Seven Ethics Against Capitalism. Oli Mould

Seven Ethics Against Capitalism - Oli Mould


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      As mentioned previously, the commons is a nebulous concept, and so pinning down a history is a perilous task. History itself is a hegemonic project of enclosure, with those events, theories, ideologies and philosophies that were recorded given credence over those that were not. As such, analysing a history of the commons with the material available will inevitably err, because it relies on that which is written down (and accessible to me as an English-speaking, lowly academic researcher). So it is vital to recognize from the outset that various articulations of the commons – from a spiritual, philosophical and natural standpoint – have existed as long as humans have. From theories of property laws in Mesopotamia,10 the ancient Egyptians’ belief in the unifying force of Ma’at, the Andean goddess Pachamama, Confucianism and Taoism in ancient China and the Druids in ancient Britain, to animism among indigenous peoples, there are ancient and non-Western narratives of the physical and spiritual commons that still exist, and thrive, today. However, to grasp how the commons has developed into an ideology that exists alongside, but with the potential to resist, contemporary forms of capitalism, it is pertinent to start a history of the commons, for this researcher at any rate, at the genesis of that capitalism, namely in ancient Greece.

      Moreover, the logos is unifying because it incorporates paradoxes and opposites, such as the ‘ways upwards and downwards are one and the same’, and ‘the beginning and the end are common’. Moreover, Heraclitus’ most famous quote is ‘you can never step into the same river twice’. In saying this, he was indicating that everything flows from and in the common; there is no stasis or fixity, as everything is constantly in flux; but it is the same river that flows; it is the same logos that flows. For Heraclitus, then, there is unity in the world – as each opposite cannot exist without the other – but it is a unity that flows, is never static and always changes. ‘Following the common’ for Heraclitus was the way to enlightenment, peace and self-control. Being ‘asleep’ and deviating from the common logos was to be ignorant of the truth.

      Their ideological, Heraclitian stance on the commons, though, remained, and can be exemplified in many struggles across the world in the subsequent centuries. The most notable from a political perspective was in the Paris Commune in 1871, when thousands of workers, servants, refugees and middle-class Parisians blockaded themselves in the city in response to the violence of the French government. The influence of the Paris Commune on future radical political movements cannot be overstated, but what is important here is their commitment to commonality, to the rejection of individualism and the violent nationalism it entailed. Indeed, one of the main protagonists of the Commune, Elisée Reclus, argued that ‘Everywhere the word “commune” was understood in the largest sense, as referring to a new humanity, made up of free equal companions, oblivious to the existence of old boundaries, helping each other in peace from one end of the world to the other.’13

      The Communards’ notion of the commons led to them creating a makeshift society that lasted for only seventy-two days, but one that focused on shared living and a distinct rejection of self-interest. The bloody end of the Commune at the hands of the French army represents the lengths to which the hegemony of systems of empire, colonialism and the state will go to assert its own version of progress. But the Commune also showed that in just seventy-two days, an actually existing commons was created that still influences political movements and scholarly debate today (we will revisit the importance of the Paris Commune in Ethic 5). 14


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