Liberty

Liberty is the ability of individuals to have agency (control over their own actions). Different conceptions of liberty articulate the relationship of individuals to society in different ways—including some that relate to life under a social contract or to existence in a state of nature, and some that see the active exercise of freedom and rights as essential to liberty. Understanding liberty involves how we imagine the individual's roles and responsibilities in society in relation to concepts of free will and determinism, which involves the larger domain of metaphysics.

Individualist and classical liberal conceptions of liberty typically consist of the freedom of individuals from outside compulsion or coercion, also known as negative liberty. This conception of liberty, which coincides with the Libertarian point-of-view, suggests that people should, must, and ought to behave according to their own free will, and take responsibility for their actions, while in contrast, Social liberal conceptions of (positive liberty) liberty place an emphasis upon social structure and agency and is therefore directed toward ensuring egalitarianism. In feudal societies, a "liberty" was an area of allodial land where the rights of the ruler or monarch were waived.

Read more about Liberty:  Philosophy, Freedom As A Triadic Relation, Historical Writings On Liberty

Famous quotes containing the word liberty:

    The liberty of the individual is no gift of civilization. It was greatest before there was any civilization.
    Sigmund Freud (1856–1939)

    A free spirit takes liberties even with liberty itself.
    Francis Picabia (1878–1953)

    Musicians are seldom unemotional; a woman who could sing like that must know how to love indeed.
    Girls brought up [as you were,] in a very strait-laced and puritan fashion, always pant for liberty and happiness, and the happiness they have never comes up to what they imagined. Those are the girls that make bad wives.
    Honoré De Balzac (1799–1850)