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Thread: freedom vs society

  1. #16
    Registered User Heteronym's Avatar
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    Well, we must have a very different idea of what constitutes freedom then, because I don't consider a loss of freedom the necessity to pay taxes to support a service that benefits me, like tap water. I believe most people will think like me.

    Loss of freedom is body scans in airports, police arrests without cause, the electorate's inability to prevent the political class from making laws the electors don't want and that benefit only a few. Things that have nothing to do with technological improvements.

  2. #17
    Ecurb Ecurb's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Heteronym View Post
    Well, we must have a very different idea of what constitutes freedom then, because I don't consider a loss of freedom the necessity to pay taxes to support a service that benefits me, like tap water. I believe most people will think like me.

    Loss of freedom is body scans in airports, police arrests without cause, the electorate's inability to prevent the political class from making laws the electors don't want and that benefit only a few. Things that have nothing to do with technological improvements.
    Many people think of words based on their emotional connotations, instead of their literal meanings. If (for example) having tap water is a "good thing", it can't possibly entail a "loss of freedom" (which is a ‘bad thing”, the reasoning goes). However, based on the literal meaning of the word "freedom", anything one is forced to do by threat of physical imprisonment surely entails a "loss of freedom”. Like Heteronym, I think purified tap water is a good thing. It has promoted human health and well-being. I have no objection to paying taxes to support it. However, since the taxes are not voluntary, and are collected with threats of imprisonment, they entail a loss of freedom.

    I also think locking up murderers is a good thing. It promotes social well-being. Nonetheless, I’m aware that locking up murderers takes away their “freedom”.

    I believe human rights are a good thing -- as I pointed out earlier, though, the rights of one person impose a loss of freedom on others.

  3. #18
    Pro Libertate L.M. The Third's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ecurb View Post
    The "right to life" (for example) means nothing other than an obligation on the part of others not to kill you. This restricts their freedom.
    Which is why government has its place, under bounds, because a perceived freedom may lead to utter anarchy.

    The "right to life" does not (and can not) protect one from tornadoes, cancers, and sunamis. Instead, it simply restricts the freedom of other people to kill you.
    That's natural law. It has nothing to do with the freedoms that are expected to be protected by government or law.

  4. #19
    Quote Originally Posted by Heteronym View Post
    Well, we must have a very different idea of what constitutes freedom then, because I don't consider a loss of freedom the necessity to pay taxes to support a service that benefits me, like tap water. I believe most people will think like me.

    Loss of freedom is body scans in airports, police arrests without cause, the electorate's inability to prevent the political class from making laws the electors don't want and that benefit only a few. Things that have nothing to do with technological improvements.
    What if every time you invented something it was stolen? You'd stop inventing right? Not to mention, when you're talking about something on such a large scale like utilities or roads, you couldn't even implement these things, financially or physically, without cooperation (or coercion).

  5. #20
    Ecurb Ecurb's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by L.M. The Third View Post
    Which is why government has its place, under bounds, because a perceived freedom may lead to utter anarchy.


    That's natural law. It has nothing to do with the freedoms that are expected to be protected by government or law.
    If freedom is valued, utopia must be an anarchy. Freedoms that are "protected by law" can ONLY be protected by restricting the freedom of others, because law can do nothing EXCEPT restrict people's freedoms. Property laws, for example, do nothing other than restrict the freedom of other people to drive particular cars and walk into particular houses.

    It is, of course, true that if there were no laws, our freedoms might be restricted more than they are by the rule of law. We might be murdered, beaten, and kidnapped. Nonetheless, it is clearly the case that "rights" and all laws restrict freedom. Without handcuffs, gaols, billy clubs, and pistols (all of which restrict freedom), the law would be meaningless.

  6. #21
    Pro Libertate L.M. The Third's Avatar
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    Again, law will ultimately violate certain perceived freedoms of individuals, while protecting the rights of the majority, who (hopefully) have instituted and elected a government through the understanding that anarchy is not freedom and that a functioning society is based upon self-control at the individual level. The question important to me is not if certain freedoms may be restricted, but what those freedoms are and how, when or why they may be restricted. When an authority arbitrarily restricts certain rights, such as religious liberty, it sets itself up to destroy both itself and the society it was established to protect.

  7. #22
    Ecurb Ecurb's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by L.M. The Third View Post
    Again, law will ultimately violate certain perceived freedoms of individuals, while protecting the rights of the majority, who (hopefully) have instituted and elected a government through the understanding that anarchy is not freedom and that a functioning society is based upon self-control at the individual level. The question important to me is not if certain freedoms may be restricted, but what those freedoms are and how, when or why they may be restricted. When an authority arbitrarily restricts certain rights, such as religious liberty, it sets itself up to destroy both itself and the society it was established to protect.
    I'm sure "authority" would argue that the rights it restricts are not restricted "arbitrarily", but for good reason. For example, our belief in property rights allows individuals to restrict the right of others to walk across certain segments of God's Green Earth. Since we have a long history of property ownership, this seems reasonable to us. However, it might very well have seemed "arbitrary" to Native Americans 200 years ago (just as throwing someone in jail for religious practices seems arbitrary to us).

