This is a 24-mark Paper 2 Section B ideology essay, marked AO1 (8), AO2 (8), AO3 (8). It tests the long-running internal disagreement within anarchism over what human beings are actually like. The disagreement is structural: it runs between the two anarchist strands the specification names, collectivist and individualist anarchism.
The mark scheme rewards answers built around the strands and the named thinkers. Real-world examples are illustration only - the marks come from the thinker and strand analysis.
The strongest line of argument is YES, BUT ONLY TO A LIMITED EXTENT - anarchists agree on an optimistic frame (human nature is not the obstacle to a stateless society) but divide sharply on its content, between the collectivist view of humans as naturally sociable and cooperative and the individualist view of humans as rational, self-interested egoists.
The 9PL0 specification names five anarchist thinkers. Each carries a distinct reading of human nature.
| Thinker | Strand | View of human nature |
|---|---|---|
| Max Stirner (1806-1856) | Individualist (egoism) | The self-interested, rational individual - the ego - is the centre of the moral universe. There is no higher duty than the self. The future society is a Union of Egoists. |
| Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865) | Collectivist (mutualism) | Humans are capable of fair, voluntary cooperation through exchange. Mutualism rests on a balance of independence and reciprocity rather than pure altruism or pure egoism. |
| Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876) | Collectivist | Strong belief in human sociability - humans are naturally social and cooperative, and flourish through collective life once the state and private property are removed. |
| Peter Kropotkin (1842-1921) | Collectivist (anarcho-communism) | Mutual aid is a scientific fact - cooperation, not competition, is the main factor in human and animal evolution. Human nature is naturally cooperative and altruistic. |
| Emma Goldman (1869-1940) | Collectivist, with a strong individualist emphasis | The free, autonomous individual is the goal, but individuals flourish through cooperative community. Bridges the two strands - personal liberty plus communist organisation. |
Collectivist anarchism rests on an optimistic, social view of human nature. Humans are naturally rational, altruistic and cooperative; competition and selfishness are the products of the state and private property, not of nature.
Kropotkin gives this its sharpest form. In Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (1902) he argued that cooperation, not competition, is the main driver of survival and progress in nature and human society. Mutual aid is a scientific fact about human nature, and it allows human nature to flourish once the state is removed.
Bakunin shares the premise: his strong belief in human sociability underpins his case for collectivisation and the abolition of private property. Proudhon's mutualism assumes humans can cooperate fairly through voluntary exchange. The collectivist strands - anarcho-communism, mutualism and anarcho-syndicalism - all rest on the claim that human nature is fundamentally social.
Individualist anarchism rests on a very different view. Humans are rational, autonomous and self-interested; the goal is the liberty of the individual to make judgements in their own best interests.
Stirner is the clearest case. In The Ego and Its Own (1844) he argued that the self-interested individual - the ego - is the centre of the moral universe. There is no natural duty to others, no sacred cause, no society that outranks the self. The future society is a Union of Egoists: a loose, voluntary association entered into only while it serves each ego, brought about by insurrection rather than the overthrow of the state.
The individualist strand also contains anarcho-capitalism, which treats humans as competitive, self-interested agents best left to a free market without a state. Where collectivists see cooperation as natural, individualists see rational self-interest as natural - and treat the free individual, not the cooperative community, as the basic unit.
Set the thinkers against one another on the specific questions that divide them.
Kropotkin and Bakunin hold that humans are naturally cooperative and altruistic. Stirner holds that the rational ego owes nothing to anyone. These are not different emphases; they are opposite accounts of what a person fundamentally is.
The reading of human nature dictates the future society. Natural sociability leads to Kropotkin's anarcho-communist commune of common ownership. Rational egoism leads to Stirner's Union of Egoists, a voluntary association with no common ownership and no shared duty. Proudhon's mutualism sits between - voluntary exchange between independent producers.
Both strands call humans rational - but they mean different things. For collectivists, reason leads people to see the value of cooperation. For individualists, reason leads people to pursue their own interest. The shared word hides a real division.
The line of argument is YES, BUT ONLY TO A LIMITED EXTENT. Anarchists agree on a frame: human nature is not innately corrupt, the state distorts it, and humans can produce order without a state. That frame is real and it unites the ideology.
So commit to: anarchists agree on the optimistic premise but are divided on its content. The agreement is thinner than it looks, because it is mostly negative; the disagreement is substantive, because it produces two incompatible visions of the good society. On the substantive question this essay is about, anarchists are divided more than they are united.