Anarchistic
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Anarchy can refer to:
For a discussion of the term anarchy itself, see below.
Anarchy (New Latin anarchia) is a term that has a number of different but related usages. Specific meanings include 1) absence of any form of political authority; 2) Political disorder and confusion; and 3) absence of any cohesive principle, such as a common standard or purpose.
- In the first meaning of "absence of political authority", an anarchy can refer to a theoretical or actual society based on the principles of one or more strains of the political theory anarchism (see also anarcho-communism for an overview of left-wing anarchists and anarcho-capitalism for an overview of right-wing anarchists). Advocates of one or other form of this theory have often named their newspapers, magazines and pamphlets, in various languages, "Anarchy", or used the word in book titles. For example:
- Anarchy, a magazine published in London in the 1960s and 1970s;
- Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed;
- Anarchy, a book by Errico Malatesta;
- nation in the world today, namely Somalia, in a state of anarchy, in that civil government has collapsed and rule in parts of the country is by mob and warlords, who often clash with bloody results. There are a few others (Afghanistan, Albania, Burundi, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Rwanda) in which government is described as "emerging" or "transitional", and which were in anomie in the near past. The Solomon Islands is described as tending towards anomie because "violence, corruption and crime have undermined stability and civil society". Another example would be The Anarchy, the name most often given to the period of civil war and unsettled government which occurred in England during the reign of King Stephen of England.
Etymology
The word anarchy comes from the Greek word αναρχία, meaning without a leader ; an- meaning "without", -arch- meaning "rule" or "ruler", and -ia corresponding to the English suffix "-y" in "monarchy". Anarchy is often confused to originate from the word Anarchos (the one who has no starting rule, the one without beginning) which was not used for persons but as a property of God. The contemporary English understanding of anarchy differs from how the term was originally defined and used by ancient Greeks. For example, Athenian democracy was not considered to be an anarchy, as long as majority rule was a valid principle there. There is a difference between the word arche (αρχή: origin, sovereignty ) and the word nomos (νόμος: custom, law ). Majority rule is an arche and not a nomos. A free citizen of Athens who was not ruled by anyone and had the right to vote was not called anarchos but eleutheros (free). The leader or ruler is called archegos (αρχηγός, from arche + ago, "to lead") and could be translated in English as "principal leader". It is also called archon (άρχων, from arche + on, "being") or archos (αρχός, from arche + -os, masculine ending) which is the correct translation of "ruler".
See also