    I'll grant that anarchy is not freedom -- however, full freedom is possible only under anarchy (because laws, by their very nature, restrict freedom). Unfortunately, humans have learned that laws are necessary, and that freedom tends to be even more egregiously restricted when laws are not enforced.

    By the way, it isn't "perceived freedoms" that laws violate -- it's actual freedoms -- like the freedom of movement to walk where one chooses to walk (which is violated by property laws). Throwing someone in jail for walking where he chooses does not violate only his "perceived freedom" -- imprisonment restricts his actual freedom.

  8. #23
    Quote Originally Posted by Ecurb View Post
    If freedom is valued, utopia must be an anarchy. Freedoms that are "protected by law" can ONLY be protected by restricting the freedom of others, because law can do nothing EXCEPT restrict people's freedoms.
    Let me get this straight. Law protects freedoms by restricting freedoms, but since you want to make sure that the take home is that law restricts freedom you ignore the first part of your sentence where you state that it grants freedom?

  9. #24
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    A lot to respond to here...

    Quote Originally Posted by Heteronym View Post
    Do you realise that just a few decades before 1917 landowners could still own serfs? That literacy was practically nil. Russia was still in the middle ages in 1917? 40 years after the revolution, Russia sent the first man into space. Since you're so fond of water taps and other inventions, surely you admire that.
    Yes - the question I was attempting to raise is whether or not society is always beneficial to all (or most) of the individuals which comprise it, and, if not, whether it is worth keeping it in those instances. One could argue yes, as those instances are necessary steps to a better society, or no, as the costs outweigh the benefits. In my view I suppose I'd choose the former*, as I said before society is necessitated by our nature.


    Quote Originally Posted by Heteronym View Post
    Well, we must have a very different idea of what constitutes freedom then, because I don't consider a loss of freedom the necessity to pay taxes to support a service that benefits me, like tap water. I believe most people will think like me.

    Loss of freedom is body scans in airports, police arrests without cause, the electorate's inability to prevent the political class from making laws the electors don't want and that benefit only a few. Things that have nothing to do with technological improvements.
    Judging from your first post and the tone it seemed to carry, I think you have gravely misjudged my position. To add to what Ecurb said, freedom is defined as a lack of constraints. Therefore, by definition, to have to pay* taxes is a direct and indirect constraint (loss of freedom) on the manner in which you may conduct your life; this is prima facie in virtue that it is self-explanatory and of its already sufficient justification in former posts. Though I have not said we necessarily loose our freedom by living in society, we just trade our freedoms for others, which, ideally as a wholly integrated society, we deem more valuable. This means to pay taxes inconveniences us in one way yet conveniences us in others (like with the tap).

    I agree that body scans at the airports are unjustified in a number of ways, as a consequence I do not fly on airplanes anymore. Society is not as ideal as I have portrayed, which should've been obvious. That is why I raised the question whether or not it is worth it to keep it when it goes awry, when a minority asserts partial values onto a majority.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ecurb View Post
    It is, of course, true that if there were no laws, our freedoms might be restricted more than they are by the rule of law. We might be murdered, beaten, and kidnapped. Nonetheless, it is clearly the case that "rights" and all laws restrict freedom. Without handcuffs, gaols, billy clubs, and pistols (all of which restrict freedom), the law would be meaningless.
    This adds to what I've said. Instead of merely trading one freedom for another one which we value more, we may trade one freedom for two or more which we cumulatively value more.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ecurb View Post
    If freedom is valued, utopia must be an anarchy.
    Perhaps freedom should be our penultimate priority (the first being the Good, or whatever else you might label it); but the total freedom that anarchy wants is impossible. To start, to be totally free agents would mean that we have infinite resources (by resource I mean a means by which we can fulfill* any desire) at our disposal, which is in itself impossible.

    Quote Originally Posted by L.M. The Third View Post
    Again, law will ultimately violate certain perceived freedoms of individuals, while protecting the rights of the majority
    I have to contest that this is a blatant categorical error since there are obvious, innumerable instances where the law hurts the majority while it helps the minority. The many usually do not dictate the law, and even in today's first world countries you could say that this is still the case. The media controlled by the few tells us what to value and these values inevitably trickle into the governmental policies.

    *edits
    Last edited by Cunninglinguist; 12-08-2010 at 11:13 PM. Reason: grammar, misuses of words

  10. #25
    Pro Libertate L.M. The Third's Avatar
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    I know my statements are coming across as confused and contradictory. And actually I acknowledged that element in my views on the subject in my original post. Certain freedoms which I view as important, I naturally think should never be restricted, while I may easily view someone else’s need for freedom in a certain area, such as the case cited above of the Native American feeling free to traverse private property, as less necessary and easier to give up, while for them it isn‘t. I’m highly uncomfortable with the idea of certain freedoms being sacrificed for the good of the many. I see that as an idea that can be used to manipulate the masses into servility. But, of course, in acknowledging government, I do acknowledge that it necessitates the giving up of some freedoms. I still say that certain things must not be infringed on by law, but I realize that where those lines are drawn is sometimes problematic, because of differing values, perceptions and backgrounds. And I don't pretend to know exactly where or how those lines should be drawn.

