The Nature of Freedom
Freedom's Origins and Requirements
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Scott Robinson
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
Here are some examples of those very subjective freedoms:
- The freedom to take up knitting
- The freedom to learn a foreign language
- The freedom to go to church
- The freedom to speak one’s opinion publicly
- The freedom to participate in the political process
- The freedom to not go to church
- The freedom to love and marry whomever they please
- The freedom to own a weapon
- The freedom to access information
- The freedom to be ethnically, sexually, or ideologically different at no societal cost
- The freedom to force others to practice a religion
- The freedom to deny service to an outsider
- The freedom to exploit others economically
- The freedom to control the media
- The freedom to ignore the rule of law
- The freedom to deny the vote to dissenters
- The freedom to silence those dissenters
- The freedom to jail one’s political opponents
- The freedom to take another country’s land and resources
- The freedom to kill members of a rival group
We’re left, then, with a question: is there such a thing as non-subjective freedom? Is freedom truly a natural state, untainted by human whims and foibles? If so, what is the nature of that freedom?
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