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Errico Malatesta

A Wisdom Archive on Errico Malatesta

Errico Malatesta

A selection of articles related to Errico Malatesta

More material related to Errico Malatesta can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Errico Malatesta
Errico Malatesta

ARTICLES RELATED TO Errico Malatesta

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Errico Malatesta - Biography

Malatesta was born in Santa Maria Capua Vetere in the Caserta province of southern Italy. The first of a long series of arrests came at just fourteen, when he was apprehended for writing a letter to King Victor Emmanuel II, complaining about local injustice. Malatesta was introduced to Mazzinian Republicanism while studying medicine at the University of Naples — however, he was expelled from those studies in 1871 for joining a demonstration. Partly via his enthusiasm for the Paris Commune and partly via his friendship with Carmelo P ...

See also:

Errico Malatesta, Errico Malatesta - Biography, Errico Malatesta - London, Errico Malatesta - Political beliefs, Errico Malatesta - On violence, Errico Malatesta - Malatesta's periodicals

Read more here: » Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Errico Malatesta - Biography

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia - Anarchist communism

Schools Anarcho-capitalism Anarcho-communism Anarcho-primitivism Anarcho-syndicalism Christian anarchism Eco-anarchism Individualist anarchism Mutualism Anarchism in culture Anarchism and religion Anarchism and society Anarchism and the arts Anarcho-punk Anarchist theory Anarchism and capitalism Anarchism and Marxism Anarchist economics Anarchist law Anarchist symbolism Anarchism without adjectives P ...

Including:

Read more here: » Anarchist communism: Encyclopedia - Anarchist communism

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia - Anarchism

Schools Anarcho-capitalism Anarcho-communism Anarcho-primitivism Anarcho-syndicalism Christian anarchism Eco-anarchism Individualist anarchism Mutualism Anarchism in culture Anarchism and religion Anarchism and society Anarchism and the arts Anarcho-punk Anarchist theory Anarchism and capitalism Anarchism and Marxism Anarchist economics Anarchist law Anarchist symbolism Anarchism without adjectives Post-left a ...

Including:

Read more here: » Anarchism: Encyclopedia - Anarchism

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - List of anarchists - Z

¹ - These individuals have not applied the label "anarchist" to themselves, perhaps because they predated its popular usage (as with Thoreau), it was considered an epithet, they did not regard themselves as anarchists, they dislike catch-all labels, or for a variety of other reasons. ² - These have been referred to as anarcho-capitalists ³ - These have been referred to as individualist anarchists ⁴ - These have been referred to as anarcho-communists ⁵ - These have been referred to as anarcho-syndicalists

See also:

List of anarchists, List of anarchists - A, List of anarchists - B, List of anarchists - C, List of anarchists - D, List of anarchists - E, List of anarchists - F, List of anarchists - G, List of anarchists - H, List of anarchists - I, List of anarchists - J, List of anarchists - K, List of anarchists - L, List of anarchists - M, List of anarchists - N, List of anarchists - O, List of anarchists - P, List of anarchists - Q, List of anarchists - R, List of anarchists - S, List of anarchists - T, List of anarchists - U, List of anarchists - V, List of anarchists - W, List of anarchists - X, List of anarchists - Y, List of anarchists - Z

Read more here: » List of anarchists: Encyclopedia II - List of anarchists - Z

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Revolutionary - Inventions

Revolutionary inventions call for a similar 'revolutionary' change in one or many human societies. Examples may include the haber process's effect on agricultural production in first world countries, or the textile mill. Paleontologists call for division of prehistoric human societies along what could be considered 'revolutionary' inventions, eg. two ages of early and late stone working, settled agriculture, etc. For a better listing of popularly accepted revolutions, see the art ...