    Quote Originally Posted by Cunninglinguist View Post
    I have to contest that this is a blatant categorical error since there are obvious, innumerable instances where the law hurts the majority while it helps the minority. The many usually do not dictate the law, and even in today's first world countries you could say that this is still the case. The media controlled by the few tells us what to value and these values inevitably trickle into the governmental policies.
    You're right, of course. But in a country like America, it's given out that the government is supposed be by the people, of the people, for the people.
    Last edited by L.M. The Third; 12-08-2010 at 12:08 AM.

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by L.M. The Third View Post
    I know my statements are coming across as confused and contradictory. And actually I acknowledged that element in my views on the subject in my original post. Certain freedoms which I view as important, I naturally think should never be restricted, while I may easily view someone else’s need for freedom in a certain area, such as the case cited above of the Native American feeling free to traverse private property, as less necessary and easier to give up, while for them it isn‘t. I’m highly uncomfortable with the idea of certain freedoms being sacrificed for the good of the many. I see that as an idea that can be used to manipulate the masses into servility. But, of course, in acknowledging government, I do acknowledge that it necessitates the giving up of some freedoms. I still say that certain things must not be infringed on by law, but I realize that where those lines are drawn is sometimes problematic, because of differing values, perceptions and backgrounds. And I don't pretend to know exactly where or how those lines should be drawn.
    Should we invariably retain certain freedoms for everyone when, in some instances, these freedoms clearly are not good for than many? I can't answer that in full. To half answer it, if we analyze the consequences of such a retention from the perspective of the ultimate end and see that it ultimately procures good (and justifies the "utilitarianism of rights," as Nozick puts it) then it might be justified to keep them.

    At the end of the day we can look back upon our history and see that the consequentialists and the deontologists have been arguing over whether what produces a Good state of affairs should have priority and should dictate the laws or what is Right should have priority and should dictate the laws (and how we define Good and Right are whole confounding questions in of themselves). Therefore I dont think one can blame a body for not knowing or admitting that they do not know.

  12. #27
    Haribol Acharya blazeofglory's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Heteronym View Post
    Well, we must have a very different idea of what constitutes freedom then, because I don't consider a loss of freedom the necessity to pay taxes to support a service that benefits me, like tap water. I believe most people will think like me.

    Loss of freedom is body scans in airports, police arrests without cause, the electorate's inability to prevent the political class from making laws the electors don't want and that benefit only a few. Things that have nothing to do with technological improvements.
    You are somewhat right but will the tax we pay be propelry utilized to the benefical end? Most of what we pay goes to the pockets of corrupt civil servents

    “Those who seek to satisfy the mind of man by hampering it with ceremonies and music and affecting charity and devotion have lost their original nature””

    “If water derives lucidity from stillness, how much more the faculties of the mind! The mind of the sage, being in repose, becomes the mirror of the universe, the speculum of all creation.

  13. #28
    Registered User bounty's Avatar
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    again, its interesting how some threads just up and die.

    I didn't read things closely, its possible what im about to say has been said in various forms, but I only noticed one person explicitly post about social contract theory, which to me is at the heart of the matter.

    the purpose of government (or society if you will) is to protect the natural rights of the individual. prior to living in society, man lived in a state of nature, in which life was "nasty, brutish and short."

    the movement from the state of nature to civilization requires we exchange some freedoms for other, more desirable freedoms.

    one of the fun variants to these tensions involves competing paradigms of government---do our elected and hired officials see themselves as our servants to protect our rights, or as our dictatorial overlords?
    Last edited by bounty; 06-11-2023 at 10:11 AM.

  14. #29
    On the road, but not! Danik 2016's Avatar
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    That's a very interesting question, bounty. But it seems that political themes are forbidden on this forum.
    "I seemed to have sensed also from an early age that some of my experiences as a reader would change me more as a person than would many an event in the world where I sat and read. "
    Gerald Murnane, Tamarisk Row

  15. #30
    Registered User bounty's Avatar
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    I read the moderators forbid talking about "politics" but almost all of life is predicated on some social-political philosophy, as is a great deal of literature, either directly, or indirectly.

    I see the former (politics) as talking about candidates, current government officials, specific policies, political parties, etc,

    I see the latter as talking about the deeper questions of our lives as individuals, in community, and those aspects of humanity vis-ŕ-vis government in general.

    but either ways okay---since there are so few of us here, I wasn't expecting to stimulate a conversation now, but rather in hopes of someone reading this down the road perhaps if the site experiences a rejuvenation.

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