1423: Ludwig von Mises – Anarchism

Anarchism rejects all coercive social organizations, and repudiates coercion as a social technique. — Ludwig von MisesDownload Print Quality (7680×4020) 239KB  |  Normal Quality (3840×2010) 140KB
Anarchism rejects all coercive social organizations, and repudiates coercion as a social technique. — Ludwig von MisesDownload Print Quality (6146×7680) 324KB  |  Normal Quality (3073×3840) 185KB

People often fail to perceive the fundamental difference between the liberal and the anarchistic idea. Anarchism rejects all coercive social organizations, and repudiates coercion as a social technique. It wishes in fact to abolish the State and the legal order, because it believes that society could do better without them. It does not fear anarchical disorder because it believes that without compulsion men would unite for social co-operation and would behave in the manner that social life demands.

Anarchism as such is neither liberal nor socialistic: it moves on a different plane from either. Whoever denies the basic idea of Anarchism, whoever denies that it is or ever will be possible to unite men without coercion under a binding legal order for peaceful co-operation, will, whether liberal or socialist, repudiate anarchistic ideals.

— Ludwig von Mises (Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis)

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