What Does "Freedom" Actually Mean Today?
Freedom, a key concept in our society, has a multiplicity of meanings. To begin with, we live in "the land of the free and the home of the brave." I was brought up on the basic distinction between "freedom from" and "freedom to." I learned Roosevelt's "Four Freedoms." My fourth grade teacher instilled the idea that freedom and responsibility go hand in hand - and that was just the beginning. Like most people, I've been puzzling out its various meanings all my life.
For a psychologist, it has multiple meanings as well. Freedom of choice is important if we are to know what people really want. Freedom from coercion or manipulation helps us know what people truly think. Psychological health requires that people feel free. And we debate perpetually the question of free will. But can we measure those things, or tell when we have gone too far or not far enough?
Recently, though, something strange has happened to the idea - or the word. People seem to feel increasingly free to think what they want, regardless of the evidence, or free to express themselves without concern for the consequences. Our increasingly polarized political world encourages freedom from restraint. The internet elicits free opinions, free judgments, free comments, while supplying free news, free music, and free porn.




