Freeman Summary - Chapter 14

Chapter Summary Of The Philosophy Of Freedom
Arnold Freeman

CHAPTER 14 THE EMERGENCE OF THE INDIVIDUAL FROM THE GENERIC
Torvald says to Nora in Ibsen's "Doll's House": —"Before all things, you are a wife and a mother." Nora replies; —''That I no longer believe.... Before all things, I am a human being, just as you are." We have come to see that the "Woman's Question" could be solved only in line with Nora's point-of-view. We are coming to see that all the other social questions demand a like solution. We are learning what Mill says to us in his essay on "Liberty," —what Emerson says to us in his essay on "Self-Reliance." We are evolving out of the generic into the individual. So far from wanting people to be conformed to some imposed mold, we see nowadays that it is highly desirable that each person should become more and more specifically a self —with a center of his or her own.

It is for this that we stand in "the West." It is for this that all good thinking moderns stand in West and East and North and South. The plain, obvious, decent social ideal before mankind is a world community of free individuals, living out their lives, each in his or her own way, tolerantly, side by side.

Generic ideas —taking strange new forms but having their roots in the past— are everywhere endeavoring to thwart the evolving of human beings into individualization. We were from 1939 to 1945 engaged in open warfare with Fascism and Hitlerism. We are now locked in a life-and-death struggle with Communism.

How is "the West" to win in this world-conflict? How are those who believe in the individual (From Within, Outwards) to overcome those who believe in the State (From Without, Inwards)?

Not by arms. Not by politics. Not by propaganda .... The question goes deep and can be answered only at the level upon which it arises .... It is man's very evolving that is at issue —and the only answer is that we should get on with the evolving itself. The only answer that can be given to Totalitarianism is the answer of the single human being, who in a certain courageous loneliness, imaginatively and creatively, lives out his or her own possibilities.

Unless we of "the West" make use of this work of Rudolf Steiner's, we shall not win this battle.

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CONTENTS
Extracts From Riddles Of Philosophy
Extracts From The Course of My Life
Extracts From The Theory Of Knowledge
PART ONE
The Knowledge of Freedom
Chapter 1   Conscious Human Action
Chapter 2   Fundamental Impulse To Get Knowledge
Chapter 3   Thinking As Instrument Of Knowledge
Chapter 4   The World As Percept
Chapter 5   Cognizing The World
Chapter 6   The Human Individuality
Chapter 7   Are There Limits To What We Can Know?





PART TWO

The Reality of Freedom
Chapter 8   The Factors Of Life
Chapter 9   The Idea Of Freedom
Chapter 10  Monism
Chapter 11  Purpose
Chapter 12  Darwinism and Ethics
Chapter 13  The Value Of Life (Pessimism and Optimism)
Chapter 14  The Emergence Of The Individual From The Generic
ULTIMATE QUESTIONS
The Consequences Of Monism