Much is made of the concept, but what does it really mean?In another thread about oil and its unfortunate penchant for attracting conflicts involving Western powers, the discussion led to here:
8/23/2006 7:01:43 PM
choice within reason, thats my only answer for this thread. it is over-simplified and obviously will vary between cultures, but i like that answer.
8/23/2006 7:14:22 PM
Dammit, Gamecat, we're not writing your paper for you. On that note, my short answers:1) Very briefly, the ability to do with yourself and the fruits of labor what you will, to any extent that does not restrict the freedom or health of anybody else. At this point someone will yell, "OH YEAH WAHT ABOUT TEH MARIJUANA AND AB0RTI0NZ?" And I will deal with that when someone actually says it, because I have more points to cover and don't have time to predict, in detail, what response everything I say will elicit.2) It's a concept. It's the same everywhere. Different cultures and individuals will see it through different-colored lenses, but it's always the same thing. Obviously enough my political position means I support some positions that aren't strictly in keeping with a straight, simple, objective view of the quickie definition I offered above, but that doesn't change freedom at all.Further, of course, some people don't really want the broader freedom, but its more specific and easily-definable bastard children, like freedom from fear.3) No. As with #2, freedom is a concept that does not change with any evolving or differing circumstance.4) Yes, but rarely is the process easy or fast.5) Grassroots political activism followed by bloody revolution, and yes, I'm serious.
8/23/2006 7:27:35 PM
8/23/2006 11:13:52 PM
or move to America and open a gas station
8/24/2006 12:27:47 AM
I am very interested in this thread, and I sincerely hope that it does not become a battle between the well-read...I get bored of listening to people repeat the ideas of famous philosophers n shit.
8/24/2006 12:30:49 AM
I have many faults, but being well-read is not among them.I haven't heard of probably 70% of the people that get named on here (including Santayana, Gamecat).Incidentally, I still don't know which one of Hannity & Colmes is the Republican. If either of them are.[Edited on August 24, 2006 at 12:41 AM. Reason : not that either of them are philosophers, but the point stands]
8/24/2006 12:41:35 AM
8/24/2006 2:05:31 AM
In the specific case of the domino's land, those people are absolutely free. Moving into that community is a choice and as long as there is free mobility of people, they are free. Now, if they were shot at or attacked for trying to leave the community, then they would cease to be free.As it stands, they are free, living in mandatory restrictions, voluntarily entered into.Now, I can see an argument that the children aren't free, but unfortunately we have to give them to the age of 18 (or earlier if they gain emancipation) before they really can exercise their freedom of choice.
8/24/2006 7:18:15 AM
^^I know this is going to sound argumentative, but it isn't intended to...You can say "don't touch the stove" all day, but the lesson is only truly learned when the child gets burned on the stove. In this case you raised your child in an environment where they were taught that touching the stove is wrong but the lesson was only truly learned through personal experience.Most children initially learn about society and how to interact with it based on the community they live in and their parents' beliefs. Early on they learn from example. I'd say learning this way in the younger years is more the norm than the exception. Of course the degree in which these beliefs are pressed upon children will vary - there are extremes with anything.Even with all of these external influences a child still has to discover and come to their own understanding of who they are. Everyone is unique, I'm not a carbon copy of my parents.Children will eventually grow up and leave the home. Part of the challenge of being a parent is letting your child have the freedom to make decisions you think are wrong and even letting your child have the freedom to make decisions you know are wrong.If you really, really wanted to tip-toe around the issue of infringing with a child's ability to discover things for themselves then you might as well toss them in the woods to be raised by wolves.[Edited on August 24, 2006 at 7:35 AM. Reason : ^^]
8/24/2006 7:35:29 AM
8/24/2006 10:53:26 AM
For clarity's sake, I really am not writing a paper here. And I don't have very hard answers to any of the questions I asked in mind. I'm genuinely just curious what other people's thoughts on them are...
8/24/2006 11:07:16 AM
Sigh, I'm just waiting for the day...Son, eat your vegetables!Quit involuntarily entering me into a system of non-freedom dad!
