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La ecología de la libertad : el surgimiento y la disolución de la jerarquía

por Murray Bookchin

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Este libro presenta una coherente teoría de la ecología social que es independiente del saber convencional de nuestra era.
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Mostrando 5 de 5
too little for the effort. ( )
  MccMichaelR | May 30, 2022 |
Interesting ideas, but he's not a good writer. ( )
  mbeaty91 | Sep 9, 2020 |
Only got up to the third chapter, on the development of hierarchy, but there was value enough just in those 150 pages. Bookchin offers a surprising synthesis of ideas that get at the core of what capitalism is practically like, where it comes from, and what it would mean for us to have something better. Dated in places, but the philosophy that Bookchin puts forth is both radical and coherent. I particularly appreciated his rejection of the trap of primitivism, and it's less extreme relatives (anti-rationalism, nihilism, etc). I can see why this book would have caught the attention of someone like Ocalan, trying to articulate a vision of a post-hierarchical world to be actually put into practice today in the most urgent of situation, rather than as an intellectual dreamworld. I doubt that I'll ever live in the world that Bookchin sketches, but in line with the best of the anarchist traditions he gives ideas for what even someone like me can change to make steps towards a more humane, democratic community. ( )
  Roeghmann | Dec 8, 2019 |
This was a challenge for me to complete, but I'm glad I did. In retrospect, it seems largely composed of long, detailed tangents strung together thematically as historical evidence for Bookchin's ideas about the history of civilization. That's what I mean when I say I found it difficult. In the same way, Mumford's [b:Technics and Human Development|90209|Myth of the Machine Technics and Human Development|Lewis Mumford|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1193426316s/90209.jpg|87057] became a bog of historical detail. That should probably be attributed more to my preferences than the authors' deficiencies, however.

Bookchin sees two currents flowing through our history: one libertarian, one authoritarian. The former, he argues, was the one more characteristic of pre-literate, pre-state societies. The latter, with the upper hand since the rise of the state, has formed a world alien to our ancestors and our true nature:

“Trapped by a false perception of a nature that stands in perpetual opposition to our humanity, we have redefined humanity itself to mean strife as a condition for pacification, control as a condition for consciousness, domination as a condition for freedom, and opposition as a condition for reconciliation.” (365)

These conditions preserve social relations domination and hierarchy, even as "equality" is upheld by the powerful as a fundamental value.

Equality is not typically associated with an authoritarian impulse. But Bookchin's insight is to distinguish between "inequality of equals" (the sense implied in the US Declaration of Independence) and the "equality of unequals." The latter is the truly libertarian equality, in force since the earliest human societies, which the authoritarian political ideologies based on false equivalence that we have inherited (from sources as far back as the Greeks) will never tolerate.

Despite thousands of years of repression, he argues, the libertarian ideal persists. Ecology, then, provides a new mode of expressing these age-old values of "organic society" that may be incorporated into a new society with the added recognition of a universal humanity--the great gift of civilization--beyond mere tribal and national identity, without our self-imposed separation from nature, to the world's ultimate benefit. ( )
  dmac7 | Jun 14, 2013 |
7/10/22
  laplantelibrary | Jul 10, 2022 |
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Este libro presenta una coherente teoría de la ecología social que es independiente del saber convencional de nuestra era.

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