Henri Saint-Simon ( ): a non-violent transformative activist 1

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1 Henri Saint-Simon (1760-1825): a non-violent transformative activist A survivor of the French Revolution, Henri Saint-Simon (1760-1825) had understood that violence in itself does not transform a society. When all real or imagined opponents of the desired or imagined transformation have been killed, new persons will again fill in the empty slots of power-relations of the old system. Something else is needed to go beyond the out-dated, in Saint-Simon s time, feudal powerrelations, and to make a transition to a new and better society based on new understandings of the world and making use of new technologies. Henri Saint-Simon s rejection of violence was deliberate, and his will to achieve the original idealistic aims of the French Revolution passionate. Saint-Simon s rejection of violence, on the basis of what he had witnessed in the French Revolution, is all the more significant in the light of the glorification of violence as a means to realize a utopian society around half a century later by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, later on by Vladimir Lenin, who referred to the violence of the French Revolution as an example to be followed or surpassed. This important point is largely lost in modern studies of Henri Saint-Simon, born as Claude Henri de Rouvroy, Duke of Saint-Simon. Inspired by the ideals of the French Revolution in its early days, he gave up the privileges and titles of nobility of his own free will. Currently one of the greatest specialists of Saint-Simon is the French philosopher Pierre Musso, who has not only co-edited the complete works of Saint-Simon (Edition critique des Œuvres complètes de Saint-Simon, Paris: PUF, 2013), but also wrote several works on this remarkable thinker and activist who may be regarded as the grandfather of modern sociology as he was the teacher and inspirator of Auguste Comte (1798-1857) who founded sociology as the scientific study of society. His importance for the discipline of sociology was duly appreciated by Emile Durkheim (1858-1917). Saint-Simon invented the concept of industrialism to designate industrial societies. James Burnham and Daniel Bell regard him as the father of technocratism and management. He wanted to minimize the role of the state in economic life and reduce armies to a minimum, so that Proudhon could see him as one of the precursors of anarchism. Marx conveniently circumvented Saint-Simon s conscious rejection of violence as a means to change societies by classifying him as an utopian socialist. The recent volume edited by José Luís Garcia, Pierre Musso and the Network Society: from Saint-Simonianism to the Internet (Cham, Switzerland: Springer, 2016), consists of 9 chapters by several authors, including an Introductory chapter by the editor and two contributions by Pierre Musso: chapter 2 Network Ideology: from Saint-

2 Simonianism to the Internet and a Final Note Examining the Network Concept. In his chapter, Pierre Musso distinguishes three industrial revolutions in the last two centuries, each of which relied upon the formation of a large territorial technical network: the railways, with the first industrial revolution (1780-1830), the electrical network, with the second industrial revolution (1880-1930), and finally the Internet network, spawned by the convergence of telecommunication and information technology. Pierre Musso highlights in this chapter as in earlier books (1998, 2010) that Many myths, fictions, images and imaginaries have always surrounded the development of major technical networks, with the purpose of socializing them. Technology itself appears as a new divinity, and the Internet is but one of its luminous apparitions. Musso recognizes six markers of Network Techno- Utopia, which can be recognized to a great extent already in the work of Saint-Simon and which have since been developed and re-applied to new industrial revolutions : (1) the association of the network and the brain, in the track of Galen and Descartes; (2) Second, the network can be formalized; this marker is Leibnizian rather than Cartesian; (3) The network transforms society. This marker is most evident in the Manifesto of Michel Chevalier, follower of Saint-Simon; Musso: the technical network always announces a technical and therefore social revolution, through the fragmentation of the existing social structure and the promise of modernity in the future. (4) Networks are thought to be contributive to peace, prosperity and universal association, as they artificially cover the Earth. (5) The fifth marker of the network is its being an answer to crisis, by ensuring economic development and prosperity it bears the promise of new occupations, and a new cycle of growth. (6) Finally, the network implies a choice of society or policy which is embedded within the very architecture of the network Its graph either reveals a monarchical, Jacobin, centralizing policy, or the opposite. Although they were categorized as utopian socialists by Marx, the efforts of Saint-Simon and his followers are at the basis of a number of lasting achievements, not only the formulation of early theories of society and socialism, but also of early theories of the global network with as corollary the planning of the Suez canal and of the Panama canal (which could finally be realized several decades after Saint-Simon s death, respectively in 1869 and in 1914). These brief remarks serve as a book notice of: Pierre Musso and the Network Society: from Saint-Simonianism to the Internet, edited by José Luís Garcia. Cham, Switzerland: Springer, 2016. The price, even of the e-version of the book, varies according to country and provider (Springer, Amazon, play.google.com etc.):

3 between ca. 55 and 75 Euro; hardcopy ca. 99 Euro. For further study of the philosophy of Henri Saint-Simon: Pierre Musso, 1998. Télécommunications et philosophie des réseaux: la postérité paradoxale de Saint-Simon (in French). Paris, PUF. (First edition 1997.) Pierre Musso, 2010. Saint-Simon, l industrialisme contre l Etat (in French). La Tour d Aigues: Editions de l Aube. Saint-Simon, Henri de. Henri Saint-Simon (1760-1825): Selected Writings on Science, Industry, and Social Organization. Transl. and ed. by Keith Taylor. New York: Holmes and Meier. 1975. Saint-Simon, Henri de. Henri Saint-Simon (1760-1825): Edition critique des Œuvres complètes de Saint-Simon (4 volumes), ed. by Juliette Grange, Pierre Musso, Philippe Régnier & Franck Yonnet. Paris: PUF, 2013.

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