See also:

Revolutionary, Revolutionary - Alphabetical list of known political revolutionaries, Revolutionary - Alphabetical list of known scientific revolutionaries, Revolutionary - Alphabetical list of revolutionary groups, Revolutionary - Inventions, Revolutionary - Quotations

Read more here: » Revolutionary: Encyclopedia II - Revolutionary - Inventions

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Peter Kropotkin - Biography

Peter (or Pyotr) Kropotkin was born in Moscow. His father, Prince Alexei Petrovich Kropotkin, traced his male line to the legendary prince Rurik; his mother, the daughter of a general in the Russian army, had remarkable literary and liberal tastes. In 1857, at the age of fifteen, Kropotkin entered the Corps of Pages at St. Petersburg. Only a hundred and fifty boys — mostly children of the nobility belonging to the court — were educated at this privileged corps, which combined the character of a military school endowed with special ...

See also:

Peter Kropotkin, Peter Kropotkin - Biography, Peter Kropotkin - Timeline of Kropotkin's Life, Peter Kropotkin - Works, Peter Kropotkin - Books, Peter Kropotkin - Articles, Peter Kropotkin - Pamphlets

Read more here: » Peter Kropotkin: Encyclopedia II - Peter Kropotkin - Biography

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Anarchist communism - Philosophical arguments

Anarchist communism emphasizes the collective experience as distinct and important in the pursuit of freedom. All forms of anarchism recognize the experience of collective identity to some extent, but the Anarchist Communists, starting with Peter Kropotkin and extending out through Alexander Berkman, Nestor Makhno, and many others recognized that there was more to experiences which were less individualistic than meets the eye. Implicitly, the anarchist communists followed a Kantian scheme of classification: like Kant they divided life ...

See also:

Anarchist communism, Anarchist communism - Philosophical arguments, Anarchist communism - Criticisms, Anarchist communism - People, Anarchist communism - Books

Read more here: » Anarchist communism: Encyclopedia II - Anarchist communism - Philosophical arguments

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Pietro Gori - Time in Milan

He then moved to Milan and worked as a lawyer with Filippo Turati. In January 1891, he supported the views of Errico Malatesta in the Congress of Capolago during which the Socialist Revolutionary Anarchic Party ("Partito Socialista Anarchico Rivoluzionario") was founded. The same year, he attended the Italian Workers Party ("Partito Operaio Italiano") congress in Milan. He translated Karl Marx' and Friedrich Engels' "The Communist Manifesto" in ...

See also:

Pietro Gori, Pietro Gori - Early years, Pietro Gori - Time in Pisa, Pietro Gori - Time in Milan, Pietro Gori - First exile, Pietro Gori - Second exile, Pietro Gori - The final period

Read more here: » Pietro Gori: Encyclopedia II - Pietro Gori - Time in Milan

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - State - Formation of the state

The birth of the state, in the broadest sense of the word, coincides with the rise of civilization. For most of the existence of the human species, people lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers. That lifestyle began to change with the invention of agriculture around the 9th millennium BC. The practice of agriculture made it necessary for human beings to build permanent settlements and spend most of their lives in close proximity to the land they cultivated. Thus, control over land became an issue for the first time. To express that control, vario ...

See also:

State, State - Introduction, State - Etymology, State - Nation country and state, State - Formation of the state, State - International point of view, State - The domestic point of view, State - Philosophies of the state

Read more here: » State: Encyclopedia II - State - Formation of the state

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Anarcho-capitalism - Philosophy

The term anarcho-capitalism was most likely coined in the mid-1950s by the economist Murray Rothbard.[1] Other terms used for this philosophy include: capitalist anarchism anti-state capitalism anarcho-liberalism stateless capitalism the private-law society[2] radical capitalismSee also:

