God and the State

Front Cover
Joseph Reidhead Publishers, 2013 - History - 94 pages
In God and the State, Mikhail Bakunin presents a clear and compelling argument against religion and divine authority. Bakunin looks at the ways that belief in the divine props up the temporal authority of governments, and condemns both. Finally, Bakunin addresses the theory that would give the power of government to science, demonstrating that science would become corrupted and used as a tool of power like the divine power it replaced. God and the State is an important and enduring work of anarchist thought. This Dialectics Annotated Edition includes over 50 new historical and biographical footnotes and notes on the English translation from the French text. Also included are several historic illustrations of Bakunin. These notes and illustrations help to make God and the State as relevant today as when it was first published.

Other editions - View all

About the author (2013)

Mikhail Bakunin (1814 - 1876) was born to Russian nobility, but abandoned that life for a life of political activism. He escaped from Siberian exile and participated in the European revolutionary movement. He is most known for being and important anarchist activist and proponent of collectivist anarchism.