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Pantisocracy : ウィキペディア英語版
Pantisocracy

Pantisocracy (from the Greek "πάν" and "ισοκρατία" meaning "equal or level government by/for all") was a utopian scheme devised in 1794 by the poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey for an egalitarian community. It is a system of government where all rule equally. They originally intended to establish such a community on the banks of the Susquehanna River in the United States, but by 1795 Southey had doubts about the viability of this and proposed moving the project to Wales. The two men were unable to agree on the location, causing the project to collapse.
==Principles of Pantisocracy==

Coleridge and Southey believed that contemporary society and politics were responsible for cultures of servitude and oppression.〔Morrow, John (1990). ''Coleridge's Political Thought'', p. 8. St. Martin's Press, New York. ISBN 0-312-03645-0〕 Having abandoned these corrupting influences along with personal property for a fresh start in the wilderness, the Pantisocrats hoped that men might be governed by the “dictates of rational benevolence.”
As spelled out by Southey, the utopian community he and Coleridge planned was to be built on two principles: "Pantisocracy" (meaning government by all) and "Aspheterism" (meaning general ownership of property).〔Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Ed. Ernest Coleridge. (1895). ''Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge'', vol. 1, p. 73. Houghton Mifflin & Co., Boston and New York. ISBN 1-4212-7161-3〕 The scheme called for a small group of educated individuals to give up their possessions and labor together for the common good. Few regulations would be necessary to govern the colony and decisions would be made so as to avoid one man having more power than another. Coleridge envisioned Pantisocracy as a way to minimize the greed among men.〔Woodring, Carl R.. ''Politics in the Poetry of Coleridge'', p. 63. The University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.〕 Additionally, Coleridge and Southey hoped to enjoy a more relaxing existence than was possible in England, and expected that each member of the community would have to work just two to three hours per day to sustain the colony.〔MacGillivray, J.R., Ed. Malcolm Wallace (1931). "The Pantisocracy Scheme and Its Immediate Background" in ''Studies in English'', p. 132. The University of Toronto Press, Toronto. 〕
The Pantisocrats viewed their attempt as not only a search for personal domestic peace, but also as an attempt to change the status quo in England.〔Morrow, John (1990). ''Coleridge's Political Thought'', p. 9. St. Martin's Press, New York. ISBN 0-312-03645-0〕 One influence on the plan was disillusionment with the French Revolution and with the current politics of England, from which Coleridge may have sought solace through an utopian escape.〔 Coleridge viewed the utopian scheme as an experiment that, if successful, might be gradually extended to a larger citizenship.〔Sister Eugenia (1930). "Coleridge's Scheme of Pantisocracy and American Travel Accounts", in ''PMLA'' p. 1079. () 28/1/2010〕 Coleridge also hoped that through a more active, natural lifestyle he would live a healthier and more wholesome existence with his family.〔Woodring, Carl R. (1961). ''Politics in the Poetry of Coleridge'', p. 69. The University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.〕

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