WELCOME
to the
School of Cooperative Individualism
YOU HAVE REACHED THE ENTRY PAGE TO THE SCHOOL OF COOPERATIVE
INDIVIDUALISM. LINKS TO SOME OF THE MAJOR COMPONENTS OF THE SCHOOL'S
WEBSITE ARE PROVIDED ON THIS AND MOST EVERY PAGE.
CLICK HERE FOR ACCESS TO MATERIAL RECENTLY ADDED TO THE SCHOOL'S
WEBSITE, INCLUDING RECENT BOOK REVIEWS.
SCI director, Ed Dodson, has developed
this Powerpoint-based course, available here for study, including
his lecture notes, provided you have Powerpoint software (save the
individual modules to your computer, then open the modules in "notes
view")
FOR NEW VISITORS
I
encourage you to read through the INTRODUCTION below as your first
step to learning about the School and its reason for being.
Cooperative Individualism is a school of thought derived from the
objective search for truth by some of history's most thoughtful
writers and philosophers.
Thanks for visiting. I hope you will find your stay informative and
enjoyable.
Welcome to the School of Cooperative Individualism. The
School was established in January 1997 as a place where thoughtful
persons would find meaningful -- and sometimes new -- insights into
the long and tireless search for a socio-political philosphy that,
if implemented, would nurture the development of just societies.
I thank those of you who have visited and continue to return to the
School, and I particularly appreciate the comments and
recommendations received over these many years. I will continue to
add important material to the School's library and will strive to
provide links to other websites that contribute to the expansion of
our knowledge and understanding.
The School offers visitors what I believe is a unique opportunity to
explore the quest for first principles begun by the ancients and
elevated to the realm of scientific investigation by the classical
political economists of the 18th and 19th centuries.
Cooperative individualism is an activist philosophy, a set
of principles upon which to base activism, and many of the classical
political economists were activists in their own times. The one
person who most fully serves as the architect of Cooperative
Individualism is Thomas Paine, although he never referred to his
principles and proposals by this term. The first consistent use of
the term I have found is by one of the founders of an experimental
community called Fairhope, in Alabama. E.B. Gaston's essay on
cooperative individualism is included in the School's libary.
Thomas Paine had both an extraordinary intellect and a deep
conviction to truth and justice. His writings and his deeds speak of
someone never afraid to challenge conventional wisdom when
observation and reason directed him to do so. Although Paine never
used the term cooperative individualism to describe the
socio-political philosophy to which he subscribed, this term is
quite appropriate as the basis for just relations between
individuals, between individuals within groups, and between groups.
Paine was also an activist. He fought to end privilege, despotism
and monopolistic behavior.
After Paine's death early in the nineteenth century, the
torch of cooperative individualism fell to the ground, its fire
nearly dying out until the emergence of Henry George in the final
quarter of the nineteenth century to relight the flame and carry the
torch into the global political arena.
In the twentieth century, the princples of cooperative individualism
were gradually overwhelmed by the conflicts -- often violent --
between those who desired to remake the world order and those who
fought to defend the status quo. In that environment, the
philosopher Mortimer J. Adler fought to preserve scientific methods
and the objective pursuit of truth. His writings materially
contribute to the preservation of the principles of cooperative
individualism.
Today, as in Paine's own time, constructive change requires two
things, essentially: an educated citizenry and a core of teachers
able to distinguish between true and false moral principles. Change
will then flow naturally and, on the whole, peacefully. This is the
mission of The School of Cooperative Individualism.