Anarcho-capitalism, Anarcho-capitalism - Philosophy, Anarcho-capitalism - The nonaggression axiom, Anarcho-capitalism - Original appropriation, Anarcho-capitalism - The contractual society, Anarcho-capitalism - Private law and order, Anarcho-capitalism - The use of force, Anarcho-capitalism - Conflicts within anarcho-capitalist theory, Anarcho-capitalism - Anarchism and anarcho-capitalism, Anarcho-capitalism - Left and Right anarchism, Anarcho-capitalism - History and influences, Anarcho-capitalism - Liberalism, Anarcho-capitalism - American individualist anarchism, Anarcho-capitalism - The Austrian School, Anarcho-capitalism - Anarcho-capitalism in the real world, Anarcho-capitalism - Medieval Iceland, Anarcho-capitalism - Modern Somalia, Anarcho-capitalism - The Internet, Anarcho-capitalism - Science Fiction, Anarcho-capitalism - Criticisms of anarcho-capitalism, Anarcho-capitalism - Practical questions, Anarcho-capitalism - Moral questions, Anarcho-capitalism - Dispute over the name anarchism, Anarcho-capitalism - Notes, Anarcho-capitalism - Books, Anarcho-capitalism - Related subjects, Anarcho-capitalism - General

Read more here: » Anarcho-capitalism: Encyclopedia II - Anarcho-capitalism - Philosophy

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Libertarian socialism - Historical origins

Libertarian socialism - Pre-'anarchism' libertarians. Although anarchism is generally considered to be a development in Western philosophical and political thought, some would disagree. Rejection of coercive authority can be traced as far back as Ancient China, where Taoism is declared by some to have been the oldest example of anarchist doctrine[6]. In fact, similar rejections of authority can probably be found in every society, if one looks hard enough; whether or not they are anarchist is a question for debate ...

See also:

Libertarian socialism, Libertarian socialism - Overview, Libertarian socialism - Anti-capitalism, Libertarian socialism - Opposition to the state, Libertarian socialism - Political roots, Libertarian socialism - Conflict with Marxism, Libertarian socialism - Libertarian socialist tendencies, Libertarian socialism - Anarchist communism, Libertarian socialism - Anarcho-syndicalism, Libertarian socialism - Council communism, Libertarian socialism - Social Ecology, Libertarian socialism - Violence in anarchism, Libertarian socialism - Criticisms of libertarian socialism, Libertarian socialism - Historical origins, Libertarian socialism - Pre-'anarchism' libertarians, Libertarian socialism - Anarchism: a new word, Libertarian socialism - The spread of ideas: anarchism's influence, Libertarian socialism - Anarchism today

Read more here: » Libertarian socialism: Encyclopedia II - Libertarian socialism - Historical origins

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Anarchism without adjectives - History

The theoretical perspective known as "anarquismo sin adjetivos" was one of the by-products of a intense debate within the movement of anarchism itself. The roots of the argument can be found in the development of anarcho-communism after Bakunin's death in 1876. While not entirely dissimilar to collectivist anarchism (as can be seen from James Guillaume's famous work "On Building the New Social Order" within Bakunin on Anarchism, the collectivists did see their economic system evolving into free communism), Communist Anarchists developed, dee ...

See also:

Anarchism without adjectives, Anarchism without adjectives - Origins, Anarchism without adjectives - History, Anarchism without adjectives - Prominent anarchists without adjectives

Read more here: » Anarchism without adjectives: Encyclopedia II - Anarchism without adjectives - History

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Anarchist communism - Philosophical arguments

Anarchist Communism emphasizes the collective experience as distinct and important in the pursuit of freedom. All forms of Anarchism recognize the experience of collective identity to some extent, but the Anarchist Communists, starting with Peter Kropotkin and extending out through Alexander Berkman, Nestor Makhno, and many others recognized that there was more to experiences which were less individualistic than meets the eye. Implicitly, the Anarchist Communists followed a Kantian scheme of classification: like Kant they divided life ...

See also:

Anarchist communism, Anarchist communism - Philosophical arguments, Anarchist communism - Criticisms, Anarchist communism - People, Anarchist communism - Books

Read more here: » Anarchist communism: Encyclopedia II - Anarchist communism - Philosophical arguments

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Anarchism - History of anarchism

see also Past and present anarchist communities Anarchism - Chart of influences. Anarchism - Justice against the state. The first essay explicitly advocating the absence of government was "A Vindication of Natural Society" (1756) by Edmund Burke. The first positive theory of anarchism was William Godwin's An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice (1793). This was a very influential tract; though he did not use the word anarchism, some today regard him as the ...

