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THE FUNDAMENTAL
SENSE OF FREEDOM
IS FREEDOM
FROM CHAINS
ISAIAH BERLIN (1909–1997)
IN CONTEXT
BRANCH
Ethics
APPROACH
Analytic philosophy
BEFORE
1651 In the Leviathan,
Thomas Hobbes considers
the relationship between
freedom and state power.
1844 Søren Kierkegaard
argues that our freedom to
make moral decisions is a
chief cause of unhappiness.
1859 In his book On Liberty,
John Stuart Mill distinguishes
between freedom from coercion
and freedom to act.
1941 Psychoanalyst Erich
Fromm explores positive and
negative liberty in his book
The Fear of Freedom.
AFTER
Present day The development
of new surveillance technology
raises fresh questions about
the nature of freedom.
W
hat does it mean to be
free? This is the question
explored by the British
philosopher Isaiah Berlin in his
famous essay Two Concepts of
Liberty, written in 1958. Here he
makes a distinction between what
he calls “positive” and “negative”
freedom. Although he is not the first
to draw this distinction, he does so
with great originality, and uses it to
expose apparent inconsistencies in
our everyday notion of freedom.
For Berlin, “negative” freedom
is what he calls our “fundamental
sense” of freedom. This kind of
Freedom is both
positive and negative.
When our own positive
freedom leads to a decrease
in others’ negative freedom,
it becomes oppression.
But our individual goals
sometimes conflict or lead
to the domination of others.
Negative: we are free from
external obstacles and
domination, or “chains”.
Positive: we are free to
control our own destiny and
choose our own goals.
The fundamental sense
of freedom is freedom
from chains.
IN CONTEXT
BRANCH
Ethics
APPROACH
Analytic philosophy
BEFORE
1651 In his book Leviathan,
Thomas Hobbes considers
the relationship between
freedom and state power.
1844 Søren Kierkegaard
argues that our freedom to
make moral decisions is a
chief cause of unhappiness.
1859 In his book On Liberty,
John Stuart Mill distinguishes
between freedom from coercion
and freedom to act.
1941 Psychoanalyst Erich
Fromm explores positive and
negative liberty in his book
The Fear of Freedom.
AFTER
Present day The development
of new surveillance technology
raises fresh questions about
the nature of freedom.