I don't think so. Islamic fundamentalism is an idea, and ideas don't oppress people. People oppress people. Ideas are given power by individuals that choose to adopt them and impose them on others. I could have chosen various other examples, but I tried to make the injustice as clear as possible.
The principle at play here, is that the moral and physical impositions of the collective undermine the interests of the individual. We recognize that as injustice, especially when the injustice is magnified by one's own moral framework. Can you recognize it too when one's own moral framework is what hides it? — Tzeentch
In your scenario the culprit is Islamic fundamentalism. — praxis
I mentioned that "Abused individuals owe no loyalty" meaning that any moral intuition or social norm could be justifiably considered invalid in that situation when looking at it from the perspective of interdependence and cooperation for mutual benefit. From the perspective of dog-eat-dog competition, slavery is cheap and offers an advantage that can't be shared by all. — praxis
Presumably she was enslaved against her will and in order to provide some value to the enslavers. Your scenario didn’t touch on betrayal. — praxis
Interdependence as a rationalization for behavior is rather unusual, probably because it's far too abstract an idea to be popularly adopted. There's no natural intuition to step back and look at the bigger picture, even though that could lead to a more fulfilling and sustainable outcome. So yeah, certainly couldn't rest with that alone. — praxis
Abused individuals owe no loyalty just as societies owe no loyalty to freeloaders and traitors. — praxis
No man is an island, the individualist's actions inevitably affect others, Beyond some petty grab for control it is necessary to rein in the individual for the good of the collective. Devoid of any sense of obligation to the group a person quickly becomes detached, drifting without any firm anchor of reciprocality to caution them. — New2K2
What if he (the individual) regards "the collective" that attempts to rein him in as an immoral enterprise? — Tzeentch
Were those who forced non-state societies into the drudgery and disease of developed agriculture working with them cooperatively or exploitively? — praxis
I think there are two basic strategies for social living, which are living cooperatively for mutual benefit or competing for resources. In competition there is always winners and losers, so in that strategy some are guaranteed to suffer. That's not the case in a society that cooperates for mutual benefit. — praxis
Honestly. I just find within that moral framework the seeds of it's own destruction. — James Riley
This implies that I'm for the project of the development of the state, regardless of the incalculable suffering that it may cause. As though I wish that any hunter-gatherer societies that exist today were developed into states, or worse, annexed by a state. — praxis
It's curious that the individualism that you appear to value so much is a consequence of the development of the state, and now you and NOS pooh-poohing the thing that gave rise to your moral framework. Shouldn't you guys be grateful? — praxis
No man is an island, the individualist's actions inevitably affect others, Beyond some petty grab for control it is necessary to rein in the individual for the good of the collective. — New2K2
Devoid of any sense of obligation to the group a person quickly becomes detached, drifting without any firm anchor of reciprocality to caution them. — New2K2
I've read research that the original intentions were pretty much as you describe, and only relatively recently has civilazation been worth the price of forced admission for the average Joe. — praxis
I don’t think that any of us knows what it would be like to somehow erase all our conditioning and achieve a kind of moral blank-slate, if a ‘moral blank-slate’ makes any sense. Would such a way of being value liberty as much as you appear to? — praxis
It's a metaphysics of and for monkeys. — StreetlightX
But can't you opt out of it? What if I voluntarily choose to abandon that because I want to do something else right now? It's my free choice after all. — BitconnectCarlos
The choices we make are largely shaped by the culture and environment we develop in, or at least the way we rationalize our choices. It’s as though you’re claiming that we choose the way we choose. — praxis
If you have good parents, for instance, who raise you right are you not duty-bound to them? If your parents provided you with a great upbringing and did everything for you are you really going to tell me that you have no moral duty to them unless you voluntarily choose it? — BitconnectCarlos
For one, the State owns your body, literally. — baker
...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
I just don't see that freedom. — baker
But this is not true of any existing human being. — StreetlightX
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
The individualist notion of freedom is literally infantile. — StreetlightX
Beyond infantile, individualism is inherently moribund - a dead ideology. — Maw
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
Human nature. One wants better for themselves. — Outlander
If, on the other hand you think human beings are by nature social animals then there must be constraints if we are to live together in peace. — Fooloso4
If a person is actually free then they can freely assume responsibility. So why is there such an apparent lack of it? — praxis
It seems to be the case that only when accept the fact that we’re not free, accept our interdependence, that we may tend to become more responsible. And because we’re a social species this acceptance may provide meaning and an enhanced sense of well-being, feeling part of something greater than ourselves. — praxis
What if your ability to live where, in the manner in which you've become accustomed and act as you please and state what you state is the sole result of claiming the essential freedoms of another? — Outlander
So, you don't quite believe this, you believe in protecting a familiar status quo that serves you and little more, just another case of looking out for number one. — Outlander
Does that not happen where you are from? — Fooloso4
The family is a social structure with rules and differences in power. It is not freedom without constraint. — Fooloso4
Society is a group of people. — Fooloso4
Man has never lived in a state of nature. There has always been some organization, starting with the family. — Fooloso4
