The Free Man

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 15:131-145 (1983)
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Abstract

Not long after the historian, Seeley, had defined ‘perfect liberty’ as ‘the absence of all government’, Oscar Wilde wrote that a man can be totally free even in that granite embodiment of governmental constraint, prison. Ten years after Mill's famous defence of civil freedoms, On Liberty, Richard Wagner declaimed:I'll put up with everything—police, soldiers, muzzling of the press, limits on parliament… Freedom of the spiriti is the only thing for men to be proud of and which raises them above animals.

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David Cooper
Durham University

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VI*—Guilt and Shame as Moral Concepts.Anthony O'Hear - 1977 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 77 (1):73-86.
Freedom.John Dewey - 2010 - Free Inquiry 30:20-23.

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