Qualitative freedom - autonomy in cosmopolitan responsibility
Autor
Dierksmeier, Claus
Institución
Resumen
Freedom is a fascinating idea. It empowers and encourages all human beings
towards a dignified life. More and more individuals and institutions appeal to the
idea of freedom in order to overturn repressive life-circumstances. No one needs to
explain the value of freedom to the oppressed. Wherever freedom is absent in practice, it is seldom lacking a cherished place in theory. The institutionalized consciousness of freedom, political liberalism, often grows in synch with the obstacles
facing freedom.
But to identify and combat the lack of freedom is easier than shaping liberties
already won. Wherever the harsh, black shadow of oppression is swept aside, the
bright white light of freedom is refracted within the prism of the most multifarious
ideas of liberty. The black and white of freedom fighters becomes replaced by the
more nuanced ideological tinges of open societies. Within their colorful array of
social and political blueprints, there resides both opportunities and dangers for liberalism. For within open societies, the once unquestioning urge for freedom now
inexorably gives rise to the urgent question: Which freedom and whose freedom is
to be upheld when the freedoms of some collide with the freedoms of others?