Anarchy 85/Meliorism
Goodman calls himself a “utopian sociologist”, meaning of course to be ironical. He is a self-
“I seem to be able to write only practically, inventing expedients. … My way of writing a book of social theory has been to invent community plans. My psychology is a manual of therapeutic exercises. A literary study is a manual of practical criticism. A discussion of human nature is a program of pedagogical and political reforms. This present book is no exception. It is social criticism, but almost invariably (except in moments of indignation) I find that I know what I don’t like only by contrast with some concrete proposal that makes more sense.”
Goodman is not in the tradition of 18th and 19th century reformerso were obsessed with the idea of a Grand Plan to cure all ills of mankind at one stroke and forever. His thought is therefore not to be compared to classical anarchism for he seems interested solely in piecemeal reforms and changes. In modern American society thinking men are faced with a moral dilemma:
{{qq|It is only by the usual technological and organisational procedures
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- ↑ Paul Goodman: Utopian Essays and Practical Proposals. Vintage Books, N.Y., 1964.