On Sat, 21 Oct 2000, petro wrote:
There are some hardcore anarchists who claim that their vision of anarchy doesn't, but if (as an example) Alice cannot direct the life of bob *at* *all*, how can she prevent Bob from *voluntarily* joining (or in fact creating) a hierarchical relationship?
In no way. But in this case Bob does not abide by the same idealism that bounds Alice and the point is moot. Anarchy brought to its logical conclusion for all practical purposes precludes hierarchical relationships between those who share the ideology. Really, from what little I know about anarchy, I believe its rhetoric revolves less around the concept of individual rights than it does around the one of equality. In that context your above emphasis on volition seems to lose some of its relevance. Sampo Syreeni <decoy@iki.fi>, aka decoy, student/math/Helsinki university