Man & Values - Human Freedom
Man & Values - Human Freedom
Man & Values - Human Freedom
A personalist Anthropology
Cormac Burke
Human freedom
It is not easy to define freedom. Among the oldest philosophical attempts to do so there is
Aristotle's phrase: "man is free when he is cause of himself". Cause of oneself: the formula contains
real insights into the nature of freedom, but can also lead one seriously astray about its operation.
No one is an absolute cause of himself. No one causes himself to be, in a constitutive sense.
Our life, our nature, our intellectual endowments, our temperament or artistic aptitudes, our free will,
are given to us. They come with birth, they are not something we originate in ourselves. Nor, during
infancy, can a child be said to be a subject of personal causality; he may be a physical cause of upsets
or accidents, but is scarcely capable of actions that shape his life in any freely chosen way. But when
infancy ends and we enter into a more personal possession of our faculties, then indeed - through the
exercise of our freedom - we do cause ourselves to become rather than just to be. To become a better
son or daughter or friend, or a worse one; a good student or a poor one; more truthful or more of a
liar; more honest or more ready to cheat others; more generous or stingier; more in control of our
passions or more under their domination. In this process of becoming we pass through different
moments of being (one may be a sober person now, and in five years time have become a drunkard).
Becoming implies new ways of being, that may themselves be temporary in nature, or settle into
something stable and ingrained. In older years "becoming" seems to imply physical decline, which
may nevertheless be accompanied by a balance and fullness of character never hitherto achieved.
In any case, rather than debate Aristotle's ideas further, we mean to settle for a more popular
notion of freedom; i.e. 'the ability to choose between possible alternatives'. It is from this concept,
without more justification, that we are going to work.
We also mean to avoid the issue of providing philosophical arguments to prove that man is
free. If someone is not convinced that he is basically free, then what we write here will be of little
interest or use to him. Human freedom is taken as a presupposition of the view of life we propose.
Our thesis is that man is a free being and that it is in the exercise of his freedom that he develops and
can fulfill himself - or not. Man is capable of free fulfillment; or of failure and frustration - also freely
brought about.
The presence and operation of human freedom means that there is no such thing as automatic
fulfillment for anyone. One's life, according to one's choices, can take different ways that lead to
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different results and destinations. One's experiences and responses can be enriching, or
impoverishing. They can open one's horizons and widen one's understanding of values, of others, of
the world; or close one's ambition and range of interests in on oneself, thus directing one's life down
the dead end of personal insufficiency. One can grow towards happiness and fulfillment, or shrink
towards misery and frustration.
Every thinking person at the threshold of life senses these alternatives: I may work out well, I
may work out badly. The impression that few seem to "make it" can provoke an initial temptation to
set one's sights low, so as to limit eventual disappointment at possible failure. Is it a wise precaution
to act so? Is it prudence? Or faintheartedness?
The young person who deliberately aims low reduces the possibilities of his or her life from
the outset. Given that, is it not better to set one's sights higher, following the natural human instinct of
youth, wanting and expecting a lot from life? Yet, what about the experience of older people, many of
whom give the impression of being more skeptical than anything else about what life can actually
give? The life experience of many older people, if they could analyze it accurately, would probably
offer two contrasting lessons. "Life did not live up to my expectations. I didn't get out of it what I had
hoped. Life failed me". Or, "I didn't expect enough of life. It could have given me more, if I had
started out with more courage and determination. Life didn't fail me; I failed life".
Whatever can be learned from the experiences of others, everyone must make his or her own
choices; and, according to the choices made, each life will produce expected or unexpected results,
some of them no doubt unwanted. Yet it does seem that the person who expects little is more likely to
achieve little.
We have already stated that man is free but not autonomous. He is free but not "independent".
As we have seen, he inescapably depends on so many things: light, air, water ... He is free, though not
unlimitedly so. His own capacities limit him physically and psychically. He is not free to live without
food or drink or to run at 100 miles an hour or to think that what he knows to be true is false.
Nevertheless, every normal person is aware of the presence of freedom in his daily life: he can get up
or not, go to work or not, vary his choices, buy this newspaper or that one, etc.
