Thanks. I don't see that Garrett Travers is addressing the article - he's not the only one. A year or so ago one could start a thread around an article with some expectation of having it's content addressed. It seems no longer to be the case. — Banno
Arendt's point here is that "it must appear strange indeed that the faculty of the will whose essential activity consists in dictate and command should be the harborer of freedom." In doing so she shows the tyranny of following one's will, and hence that will is contrary to freedom. The will, therefore, cannot be the source of freedom. — Banno
I confess I don't understand why she claims that freedom is identified with sovereignty to begin with, — Ciceronianus
I actually went ahead and read it, my arguments are relavent to the descriptions of "freedom" provided in the article, such access to healthcare (someone else's labor), and government covid mandates (force imposed to impede free action). — Garrett Travers
Or more specifically - other's goals. Ethics is the relationship between one person's goals and another person's goals in whether they come into conflict or agree. — Harry Hindu
No one seems to question, "Gotta have it!" - only the ease with which one can try to get it. — tim wood
But wants and desires? What do these have to do with freedom? Only that they hinder, constrain, and restrict it, and only in being able to dismiss them may one return him- or herself to a state of optimized practical freedom. — tim wood
No one seems to question, "Gotta have it!" - only the ease with which one can try to get it. — tim wood
But wants and desires? What do these have to do with freedom? Only that they hinder, constrain, and restrict it, and only in being able to dismiss them may one return him- or herself to a state of optimized practical freedom. — tim wood
If nothing else the article gives us pause to consider if there can be a coherent notion of freedom. — Banno
You really mean to say that pursuing one’s desires is an example of a lack of freedom? Where are you people generating these absurdities. — Garrett Travers
There is nothing fallacious or inconsistent in defining freedom as the ability to act, think, or speak without coercion. — Garrett Travers
Arendt's point here is that "it must appear strange indeed that the faculty of the will whose essential activity consists in dictate and command should be the harborer of freedom." In doing so she shows the tyranny of following one's will, and hence that will is contrary to freedom. The will, therefore, cannot be the source of freedom. — Banno
In doing so she shows the tyranny of following one's will, and hence that will is contrary to freedom. The will, therefore, cannot be the source of freedom. — Banno
Can you indicate what some of these "natural" desires are? Keeping in mind that we're distinguishing between need and desire. I'm asking after having spent a fair amount of time gratifying so-called natural desires, only to finally recognize they weren't really natural in the first place. But who knows, perhaps you're the wiser of us. Examples for the terminally curious: a Zenith El Primero Chronograph, the cost burning my wrist so that I eventually sold it back for what I paid for it. Or exotic steel for a hunting knife, finally learning that a basic 1075 - 1095 carbon steel is best for most people and most applications, and a whole lot less expensive.You denying your natural desires is the opposite of freedom. — Garrett Travers
will is contrary to freedom. The will, therefore, cannot be the source of freedom. — Banno
Finding an all-purpose definition of freedom would not be a valuable use of brain cells. — frank
We could also look to see how the notion grew from nescient in ancient philosophical contexts and map the were's and why's of it's progress, as well as consider critically how this family of ideas might fit together.
Which is what this thread is about. — Banno
Arendt's point here is that "it must appear strange indeed that the faculty of the will whose essential activity consists in dictate and command should be the harborer of freedom." In doing so she shows the tyranny of following one's will, and hence that will is contrary to freedom. The will, therefore, cannot be the source of freedom. — Banno
I'm asking after having spent a fair amount of time gratifying so-called natural desires, only to finally recognize they weren't really natural in the first place. — tim wood
I just hope that my comments here won't be ignored. — god must be atheist
And yet it is the task in hand. Something to fill in time on a cloudy morning. — Banno
I agree with you to this point, Janus, but when you are forced, you are given a choice too, and you will follow the path of what you will. — god must be atheist
SO if freedom is lack of coercion, you are not free if you act in accord with the coercion of reason.
SO if freedom is lack of coercion, you are not free if you act in accord with the coercion of will. — Banno
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