A profound unease stirs within the individual, a silent rebellion against the specters that have long haunted human consciousness. For millennia, the spirit of man has been bound, not by chains of iron, but by invisible bonds woven from "fixed ideas" and "spooks" - the sacred concepts of State, God, Humanity, morality, and every other abstraction demanding devotion and sacrifice. These are but creations, phantoms born of the mind, yet they have been granted a tyrannical power over the unique self, dictating its desires, its duties, and its very essence.
From the earliest stirrings of childhood, where one is constrained by parental authority, a journey of subjugation unfolds. As the individual matures, the constraints shift from the material and natural to the conceptual. Ancient philosophers, with their ideals and virtues, began this long process, laying the groundwork for a world where the individual was perpetually indebted to some higher cause. Then came Christianity, cementing the reign of the divine, demanding that one subordinate their earthly concerns to the heavenly, their flesh to the spirit.
Yet, even as humanity sought liberation from these older masters, new ones arose, equally insidious. The monarchical state, the bourgeois state, and even the revolutionary movements that promised freedom merely replaced one set of fetters with another. They spoke of the "good cause," of truth, of justice, of the people, of the fatherland - all grand narratives that, in their insistence on universal ideals, continued to deny the singular, incomparable reality of the individual. Every revolution, it seemed, only swept away an old evil to enthrone a new one, a fresh set of "sacred" obligations to which the ego was expected to bow.
The modern world, despite its boasts of enlightenment, remains deeply entrenched in this religious mode of thought, substituting secular deities for divine ones. Even the promise of socialism, far from offering true liberation, is revealed as a potential for one of the most oppressive totalitarian states, where the collective demands subsume the individual entirely. The avaricious individual, seemingly self-interested, is no less enslaved, sacrificing their own expansive possibility to the single, narrow end of material riches. This is not true egoism, for it is still a form of bondage to a fixed idea.
True egoism is not the pursuit of conventional self-interest, nor is it merely being selfish or narcissistic. It is, rather, a radical self-ownership, a recognition of one's own uniqueness - the "Unique One" - and a refusal to be controlled by anything outside oneself. It is about realizing that you possess the power to choose how you engage with the world, how you interact with others, and that you are the ultimate authority in your own life. You define your own values, you make your own choices, and you are not merely going along with what everyone else tells you to do; you are the captain of your own ship.
This is a call to self-liberation, not to establish a new authority in place of the old, but to affirm one's self-sovereignty to the fullest extent of one's power, here and now. Nothing is more to me than myself. My concern is neither the divine nor the human, not the true, good, or just, but is unique, as I am unique. Every doctrine, every belief, every institution that demands the subordination of the individual's interests to some external fiction - be it State, God, Humanity, or Society - must be mercilessly criticized and undermined.
The journey of the ego begins by shedding these "spooks," these authoritarian concepts that dominate human life. Only by shaking off these mental chains can the individual truly act freely. It is a declaration of hostility to every creed that would crush or deny individuality, a profound affirmation of amoralistic egoism and the celebration of the unique, self-owning individual.