It's a much simpler thing I'm talking about; which is that if people do not believe they are free they will not experience freedom nor will they act freely, but instead their acts will be determined by their slavery to the ideas that deny their freedom.
That's a contradiction. If that were true, freedom would be dependent on believing in it, meaning it would not be "universal" and only a particular way, a discourse, a thought, an action, of people behaving.
In any case, no one's actions are predetermined by their outlook on freedom. Every action takes the action itself. All acts are lived. Even the person who denies they have freedom might find themselves acting otherwise to what they thought would happen. Everyone is free. All make choices, even those who think they don't have any choice. Freedom is so without the guarantee of belief in freedom. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But what in the world has belief got to do with freedom? A belief in unicorns speaks nothing as to their reality, and I don't see what a 'belief' in freedom has to do with the practice and exercise of freedom either. In any case, without specifying how belief functions to guarantee freedom - and yes, as Willow points out, you're leveraging belief as a guarantee for freedom, no matter your protestations to the contrary - all you're doing is displacing the problem. To be free, one must believe: OK but what is belief other than some kind of immaterial, 'mental' conviction, no different to one's 'belief' in UFOs and The Secret? In fact, how does your position differ from the self-help woo that is The Secret at all? — StreetlightX
so how can it not be a matter concerned entirely with our thoughts, beliefs, intuitions and experience, in other words with life as lived ? — John
When a Rosa Park sits at the front of a bus, this expression of freedom is abyssal, terrifying, completely dehumanizing in every sense of the word. But it has nothing to do with how she 'feels or thinks' and everything to do with what she does — StreetlightX
Yes, for me freedom is a mystery, it points beyond both the mechanical and the organic and is like a finger pointing at an unknown moon. Not everything can be decided or accounted for by the discursive intellect. It's a remarkable irony when Streetlight refers to what I have been saying about freedom as "horrifyingly narrow and morbidly intellectualist"! — John
All acts are not lived. If an act is entirely unconscious then it is not lived. Of course it is still 'gone through' by the body, but it may be utterly mechanical, or merely organic. Freedom and life are neither mechanical nor organic. Of course "all make choices" but choices my be completely mechanical; even machines can make choices in this sense. — John
It is interesting, though, how a discussion that started off about the existence of common themes in PM has zeroed in on the issue of freedom. — John
I think it is safe to say that we have an intuitive sense of something greater, which we're lacking, which we need to find (hence the name). But many others will say we're just 'seeing things' - projecting, rationalising, or whatever. — Wayfarer
You don't need that word to understand what the vision of the free society is. It's helpful, though.What in the world is 'spirit'? It is another completely underdetermined and fuzzy feel good word? — StreetlightX
Nobody thinks she wanted that particular seat. Her action was highly symbolic.As if Parks were not driven by the real, material circumstances in which her community were being treated as second class citizens, as if she wasn't contesting - in a literal manner - the appropriation of space and time (a bus seat, in this case), — StreetlightX
But no, far better, apparently, to think of her acts in terms of 'spirit' and 'authenticity' and 'belief'; psychological weasel words that absolve you of actually engaging in 'life as actually lived', with history, with space and time. — StreetlightX
Do remember in one of our earlier discussions when you claimed that removing the “grounding myth” would amount to a loss of freedom? — TheWillowOfDarkness
You position considers freedom dependent on believing one is free. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I remember you outright stating it— that if there was no such “grounding myth,” that there easn't even a possibly of anyone being free. — TheWillowOfDarkness
All acts are lived. Our worlds and lives are bigger than what we are immediately aware of in one moment.To say the unconscious is not lived is manifestly untrue. People are affected by what they aren’t aware of all the time. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Any action we take involves some part of the world we aren’t presently aware of. When I think about what letter I need to type next, I’m far more than that thought and my body is doing countless things I’m not aware of in that thought. Living freedom doesn't depend on the thought of it. Such an argument is for one who locates life only in the present idea of their consciousness (e.g. "I'm free" ) rather than wider world that extends beyond their thoughts. — TheWillowOfDarkness
This... rather ironic. You are the one trying to narrow down life to the discursive intellect here. What do you say to say when we point out that life is more than thought? You claim it's not life, as if lives were restricted to the immediately present consciousness experience:
All acts are not lived. If an act is entirely unconscious then it is — TheWillowOfDarkness
Lol. You're protesting that we should the think of the Civil Rights Movement in terms of physics. — Mongrel
Nobody thinks she wanted that particular seat. Her action was highly symbolic. — Mongrel
Lol. You think this. — StreetlightX
Sure - symbolic with respect to what? — StreetlightX
Yes, for me freedom is a mystery, it points beyond both the mechanical and the organic and is like a finger pointing at an unknown moon. — John
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