durangodawood
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- Aug 28, 2007
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Thats interesting. But I'm not convinced that the particular snapshots youve chosen actually describe the full breadth of freedom/liberty in each of those cultures. Perhaps they are salient moments we here-and-now choose as sort of object-lessons.In terms of basic meaning, yes. But if you trace the history of the usage, there are some interesting differences. From the French direction of the Enlightenment, liberty was grouped with equality and fraternity to take on an essence of a need for responsible liberty (the bloodbath of the French Revolution proved what happens when responsibility is absent).
From the German direction, freedom (freiheit) is the exact opposite - freedom from responsibility. That became a real problem for the Quakers when German peasants started pouring into the Pennsylvanian colony because they had promised them a "free" society without understanding each other. What I find so amusing about the German path was that Bismarck realized that most people associate freedom with comfort. So his approach was to give the German people that freedom from responsibility that they sought. Build up industry and make Germany an economic powerhouse so that the people are fat, dumb, and happy - leaving him "free" to use that economic might for whatever personal (imperial) ends he desired. And yes, his personal correspondence was that blunt about his intentions. Look what it produced in Germany.
So which model is America?
But the basic ideas of freedom and liberty are identical, I think.
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