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Truth Warrior
11-28-2008, 07:33 AM
Superman and Freedom


by Chris Brown (http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig9/mailto:austrolibertarian@gmail.com)



If man is really free, how can we account for his inability to fly, to travel through time, to leap across the ocean, for not being omniscient or omnipotent? In short, wouldn’t man have to be more like Superman to actually be free? Man is constrained in some ways, isn’t he? Is man really free then?

In The Ethics of Liberty (http://www.mises.org/store/Ethics-of-Liberty-The-P238C18.aspx?AFID=14)Murray Rothbard makes a crucial, yet subtle, distinction that we will get to later. It is an important insight, and essential for the libertarian to understand and explain libertarian philosophy.

Returning to the original “dilemma”: What then can we say about the limits of man’s abilities? Rothbard discusses this in his section on “A Crusoe Social Philosophy (http://mises.org/resources.aspx?Id=d94c7567-a276-4328-80e1-7d92cacb759f)”:

Some critics have charged that this freedom is illusory because man is bound by natural laws.
It is true that man is bound by natural, or “God-given,” laws. He does not possess certain abilities or powers – he is bound by scarcity all around. Examples are abundant.

The power to leap across the ocean is not given to man. However, man’s ingenuity has led him to search for and find ways to travel across the ocean by boat or submarine. Man realized his limits, i.e., not being able to breathe underwater for long periods of time, or swim great distances without rest or sleep; he does not have the power to do so. Man submitted to natural laws and through obedience used them to construct boats and ships.

The power to fly is also not given (naturally) to man. Yet man has found ways to achieve flight according to natural laws, which, when heeded, have allowed man to fly in any number of ways, e.g., hang-glide, helicopter, airplane, parachute.

The power to lift extremely heavy objects is also not found in man’s (bodily) abilities. Man has learned natural laws to design mechanisms that can lift objects that weigh over a thousand times what man could lift alone.

Man has operated within natural laws, and those who best understand and adapt to natural laws are those who can use them to their advantage. But how does this affect man’s freedom to act?

Rothbard, in answering critics who construct an argument to (attempt to) show that man is not ultimately free, points out how man is free:

We have seen that Crusoe, as in the case of any man, has freedom of will, freedom to choose the course of his life and his actions.
Man may choose his actions – but what about the constraints of nature and scarcity? Here is where Rothbard’s subtlety and insight comes in. The argument is not whether man is free in regards to natural laws “impeding” his abilities. Rothbard clarifies:

Man is free to adopt values and to choose his actions; but this does not at all mean that he may violate natural laws with impunity – that he may, for example, leap oceans at a single bound. In short, when we say that “man is not ‘free’ to leap the ocean,” we are really discussing not his lack of freedom but his lack of power to cross the ocean, given the laws of his nature and of the nature of the world. (Emphasis added.)
In other words, man cannot escape or overcome natural laws, but this has nothing to do with freedom; it has to everything to do with power, or the ability to perform a given task. Man is free to exercise his agency, to make free choices regarding his actions and values, despite “limitations” placed on him by natural laws. If we put this another way, says Rothbard, “it is patently absurd to define the ‘freedom’ of an entity as its power to perform an act impossible for its nature!”

In other words, man is not Superman but make no mistake: Man is free to choose!

November 28, 2008


Chris Brown [send him mail (http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig9/mailto:austrolibertarian@gmail.com)] is a lecturer at the Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship. He also centrally plans the Austro-libertarian (http://www.austro-libertarian.com/) blog.
Copyright © 2008 LewRockwell.com

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Truth Warrior
11-28-2008, 03:44 PM
bump

satchelmcqueen
11-28-2008, 06:10 PM
neat topic. maybe a bit off subject but not at the same time. ive always thought of pictures or clips you see of prisoners, or if you were put in prison wrongfully. all it would take for you to get out is simply being able to go outside and hover/fly out of the fenced in area. or teleport to another place.

yet with all man can do, a simple fence with no roof can keep us imprisoned.

Truth Warrior
11-28-2008, 06:17 PM
neat topic. maybe a bit off subject but not at the same time. ive always thought of pictures or clips you see of prisoners, or if you were put in prison wrongfully. all it would take for you to get out is simply being able to go outside and hover/fly out of the fenced in area. or teleport to another place.

yet with all man can do, a simple fence with no roof can keep us imprisoned. Speak for yourself. ;) :D

"The man that truly knows what freedom is, will find a way to be free."

mediahasyou
11-30-2008, 03:06 PM
http://www.voluntaryist.com/articles/070.php

Truth Warrior
11-30-2008, 03:11 PM
http://www.voluntaryist.com/articles/070.php :cool: Thanks! :)


A Definition of Freedom
by Julie Watner
From Number 70 - October 1994

Freedom is a mental condition-a condition of the spirit. All of us are free, if we but choose to acknowledge it. To borrow from Rose Wilder Lane, freedom is control of self. The essence of your "self" is your mind, soul, and spirit. We all are always free to change our thoughts, improve our knowledge and understanding, change our attitudes and beliefs-the inner part of each of us. We do need more folks to recognize that they already are FREE!

Liberty is a condition of the physical body: the absence of physical restraints. We seek liberty to use our resources, time, intelligence, and energy in the most beneficial (to us) way.

A productive, healthy society of freedom-and liberty-minded individuals is not to be confused with a libertine one. The conditions of liberty and freedom, above all, require individual responsibility in every phase of life. Each of us must take the consequences of our actions, good and bad.

This is not easy, especially with our Big Brother the State standing by to present at least the illusion of "help" with every aspect of our lives.

Because the root of the problem (irresponsibility) is so ingrained, trying to convince others to live the freedom ideas through slogans, speeches, and hype is usually short on results. At best they provide the spark which causes an individual to seek out new information.

The "library of freedom"-books, pamphlets, newspapers, and magazines-not only documents man's quest from ancient times forward, but also is an important, longer lasting way to spread the word and fan the spark of interest into a flame.

But "plain-Jane" and unexciting as it sounds, I believe the most effective way to spread the freedom idea is to educate ourselves and raise our children to be honest, knowledgeable, confident, responsible lovers of freedom-to light a single candle. If each one of us lights another candle, and each of those follows suit, the freedom ideas will grow from a quiet bonfire to a WILDFIRE engulfing everything in its path.

Living in an environment of liberty and freedom is akin to being a parent-it is the best of times; it is the worst of times. With neither can you ever relax your vigilance, there is always work to be done, you are always being called upon to exercise new skills, and improve upon old ones.

There is a tremendous amount of worry involved, also discouragement and uncertainty. On the other hand, it is hard to convey to a non-parent, just as to a statist, the joys, rewards, exhilaration, and satisfactions that make the responsibilities worthwhile. You just have to have faith, jump in, and DO IT!

Editor's Note: This essay was the winner in a contest sponsored by The Customer Company. The stated object of a one-page essay was to define freedom and suggest the best way to implement it.

mediahasyou
11-30-2008, 03:19 PM
You can choose to be superman just as you can choose to be free. It's just a matter of how crazy you are willing to be.

Are you willing? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dvn_Ied9t4M

Truth Warrior
11-30-2008, 03:24 PM
You can choose to be superman just as you can choose to be free. It's just a matter of how crazy you are willing to be.

Are you willing? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dvn_Ied9t4M Of course you can also choose to be DEAD!!! :eek: Darwin Awards await. ;) :D