the extremest self-surrender fails, how can a mixture
of Christian love and worldly caution succeed? This at least must
be given up. The policy of Christ and Tolstoi can soon be tested,
but Tolstoi's belief is not satisfied with a present test and
failure. He has the infatuation of one who persists because this
ought to be. The egoist who thinks "I should like this to
be" still has the sense to perceive that it is not accomplished
by the fact of some believing and submitting, inasmuch as others
are alert to prey upon the unresisting. The Pharaohs we have ever
with us. | </td></tr> |
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<P>
<P> <P>
If the style of this book is found
unattractive, it will show that I have done my work ill and not
represented the author truly; but, if it is found odd, I beg that
I may not bear all the blame. I have simply tried to reproduce
the author's own mixture of colloquialisms and technicalities,
and his preference for the precise expression of his thought rather
than the word conventionally expected. One especial feature of the style,
however, gives the reason why this preface should exist. It is
characteristic of Stirner's writing that the thread of thought
is carried on largely by the repetition of the same word in a
modified form or sense. That connection of ideas which has guided
popular instinct in the formation of words is made to suggest
the line of thought which the writer wishes to follow. If this
echoing of words is missed, the bearing of the statements on each
other is in a measure lost; and, where the ideas are very new,
one cannot afford to throw away any help in following their connection.
Therefore, where a useful echo (and then are few useless ones
in the book) could not be reproduced in English, I have generally
called attention to it in a note. My notes are distinguished from
the author's by being enclosed in parentheses. | </td></tr> |
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<P>xx <P> seemed that such repetition might be absolutely necessary, but
have trusted the reader to carry it in his head where a failure
of his memory would not be ruinous or likely. Steven T. Byington | </td></tr> |
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