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Great Ideas: Possible and Minimal Definitions

Now we tackle the most difficult of our preliminary questions: What is a Great Idea? We’ve already talked a bit about “greatness,” but the other half of the term threatens to get at least as complicated. My big old 1919 Webster’s has the following definitions: 1. An archetype or pattern; a conception of any perfection; an ideal; hence, in a less exalted sense, a preliminary or imperfect conception or construction; a plan, outline, sketch, or draft;—now usually restricted to a plan or purpose of action; an intention or design.2. The embodying form or exemplar of a conception, person, or thing; […]
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Westrup note

I’ve been fortunate enough to get my hands on a fragile inter-library loan copy of Alfred Westrup’s The Abolition of Interest, and will be transcribing it over the next couple of days. The bibliography is even a little more convoluted than I had guessed. This earliest pamphlet contains about half of The Financial Problem, so it is indeed the “first edition” of that work, but it also contains an important section that would be developed in Citizen’s Money, making it, by the same logic, something like the first edition of that work. This is the reverse of the bibliographic problem […]
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The Great Conversation

As part of the process of tackling “great ideas,” we’ll be doing a certain amount of meta-talking—talking about what we’re talking about, and why we’re talking about it in the first place, or why we’re talking about it in a particular way, when we could be talking about it in so many other ways. There are a number of reasons for this, but perhaps the most inescapable one is this: “Greatness” is a “great idea.” Those of you with a little background in critical thinking should have red flags appearing in that part of your brain that marks logical flaws […]
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Bolton Hall, Things as They Are (1899)

Back in May, I posted a couple of section’s from Bolton Hall’s Things as They Are: an essay, “The Delivery from Bondage;” and three “fables” featuring Snap, the Philosopher Dog. I finally got a chance to do the rest of the text editing on the volume, and a pdf edition is now available in the Libertarian Labyrinth. I’ve been working on indexes of Hall’s radical fables and parables–no small feat, since he published everywhere from St. Nicholas to the American Journal of Eugenics (the continuation of Lucifer, the Lightbearer.) The list is over 250 titles long now, and I’m not […]
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Deadanarchists.org

Much-overdue props to Robert P. Helms for launching deadanarchists.org, an anarchist history site with current emphases on Voltairine de Cleyre and anarchist history of the Philadelphia area. Robert contributed a profile of Hugo Bilgram to the Libertarian Labyrinth awhile back, and you can find a number of his other writings online.
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Alfred Benbow Westrup, “The Financial Problem”

Only one more of Alfred B. Westrup’s major pamphlets to track down and scan—I think. . . The Financial Problem (3rd ed., 1891) is now available in pdf format. As I mentioned in an earlier post, this is a revised edition of Westrup’s earliest (?) pamphlet, The Abolition of Interest a Simple Problem (1879). So, why all the question marks, qualifications, and “i think…”s? The 1891 Citizen’s Money includes, on the title page, this interesting line: Author of the Principles of Monetary Science, Honorary Member ofthe Sociedad Las Clases Productoras. This probably refers to the 1886 edition of The Financial […]
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Resource: Melungeon Heritage Association

I’ve had occasion in the past to reference the Melungeons, “tri-racial isolates” of the southern US. Reports of these groups, and others such as the “Tribe of Ben Ishmael,” made up an important part of the eugenics literature of the late 19th century. Some important pieces of that literature are available on the website of the Melungeon Heritage Association. (Check out the left navigation menu or click on “Tools for Research. Thanks to Terry from the Left Libertarian list for the heads-up.)
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Does the Peace Sign P*ss You Off?

With Laundry Day fast approaching, I’m getting down towards the bottom of the t-shirt pile, so yesterday I wore the one with the peace sign. Honestly, it’s always towards the bottom of the pile, mostly because—much more than most of the genuinely inflammatory shirts I own, more, perhaps, than the one featuring Subcommandante Marcos saying “Ya Basta!” with only one finger—it seems to actively enrage people. It’s a post-9/11 thing, and I more or less understand. To fight or not to fight has come to be one of those Defining Questions. While the President has recently said that disagreement about […]
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Alfred B. Westrup, New Texts and Bibliography online

[I posted an earlier version of this yesterday, but a computer glitch devoured a couple of hours of bibliographic work. Here is an complete version, with the lost material restored and some additions.] Slowly but surely, all of Alfred B. Westrup’s mutual banking material is making its way into the archive. This week’s first addition is Westrup’s magnum opus, The New Philosophy of Money (1st ed., 1895). Like Greene’s Fragments, Tucker’s Instead of a Book, and Ingalls’ Reminiscences, Westrup’s major work is largely stitched together from newspaper debates, correspondence and portions of earlier works. It’s value is in collecting all […]
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Archiving Progress and Prospects

I’m happy to say that I’m on track to posting considerably more than the 3000 original pages that has been my goal for 2006’s scanning and archiving initiative. Looking ahead to 2007, I’m hoping to make it the Year of Liberty, with my major research push being to develop an understanding of the development of individualist anarchist thought in the pages of Benjamin R. Tucker’s journal, and my main archiving efforts going towards a hypertext archive of the major banking and currency debates in Liberty and many of the papers with which it was in dialogue as I can get […]