*** Dedication

*** Acknowledgements

** Introduction

** 1. Liberty and public censure in Anarchist thought

*** The conceptual argument

*** The crude empirical arguments

*** The sophisticated empirical arguments

*** The libertarianism of Anarchist censure

** 2. The goal of Anarchism: communal individuality

*** The normative status of individuality and community in Anarchist thought

*** Liberty, censure and individuality

*** Liberty, censure and community

*** How free is Anarchy?

** 3. Varieties of Anarchy

*** Godwin: Anarchy as conversation

*** Proudhon and Bakunin: Anarchy as a productive enterprise

*** Kropotkin: Anarchy as an extended neighborhood

** 4. The Anarchists as critics of established institutions

*** Law, government and unanimous direct democracy

*** Authority

*** Punishment

*** Social inequality

*** Technology

*** The coherence of Anarchist criticism

** 5. Anarchist strategy: the dilemma of means and ends

*** Godwin: ‘trusting to reason alone’[198]

*** Proudhon: waiting for the revolution

*** Bakunin: the perils of force and fraud

*** Kropotkin: in search of strategic balance

*** The futility of Anarchist strategy

** 6. The place of anarchism in the spectrum of political ideas

*** Anarchism, liberalism and community

*** Anarchism, socialism and the state as cause

*** The singularity of Anarchism

** 7. Evaluating anarchism

*** Anarchy as a complete achievement

*** Anarchy as a critical standard and practical guide

*** The significance of Anarchism for political thought