See also:

Anarchism, Anarchism - Precursors of anarchism, Anarchism - Primitive cultures, Anarchism - Philosophical traces, Anarchism - Ancient Greece, Anarchism - Anabaptists and Diggers, Anarchism - Age of Enlightenment, Anarchism - History of anarchism, Anarchism - Chart of influences, Anarchism - Justice against the state, Anarchism - The first self-labelled anarchist, Anarchism - Egoism, Anarchism - Individualist anarchism Liberal anarchism, Anarchism - The International, Anarchism - Anarchist Communism, Anarchism - Propaganda by the deed, Anarchism - Anarchism at work, Anarchism - The Russian Revolution, Anarchism - The fight against fascism and the Spanish Civil War, Anarchism - Religion, Anarchism - Anarchism and feminism, Anarchism - Contemporary anarchism, Anarchism - Anarcho-capitalism, Anarchism - Anarcho-syndicalism, Anarchism - The platformist tradition, Anarchism - Post-left anarchy, Anarchism - Post-structuralism, Anarchism - Insurrectionary anarchism, Anarchism - Small 'a' anarchism, Anarchism - Anarcho-primitivism, Anarchism - Issues, Anarchism - Conceptions of an anarchist society, Anarchism - Environmentalism, Anarchism - Anti-Racism and Anti-Oppression, Anarchism - Neo-imperialism and Globalization, Anarchism - Parallel structures, Anarchism - Technology, Anarchism - Pacifism, Anarchism - Parliamentarianism, Anarchism - Cultural phenomena, Anarchism - Historical events, Anarchism - Books, Anarchism - Anarchism by region/culture

Read more here: » Anarchism: Encyclopedia II - Anarchism - History of anarchism

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - State - The domestic point of view

Looked at from the point of view of an individual nation, the state is a centralized organization of the whole country. Those studying this dimension emphasize the relationship between the state and its people. The English political philosopher Thomas Hobbes argued that in order to avoid a multi-sided civil war, in which life was "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short", individuals must necessarily surrender many of their "natural rights" -- including that of attacking each other -- to the "Leviathan", a unified and centralized state. In ...

See also:

State, State - Introduction, State - Etymology, State - Nation country and state, State - Formation of the state, State - International point of view, State - The domestic point of view, State - Philosophies of the state

Read more here: » State: Encyclopedia II - State - The domestic point of view

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - State - International point of view

The legal criteria for statehood are not obvious. A document that is often quoted on the matter is the Montevideo Convention from 1933, the first article of which states: The state as a person of international law should possess the following qualifications: (a) a permanent population; (b) a defined territory; (c) government; and (d) capacity to enter into relations with the other states. Also, in article 3 it very clearly states that statehood is independent of recognition by other states. This is th ...

See also:

State, State - Introduction, State - Etymology, State - Nation country and state, State - Formation of the state, State - International point of view, State - The domestic point of view, State - Philosophies of the state

Read more here: » State: Encyclopedia II - State - International point of view

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - State - Introduction

The word "state" in contemporary parlance often means the "Westphalian state", in reference to the Peace of Westphalia of 1648 and is used most often in international relations theory. In this sense, the modern state is an entity that enjoys extensive autonomy in its domestic economic and social policy, largely free from interference from other states and powers. A number of modern commentators have claimed that we are experiencing the decline of the Westphalian state as the principal actor of the international system, pointing to eco ...

See also:

State, State - Introduction, State - Etymology, State - Nation country and state, State - Formation of the state, State - International point of view, State - The domestic point of view, State - Philosophies of the state

Read more here: » State: Encyclopedia II - State - Introduction

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Libertarian socialism - Libertarian socialist tendencies

Libertarian socialism is composed of a diverse range of tendencies and organizations, with varying degrees of unity depending on specific ideological beliefs. These are only a few of the most historically important factions within libertarian socialism. Libertarian socialism - Anarchist communism. Main article: Anarchist communism Anarchist communism was first formulated in the Italian section of the First International, by Carlo Cafiero, Errico Malatesta, Andrea Costa, and other ...

