[[!meta title="Post-Scarcity Anarchism"]] * Murray Bookchin. * Working Classic Series. * AK Press - 2004. ## Towards a Liberatory Technology The year 1848 stands out as a turning point in the history of modern revolutions. This was the year when Marxism made its debut as a distinct ideology in the pages of de Communist Manifesto, and when the proletariat, represented by the Parisian workers, made its debut as a distinct political force on the barricades of June. It could also be said that 1948, a year close to the halfway mark of the nineteenth century, represents the culmination of the traditional steam-powered technology initiated by the Newcomen engine a century and a half earlier. -- 43 I have reviewed these technological developments because both their promise and their limitations excercised a profound influence on nineteenth century revolutionary thought. The innovations in textile and iron-making technology provided a new sense of promise, indeed a new stimulus, to socialist and utopian thought. It seemed to the revolutionary theorist that for the first time in history he could anchor his dream of a liberatory society in the visible prospect of material abundance and increased leisure for the mass of humanity. Socialism, the theorists argued, could be based on self-interest rather than on man's dubious nobility of mind and spirit. Technological innovation had transmuted the socialist ideal from a vague humanitarian hope into a practical program. The newly acquired practicality compelled many socialist theorists, particularly Marx and Engels, to grapple with the technological limitations of their time. They were faced with a strategic issue: in all previous revolutions, technology had not yet developed to a level where men could be freed from material want, toil and the struggle over the necessities of life. However glowing and lofty were the revolutionary ideals of the past, the vas majority of the people, burdened by material want, had to leave the stage of history after the revolution, return to work, and deliver the management of society to a new leisured class of exploiters. Indeed, any attempt to equalize the wealth of society at a low level of technological development would not have eliminated want, but would have merely made it into a general feature of society as a whole, thereby recreating all the conditions for a new struggle over the material things of life, for new forms of property, and eventually for a new system of class domination. [...] Virtually all the utopias, theories and revolutionary programs of the early nineteenth century were faced with problems of necessity -- of how to allocate labor and material goods at a relatively low level of technological development. [...] The fact that men would have to devote a substantial portion of their time to toil, for which they would get scant returns, formed a major premise of all socialist ideology -- authoritarian and liberarian, utopian and scientific, Marxist and anarchist. Implicit in the Marxist notion of a planned economy was the fact, incontestably clear in the Marx's day, that socialism would still be burdened by relatively scarce resources. Men would have to plan -- in effect -- to restrict -- the distribution of goods and would have to rationalize -- in effect, to intensify -- the use of labor. -- 44-45 The problem of dealing with want and work -- and age-old problem perpetuated by the early Industrial Revolution -- produced the great divergence in revolutionary ideas between socialism and anarchism. Freedom would still be circunscribed by necessity in the event of a revolution. How was this world of necessity to be "administered"? How could the allocation of goods and duties be decided? Marx left this decision to a state power, a transitional "proletarian" state power, to be sure, but nevertheless a coercive body, established above society. According to Marx, the state "wither away" as technology developed and enlarged the domain of freedom, granting humanity material plenty and the leisure to control its affairs directly. This strange calculus, in which necessity and freedom were mediated by the state, differed very little politically from the common run of bourgeois democratic radical opinion in the last century. The anarchist hope for the abolition of the state, on the other hand, rested largely on a belief in the viability of man's social instincts. Bakunin, for example, thought custom would compel any individuals with antisocial proclivities to abide by collectivist values and nedds without obliging society to use coercion. Kropotkin, who exercised more influence among anachists in this area of speculation, invoked man's propensity for mutual aid -- essentially a social instinct -- as the guarantor of solidarity in an anarchist community (a concept which he derived from his study of animal and social evolution). The fact remains, however, that in both cases -- the Marxist and anarchist -- the answer to the problem of want and work was shot through with ambiguity. [...] but given the limited technological development of the last century, [...] both schools depended on an act of faith to cope with the problem of want and work. Anarchists could argue against the Marxists that any transitional state, however revolutionary its rethoric and democratic its structure, would be self-perpetuating; it would tend to become an end in itself and to preserve the very material and social conditions it had been created to remove. For such a state to "wither away" (that is, to promote its own dissolution) would require its leaders and bureaucracy to be people of superhuman moral qualities. The Marxists, in turn, could invoke history to show that custom and mutualistic propensities were never effective barriers to the pressures of material need, or to the onslaught of property, or to the development of exploitation and class domination. Accordingly, they dismissed anarchism as an ethical doctrine which revived the mystique of the natural man and his inborn social virtues. -- 46-47 That the socialist notions of the last generation now seem to be anachronisms is not due to any superior insights that prevail today. The last three decades, particularly the years of the late 1950's, mark a turning point in the techological development, a technological revolution that negates all the values, political schemes and social perspectives held by mankind throughout all previous recorded history. [...] As we shall see, a new technology has developed that could largely replace the realm of necessity by the realm of freedom. -- 48 Almost every account of applied automation today must be regarded as provisional: as soon as one describes a partially automated industry, technological advances make the description obsolete. -- 56