Then shame on whoever did that claiming. — Tzeentch
I believe what I stated, and this is just an underhanded (and sleep-inducingly old) attempt at framing it as selfishness.
What makes you believe I am so fond of the status quo? — Tzeentch
From an early age individuals are taught what to believe. By their parents, by the educational system, politicians and so forth. This happens before the individual is capable of critical thought.
If the individual develops critical thinking, they have a chance to reevaluate all they know, and rid themselves of the false beliefs of others.
The "invisible bonds" are the beliefs of others, and one is still inherently free, because one by virtue of their own mental faculty holds the key to the lock. — Tzeentch
So for example if a kid were raised in a, oh I don't know, heavy libertarian culture and eventually applied their God given critical thinking skills to discover that they've been manipulated, would they throw off the invisible chains and go on to undo the damage and work to help empower the working class? — praxis
More seriously, if I'm following correctly it appears to be a catch 22 situation. The freer a person becomes the more responsibility they assume, but the more responsibility they assume the less free they become. — praxis
I don't share that view of human nature, and frankly I think attempts at psychoanalyzing complete strangers sooner point towards projection. — Tzeentch
However, one would hope that since they had to undo the damage done to them, they would apply methods that do not do the same to others. — Tzeentch
A free person more readily recognizes and accepts those responsibilities that are theirs, because they chose them voluntarily. They do not necessarily assume more responsibilities. — Tzeentch
How about the denial of basic human right to life by those who have no regard for the lives of others and refuse to follow simple safety precautions and wear a mask? — Fooloso4
In nations where the public health responses so far have been efficient and effective (e.g. Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam, Iceland, Germany, (Scandinavia), Australia, New Zealand, etc), you are quite right, NOS: their approaches have been much more collectivist than not. However, nations mislead by individualistic, reactive, populist governments like the former Trump maladministration, BoJo's clown show, Modi's "Raj", Xi's sweatshop gulag, Putin's klepto-czarship & Bolsonaro's junta, for example, demonstrate yet again that not working collectively – collaboratively – on common complex problems is disastrously self-defeating.The response to Covid was a collectivist project if I’ve ever seen one. — NOS4A2
Incidentally and with reference to the idea that 'humans are born free', the only people who can get away with saying that are people who have never so much as laid eyes on a child before. There are few creatures as so hopelessly dependant and subserviant as children. Kant understood this well: that any measure of freedom was the result of a great deal of discipline and tutelage, such that, having mastered our abilities and rational capacities by way of education, only then could anyone be called free. The individualist notiom of freedom is literally infantile. — StreetlightX
The individualist notion of freedom is literally infantile. — StreetlightX
Beyond infantile, individualism is inherently moribund - a dead ideology. — Maw
Oh? So what are children free to do? Piss and shit their diapers? And scream?And yet he is free. In fact, children are more free than most adults. — Tzeentch
One would assume that the denizens of this forum would be intelligent enough to understand that the phrase "Man is born free" does not imply that babies are born in absolute physical freedom.
Man is born unindebted, under possession or moral authority of no state, society or individual. — Tzeentch
One would assume that the denizens of this forum would be intelligent enough to understand that the phrase "Man is born free" does not imply that babies are born in absolute physical freedom.
Man is born unindebted, under possession or moral authority of no state, society or individual. — Tzeentch
But this is not true of any existing human being. — StreetlightX
...but pretty much any human is born into webs of social, political and even ecological relations which pretty much everything around it, webs upon which they are dependent upon for their very existence. — StreetlightX
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