8/24/2006 11:19:18 AM
Isn't that ostensibly what a child is saying when they refuse to eat their vegetables?
8/24/2006 11:21:32 AM
Yeah, but I'm not going to argue about how telling them to eat vegetables is morally wrong now am I?I guess it all boils down to this. You can either:1) Have problems with parents raising their child the way they want to in the name of "freedom" for the childor2) You can have problems with the limitation of freedom on parents to raise their own children the way they see fitSince kids learn the responsibilities and consequences of real freedom little by little I'll chose to side with letting parents have freedom to raise their kids the way they want to.[Edited on August 24, 2006 at 11:30 AM. Reason : -]
8/24/2006 11:23:42 AM
8/24/2006 11:25:29 AM
Of course not.But then, it does put us into a grey area.Does having true freedom necessitate that one have the freedom to involuntarily enter others into a system of non-freedom or less freedom?---
8/24/2006 11:27:28 AM
Well, I say the gray area becomes that much more black and white when you consider that parents are legally held accountable for the actions of their children until they reach a certain age.If my kid keys the neighborhood cars every time he goes outside I'm going to restrict their freedom to go outside.
8/24/2006 11:34:25 AM
8/24/2006 11:38:04 AM
And before the US or Britain came, they had not adopted an idea of freedom?
8/24/2006 11:38:47 AM
I know you're not writing a paper, Gamecat. You just presented it in such a way as looked like a paper topic, and we've seen people try to get us to do their homework before.
8/24/2006 12:07:14 PM
Germany had lots of freedom in my opinion before WW2, during the Weimar Republic. The economy sucked, but Berlin was the epitome of free speech and artistic expression during the 20s.Generally defined, I think freedom is the allowance of free movement and expression of a populace while keeping an ear to the popular desires of said populace and balancing that with practicality. People might all desire to drive school buses to work everyday, but its completely unpractical for the populace. I think sometimes my pragmatism takes a greater place over my desire for the all-out freedom to do anything.[Edited on August 24, 2006 at 12:14 PM. Reason : .]
8/24/2006 12:11:42 PM
this might be extremely fundamental but I was just discussing this with someone today...Person A suggested that SUV's be banned from the United States for reasons such as safety of other drivers, emisions, amount of gas used, ect. The person he was suggesting this to (person B) was amazed that someone would want such a freedom, such as driving an SUV, taken from them. Person B supports weed being illegal. Person A points out that these two topics are extremely similar and that denying ones right to an SUV is no different than denying the use of pot.ones persons freedom is very different than anothers. And to go back to what I was talking about in the other thread...this is why the war in the middle east is beyond fucked forever.
8/24/2006 12:11:48 PM
8/24/2006 12:25:31 PM
if someone wishes to expose such ideas, they can. its when it takes over that its dangerous, so yes, it led to something that was anti-freedom, but the presence of such ideas in itself w/o popular support still fostered and allowed for free expression.
8/24/2006 12:27:21 PM
^^^ That's exactly why I made the thread.All arguments over the Iraq War are arguments about the definition of freedom.[Edited on August 24, 2006 at 12:30 PM. Reason : .]
8/24/2006 12:29:38 PM
Should we invade Ave Maria, Fla.? No, but we should embargo it
8/24/2006 12:30:55 PM
8/24/2006 12:33:05 PM
8/24/2006 12:43:09 PM
8/24/2006 12:43:11 PM
Communism is a western concept that China unfortunatley got swept up in. Maosim/Marxism was an unfortunate anomally that China will soon grow out of. While it may not completely decentralize, it will not be what we call a "communist state" much longer.That's just my amateur (albiet bold) opinion, and i just made up that term "Neo-Confucian Meritocracy". If you deconstruct it, you'll see where I'm coming from.
8/24/2006 12:51:47 PM
Freedom is one of those things that is easier identified by what it is NOT rather than by what it is.
8/24/2006 1:22:14 PM
Freedom is obscene.
8/24/2006 2:21:10 PM