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Foundations II: substantial freedom
May 20, 2006
"I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every from of tyranny over the mind of man."
-Thomas Jefferson
One of the most destructive legacies of the conservative movement is the diminishing they have inflicted on the concept of freedom. This seems counterintuitive, perhaps, but all the relentless yammering that emanates from conservatives about freedom is perhaps a signal of their weakness on this issue, one of fundamental and historical importance to the American project.
Since the beginning of the conservative movement, the conservative conception of freedom has been intimately and intrinsically tied up with property rights, almost to the point of excluding anything else. This goes back all the way to Russell Kirk: "...conservatives are persuaded that freedom and property are closely linked" is one of his ten principles, and the only mention of freedom throughout his ten conservatives principles.
One of the obvious attributes of the idea of freedom that this misses is its incredible breadth. True freedom goes far, far beyond just the connection to property, or stuff. The connection between stuff and true freedom is even tenuous since we don't just own our stuff, our stuff owns us as well. Who is more free: the apostle who owns nothing and lives in an intentional community, or the typical American, surrounded by the amazing output of our consumer economy, but saddled with levels of debt not seen since feudal Europe?
There may be no answer to this question, but conservative thought would have us believe the answer is definitely the latter...
Yet a major facet of the perennial wisdom (the core wisdom that most religious traditions share) is to not get too connected to stuff. All major religions have vigorous, unambiguous warnings about becoming overly concerned with property, such as this from Matthew 6:19: "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal."
What conservatives have done with freedom is pulled out this tiny slice of what freedom really is, just the parts related to property rights, and elevated just that as being practically the whole notion. It's as if, in the process of trying to define life, they took one species of fern out of an entire complex rainforest ecosystem and said "this is it -- this is life."
The progressive understanding of freedom is far more broad. True freedom is an unbelievably broad concept, a whole ecosystem of understanding. It encompasses practically every aspect of the human condition, so much so that it's difficult to even get one's head around it. FDR's four freedoms are a good start: freedom from want, freedom from fear, freedom of speech, and freedom of worship. Sexual and bodily freedom are critical to progressives too. Freedom of the press and freedom of thought (or cognitive liberty) are also critical, and figure into our understanding of this in an even more important way.
It's a little tempting to leave the progressive notion of freedom at this point, with just an emphasis on the true breadth of it. But freedom of thought is key to this in a certain way that has been explored much further by Harvard economist Amartya Sen. In his Development as Freedom, he lays out an idea of substantial freedom that is much more useful for progressive expansion than simply appreciating the true breadth of the idea.
It would be difficult for me to do justice to this whole concept, and the link above is a succint and clear deeper explanation of it. The basic notion of substantial freedom is that the objective of civilization is for citizens to become "fuller social persons, exercising our own volitions [capacities for deliberate choice] and interacting with--and influencing--the world in which we live." Maximizing and expanding that kind of freedom is what progressives are about.
Like with interdependence, this is an idea that touches a lot of progressivism. Freedom of speech and freedom of assembly, for example, are the philosophical underpinnings that give rise to unionism. It's impossible to restrict unionism without severely curtailing one or both of these basic freedoms. Freedom of the press underlies a lot of what's happening on the internet. Freedom of religion translates into defending the establishment clause, because a secular public society is the best and only way to truly protect this cherished freedom. Coginitive liberty underlies our strong belief in education, our understanding of culture, the importance of mental health and is the basic criticism of the socially destructive war on drugs.
Substantial freedom is also is a pointer to progressivism's relationship to capitalism. Obviously capitalist societies can generate great amounts of substantial freedom. But it has its limitations, so progressives just want to housebreak capitalism, not smash it.
But at the root of it all is this idea of substantial freedom, and closely linked to it, cognitive liberty. The two ideas laid out so far, interdependence and substantial freedom, form what could be the backbone of the progressivism that's developing now.
Posted by Dan Ancona
Comments
Very sharp observation. The rest of the line you quote from is this: "...but a sound economic basis for the person, the family, and the commonwealth is much to be desired," which is a true statement, as is the part that you mention. I've written up a full response to his ten principles here...
http://speakoutca.org/archives/2006/06/foundations_iii.php
But in case that doesn't answer it let me go further: The question really is one of emphasis. Keep in mind that freedom to own property is the *only* kind of freedom Kirk mentions in the whole thing, and it comes seventh out of ten! All I'm saying is that progressives have an opportunity to emphasize the breadth and full dazzling dimensions of freedom rather than just singling out this one rather mundane aspect of things.
There is another point of agreement here though, which is interesting because it rebuts the libertarian caterwauling about "coercion":
"The conservative acknowledges that the possession of property fixes certain duties upon the possessor; he accepts those moral and legal obligations cheerfully."
It's simple, really. This may be the eventual key to undoing rabid anti-taxism, as taxes are just one of the moral obligations that go with the possesion of property. Freedom from coercion is easy: just don't have property! But if you do want to own things, keep in mind that the money in your hand is worth nothing without the taxes you pay.
Posted by: Dan Ancona at June 13, 2006 05:36 PM
Thank you for this superlative statement. May I send it on with your name given credit? We are working hard to get an amendment to the constitution protecting privacy more explicitly, and I would like to share this there. the sitewhere the petition may be signed is http://www.privacyright.net
Posted by: Elaine at August 11, 2006 10:49 PM
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Dan - Your entry provides plenty to think about. I am wrestling through your question:
Who is more free: the apostle who owns nothing and lives in an intentional community, or the typical American, surrounded by the amazing output of our consumer economy, but saddled with levels of debt not seen since feudal Europe?
Having never heard of Kirk, I read through his Ten Principles that you linked to and agree that his only mention of freedom comes with a discussion of personal and communal property. In this section he says "Getting and spending are not the chief aims of human existence..."
In the last paragraph of the Ten Principles, Kirk puts those for whom "...material needs are their only needs..." at the opposite pole of people he says are conservative.
Getting back to your question and your answer, you say that "conservative thought would have us believe the answer is definitely the latter" (meaning people who are swimming in materialism and debt). This does not seem to fairly represent Kirk's position.
I'm confused. Can you help clarify?
Posted by: Carl Palowitch at June 9, 2006 03:45 PM