Anarcho-pragmatism model

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Definitions

The anarcho-pragmatism (anarcho-AI) is a theory model for social organization that attributes the title of power to the individuals, based on their voluntary actions and on a pragmatic consensual perspective of their involuntary actions.

On a strict sense, anarcho-pragmatism is a method to organize mutiple populations (without the central figure of a state) by making collective decisions and using different participation methods on a 'scale of scientific, ethical and pragmatic priorities'.

On an open sense, anarcho-pragmatism is a method for social development in which participants are free (libres) and equal and social relationships are established by ethical trusting mechanisms.

On a more extensive sense, anarcho-pragmatism is a method to organize the contribution of knowledge and survival needs, from the individual and the collectives perspective, which is based on a serie of rules created from a neutral, ethical, sustainable, scientific, networked, theoretical way of life and all the participants on the system.

Origin and ethimology

The main term to describe the theory anarchy-pragmatism comes from the sum of an ancient Greek word and a philosophical movement.

- Anarchy: ἀναρχία (anarchia), which combines ἀ (a), "not, without" and ἀρχή (arkhi), "ruler, leader, authority."

- Pragmatism: a philosophical movement began in the United States in the 1870s by The Metaphysical Club.

Symbol

The symbol that better represents anarcho-pragmatism is an image of a Taxus baccata (also known as: Tejo) over a classic anarchist blackflag.

Methodology

A short math formula to describe the decision method is: 1=1+X;

- 1 individual is equal to 1 + X votes; 
- X is based on a Scale of consensual empowerment variables applied to pragmatic priorities.