Freedom and Existence: A Symposium

Review of Metaphysics 9 (1):27-56 (1955)
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Abstract

For Socrates and Plato such freedom is the arch-achievement of human life--as also in the philosophy of Spinoza. As Socrates loved to argue, getting what seems good to us is one thing, knowing what we really want is another. It is another thing to act over a considerable period with this knowledge clearly in mind and effectively directing our conduct. In so far as we may succeed in doing so, we are internally free. It is freedom, so conceived, that we wish to relate to the idea of human existence.

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