See also:

Libertarian socialism, Libertarian socialism - Overview, Libertarian socialism - Anti-capitalism, Libertarian socialism - Opposition to the state, Libertarian socialism - Political roots, Libertarian socialism - Conflict with Marxism, Libertarian socialism - Libertarian socialist tendencies, Libertarian socialism - Anarchist communism, Libertarian socialism - Anarcho-syndicalism, Libertarian socialism - Council communism, Libertarian socialism - Social Ecology, Libertarian socialism - Violence in anarchism, Libertarian socialism - Criticisms of libertarian socialism, Libertarian socialism - Historical origins, Libertarian socialism - Pre-'anarchism' libertarians, Libertarian socialism - Anarchism: a new word, Libertarian socialism - The spread of ideas: anarchism's influence, Libertarian socialism - Anarchism today

Read more here: » Libertarian socialism: Encyclopedia II - Libertarian socialism - Libertarian socialist tendencies

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - State - Philosophies of the state

Different political philosophies have distinct opinions concerning the state as a domestic organization. In the modern era, these philosophies emerged with the rise of capitalism, which coincided with the (re)emergence of the state as a separate and centralized sector of society. Philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau pondered issues concerning the ideal and actual roles of the state. Recent philosophers like John Rawls and Robert Nozick were more concerned with distributive just ...

See also:

State, State - Introduction, State - Etymology, State - Nation country and state, State - Formation of the state, State - International point of view, State - The domestic point of view, State - Philosophies of the state

Read more here: » State: Encyclopedia II - State - Philosophies of the state

Errico Malatesta: Encyclopedia II - Anarchism - Issues

Anarchism - Conceptions of an anarchist society. See also: Anarchism and Society Many political philosophers justify support of the state as a means of regulating violence, so that the destruction caused by human conflict is minimized and fair relationships are established. Anarchists argue that pursuit of these ends does not justify the establishment of a state, and in fact many argue that the state is incompatible with those goals. Anarchists argue that the state helps to create a monopoly on viol ...

See also:

Anarchism, Anarchism - Precursors of anarchism, Anarchism - Primitive cultures, Anarchism - Philosophical traces, Anarchism - Ancient Greece, Anarchism - Anabaptists and Diggers, Anarchism - Age of Enlightenment, Anarchism - History of anarchism, Anarchism - Chart of influences, Anarchism - Justice against the state, Anarchism - The first self-labelled anarchist, Anarchism - Egoism, Anarchism - Individualist anarchism Liberal anarchism, Anarchism - The International, Anarchism - Anarchist Communism, Anarchism - Propaganda by the deed, Anarchism - Anarchism at work, Anarchism - The Russian Revolution, Anarchism - The fight against fascism and the Spanish Civil War, Anarchism - Religion, Anarchism - Anarchism and feminism, Anarchism - Contemporary anarchism, Anarchism - Anarcho-capitalism, Anarchism - Anarcho-syndicalism, Anarchism - The platformist tradition, Anarchism - Post-left anarchy, Anarchism - Post-structuralism, Anarchism - Insurrectionary anarchism, Anarchism - Small 'a' anarchism, Anarchism - Anarcho-primitivism, Anarchism - Issues, Anarchism - Conceptions of an anarchist society, Anarchism - Environmentalism, Anarchism - Anti-Racism and Anti-Oppression, Anarchism - Neo-imperialism and Globalization, Anarchism - Parallel structures, Anarchism - Technology, Anarchism - Pacifism, Anarchism - Parliamentarianism, Anarchism - Cultural phenomena, Anarchism - Historical events, Anarchism - Books, Anarchism - Anarchism by region/culture

Read more here: » Anarchism: Encyclopedia II - Anarchism - Issues

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