A new study on the human capacity for cooperation suggests that, deep down, people of diverse cultures are more similar than you might expect. The study, published in Scientific Reports, shows that from the towns of England, Italy, Poland, and Russia to the villages of rural Ecuador, Ghana, Laos, and Aboriginal Australia, at the micro scale of our daily interaction, people everywhere tend to help others when needed.
That’s really interesting and resonates a lot with classical anarchist thought. Though postclassical anarchist thought particularly post-structural or post-anarchist thought rejects the idea of a a universal human nature or tendency, rejecting its prescriptiveness.