
Freedom: The Social Contract's Chains
The provided text is an essay from the philosophical blog, Philosophics, which presents a nuanced examination of freedom as a socio-political concept. The author, Bry Willis, challenges the common interpretation of freedom as the absence of restraint, arguing instead that it is the capacity to act within shared constraints. The core of the post revolves around the paradox articulated by Jean-Jacques Rousseau: that humans are born free but are everywhere in chains, illustrating this idea by referencing Erich Fromm and Michel Foucault. Willis uses a fictional Critical Theory parody card called Freedom (Enchantment – Social Contract) to mechanically represent Rousseau's dilemma, defining liberty as a constant negotiation or civic upkeep. Ultimately, the text asserts that true liberty is achieved only through participation in a collective moral order, where citizens voluntarily accept bindings for mutual autonomy, noting that this social contract is fragile and subject to collapse.
https://philosophics.blog/2025/11/05/freedom-the-chains-that-bind-us-together/
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