In the Catholic Peace Weekly Philosophy Chat column, a Jesuit professor of philosophy gives us some background on humans' quest for freedom.
Humans constantly yearn for freedom. This proves that on the one hand, humans are free beings, but at the same time, they are unfree. Philosophically, the two beliefs that dominate the spiritual world, namely the natural scientific belief that the world is under the law of inevitable causality and the theological belief that the world is under the absolute foresight of God, have long been the background for the metaphysical question of ‘Can humans really be free?’
However, freedom is the fundamental concept for human self-understanding and self-realization, and without freedom, human life is also unthinkable. As spiritual beings, humans are free by nature and realize themselves in the world through free actions.
Emerich Coreth, SJ, was an Austrian philosopher and
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humans are inherently open to the realm ofPhilosophical anthropologists in the early 20th century conceived fundamental freedom as an insight that aligns with humans' essential characteristic, ‘openness to the world.’ According to this, humans, unlike animals, are not bound by the environment and impulses or the immediacy of nature but instead have their own world through it. Humans open the world and are open to the world based on fundamental freedom.
The ancient Greek words for freedom include ‘eleutheria’, ‘parrhesia’, and ‘autarkeia’. ‘Eleutheria’ means ‘freedom of action,’ which means the freedom to practice what I consider right and not being forced by the rules and expectations created by others. ‘Parresia’ refers to ‘freedom of discourse’ that allows one to honestly express one’s thoughts in front of others, and ‘Autarkheia’ refers to ‘inner freedom’ that represents the nobility and dignity of a human being, meaning self-government and autonomy.
This concept has been used in various fields with multiple meanings, such as physical freedom, legal and political freedom, social freedom, psychological freedom, and ethical freedom. In particular, as ancient Stoic and Epicurean philosophers pursued true freedom through ‘Apatheia’ and ‘Ataraxia’, meaning ‘peace of mind and heart,’ freedom is very important for practical life beyond the theoretical level, and above all, for mental health and healing.
Philosophical counseling invites people to find freedom even in unfree conditions for mental health, mental stability, and pain relief. Freedom is a fundamental principle and an indispensable condition of human existence, and it is a decisive force that allows humans to free themselves from the internal bondages that torment them.
To do this, ‘inner freedom’ that controls oneself and leads to self-determination, free from external pressure and control, is required above all. This is possible when one realizes existential freedom through self-determination in a fundamentally open world, free from material and sensory constraints.
Existential freedom means being open to absolute truth or the totality of meaning. Accordingly, Jaspers (1883-1969) defined existential freedom as ‘the activity of the will to think about the source’ where humans meet the transcendent, which resolves internal compulsion, conflict, and self-deception. Self-awareness is the source of freedom and happiness, which can liberate oneself from the internal constraints that bind oneself and move toward self-healing.