Originally posted by Elok
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"The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.
"The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton
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Originally posted by Lorizael View PostTraditionally, freedom is an absence of coercion. But the coercion we're talking about is usually of the social/political variety. So in a "free" society, you cannot be coerced into silence, or coerced into a particular job, etc. But there's an evolving view of freedom that looks at it as an absence of other kinds of force as well. For example, you can have a freedom from sickness or a freedom from ignorance, which is how you get states with universal healthcare or education.
The difficulty is the tension between what freedom grants and what freedom costs. If you look at freedom as only applying to social/political coercion, then you can think of being free as the "natural" state of things (even if it never exists). Thus, governments cannot give you freedom; they can only restrict it conditionally. So the cost of freedom is that you cannot infringe on another's freedom, for example, and the government can act to ensure that.
of course from an anarchist perspective, the absence of government is perquisite for anything approaching freedom. it can also argued that the structure of employment (capitalist > managers > workers) is antithetical to freedom; what is the point of political 'freedom' if you are at someone's beck and call for a quarter of your life, just so that you have the means to survive. a free structure by contrast would be some kind of workers co-operative.
we might even say that living in any kind of society necessarily restricts freedom. we are all constrained and prevented from acting as we please by laws, norms, social conventions etc. obviously we prefer it this way; hermits living in the forest don't post on apolyton."The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.
"The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton
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