St Exupère;5647382 said:
It is, because in the way you define freedom, any form of social, cultural, institutional norms are constraints restricting such freedom. Which renders futile and oppressive any form of education (aka pink floyd), and worse will in the end target the oppression the family do impose on their kids, up to the newborns as you mentioned. Therefore intrinsiquely and despite it being attractive at first, the anarchist ideology finally turns againts humanity itself.
Yes, any kind of social, cultural or institutional norms
are limiting to freedom. By living in a society with other humans, you're freedom
will be limited.
If you view Anarchism's attempts to limit this effect as inherently negative, then you are required to prove that the opposite- an over-abundance of social and cultural limits on an individual- are somehow a superior system.
In the way I use the term, I mean it. I do not throw them to diminish my contemptors. In my opninion, by nature, anarchism and communism are nihilisms in that they are direct threats to humanity itself, as a concrete reality. More perversely and sometimes less evidently, so are all pure materialisms and rationalisms. With nuances.
Why are they direct threats to humanity? Because they attempt to create a world in which people are allowed self-determination and do not have to find "Truth" through God?
For the very fact that materialists use solely reason, and that reason bases itself on very concrete models and objects, and that for that reason, reason will always be limited and enslaved to those models and objects. Which is fine by itself, but not fine if you restrict humanity and individuals to this sole, reasonable, horizon.
No, doesn't work like that- "freedom" means situational self-determination, i.e. the ability to make you own decisions within reality you find yourself. The fact that one relies on said reality to make these decisions is not "enslavement", it's just realism. The world exists as it is, whether we like it or not, so there is nothing to be said against coming to terms with that.
But that is not a rational position, it is a pré-supposé. It is as irrational as to say that Jesus-Christ has already saved all sinners and all we need to do is to recognize it. And I would like to hear, rationally speaking, where such "innate freedom" comes from.
It doesn't come from anywhere, it's
innate. Freedom isn't actually a substantial thing, it's the lack of artificial systems being imposed upon a person, and, as we are born without such systems already imposed upon us, we are born free, and then we lose the freedom along the way.
How can you be sure those are your own choices? maybe they are just your mechanical reaction to envy, jealousy, ambition, desire, fear, which have all been caused by these models/idols that I was referring to. The authentic freedom you are referring to, might turn out to be a complete illusion.
True, I do not know that I am "free" and that my choices are my own. However, I never said that this was the case- I merely defined freedom and identified how it is lost, I never said that I had retained it.
Without introducing God in this reasoning, it means no one can ever bee free since we all are by definition influenced by what you call external systems.
Firstly, yes, none of us are truly free.
Secondly, God doesn't come into it.
Or, maybe you believe that some of your choices are for yourself, because the illusion of being all-powerful and free is a nice feeling. Yet, if you look deep down, things might be slightly different. I for one believe that only the choices that we make, expecting absolutely nothing in return, are free. And it is only via God that we can, truly, make such things; and in particular via Christ. Otherwise, our vanity always kicks in at some point.
As I said, I do not consider myself to be truly free. A little freer than most, maybe, because I know that I'm not free, but still not free. I'm just the guy that can see my chains.
I'm still not understanding this whole "freedom through God" idea- how is that supposed to work, exactly? As far as I can tell, you believe that faith leads to some sort of freedom-granting "truth", which, if I'm correct, seems to be a sort of monotheistic approach to the notion of enlightenment. Is this case, and how do you believe that one would go about attaining this "truth"?idea