Spontaneism


Revolutionary spontaneity, also known as spontaneity, calls in political terminology the belief that social revolution can and should occur as spontaneously as possible, if it is to have firm foundations and actually represent the will of the people, arising from the working class prepared without the help or guidance of a political party. It considers, therefore, pernicious the action of individual individuals or concrete parties in the revolutionary development, in itself, its political as well as ideological authority as conductors on the oppressed classes. In his book What to do ?, Lenin argued strongly against revolutionary spontaneity, considering it a dangerous revisionist concept that degenerates the disciplined nature of Marxist political thought and turns it into arbitrary and sterile thinking. The anti-Leninist currents of Marxism, on the other hand, think otherwise.

Most anarchist political schools subscribe to some sort of revolutionary spontaneity, the product of their fiercely anti-avant-garde positions.

However, you have to see the context in which you use the term and its meaning to give you the best interpretation and understanding. See

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