Authors > James J. Martin
James J. Martin Quotes
When anarchism in its several forms, including its theoretical statements and practical experiments, is analyzed structurally, it generally separates into three broad areas of tactics and strategy; (a) a rejection of constituted authority as the source of social dynamism and equilibrium;(b) a refusal to collaborate with the existing order anywhere through participation in any program of reformism; (c) the promotion of a variety of non-coercive alternatives of quite clearly defined nature as a substitute. Within this framework the various schools of anarchism have developed a number of sectarian variants, and some of these elaborations have created bitter doctrinal controversies. The result has been the erection of barriers fully as steep among the anarchists as those existing between them and the conventional world.
Source: Men Against the State (1953) [link] #613
About James J. Martin
(From Mises.org)

James J. Martin (1916 - 2004) was an American historian. He is best known for his work on the history of American individualist anarchism, Men Against the State, first published in 1953.