Freedom and commitment
The modern mood about freedom has become unsustainably paradoxical and, in the end, selfdefeating: wanting freedom, but not wanting commitment, wanting to be able to choose, but not
wanting to be bound by any choice. Such an approach cannot work; it implies a rejection of real
freedom and in the end can only lead to its destruction.
Every free decision, every choice, excludes all options except the one chosen. Curiously, the
inevitability of this aspect of our power to choose can become a cause of suffering for certain
personalities. The French writer, Andr Gide, remarked, "I always found the need for choosing
unbearable, because to choose seemed to me not so much to select, as to reject what I had not
chosen"1. Freedom can indeed seem a burden for those who fail to resolve the paradox of this mood2.
If a person is on a trip and arrives at a crossroads, he is free to continue along any one of the
roads before him. It is clear that to choose one means to leave the others behind. The more decidedly
he goes ahead on the road chosen, the more he departs from the other roads. If the thought crosses his
mind that he is endangering his freedom in this way, that he is even losing (rather than exercising) it,
he may yield to the temptation to turn back, perhaps also because the difficulties of the way are
beginning to make themselves felt (every way has its own difficulty), perhaps simply because it seems
more important to him to maintain - to preserve - his freedom uncompromised.
The ultimate consequence of yielding to such a way of thinking is obvious. Whoever allows
himself to be overcome by the fear of committing himself, keeps returning time and again to his point
of departure. He remains stuck at the crossroads - with a freedom that is "intact", but useless; and will
thus become, little by little, incapable of any permanent and definitive choice3.
Fear of commitment
There is a rightful insistence today that freedom is a particular requirement of the dignity of
the person. Yet, not to want to engage oneself in any definitive decision, however noble it may be,
Nourritures Terrestres: in: Jean Mouroux, Le Sens Chrtien de l'Homme, Paris,
1953, p. 136.
1
Gide's mood here is close to that of his compatriot Jean-Paul Sartre. "Sartre
uses the term 'anguish' to describe this consciousness of one's own freedom.
Anguish is not fear of an external object but the awareness of the ultimate
unpredictability of one's own behavior" (Leslie Stevenson and David L. Haberman:
Ten Theories of Human Nature, 1998, p. 177). In theory, only people of weak will
would regard their future conduct as unpredictable and hence be subject to this
anguished appreciation of freedom, while the strong-willed person, sure of the
direction of his or her future choices, would be free from any such anguish. In
practice, even very strong-willed people at times make surprising choices which
they cannot explain or which they feel ashamed of. This may turn out to be a
salutary experience leading to a more modest appraisal of the strength of their
will. It is not evident that it should give rise to the sort of anguish Gide or
Sartre felt.
2
This applies to the realm of thinking even before that of acting. What is the
point of "freedom of thought" if the mind no longer believes in meaning, that is,
in the truth or validity of an idea or a conclusion? The thoughts that the mind
is then free to think appear less and less worth thinking, for they lead nowhere.
The mind wanders aimlessly. It has no "vistas", no avenues of discovery or
growth. It stands at the crossroads of thought, free to choose any of the roads
and less and less convinced that any is worth choosing.
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remains a sign of freedom (an impoverished freedom, perhaps on its way to becoming totally
bankrupt), but by no stretch of the imagination can it be considered an affirmation of personal dignity.
To be unwilling to commit oneself to anything betrays a lack of human stature and worth. To be
afraid of commitment is in the last analysis to be afraid of freedom itself. The modern philosophy of
rights forgets the right to commit or bind oneself4: therefore it tends to see freedom and commitment
as opposed.
Freedom can be overtaken by a creeping paralysis, when a person yields to the fear of any
choice - since choosing involves a new situation open to what is unknown. Paradoxically, the
uncertainty that accompanies every decision can then turn freedom itself into a sort of prison where,
as Michael Ende illustrates in one of his stories, all the doors of choice are examined one by one, and
rejected; and the person remains where he was. Nevertheless, it is clear that to refuse to choose is in
itself also a choice; and leaves one equally open to the future, with that fundamental character of the
unknown which it never loses. There is no way of knowing what your future holds for you. You can
try to shape it; you cannot control it.
The burden of the past oppresses many people. The fear of the future can have an even more
negative and depressive effect. No philosophy is adequate for facing life if it is not a philosophy also
"of the future", which in some way endows the future with positive sense for me. The failure of
Marxism illustrates how to work for an abstract future "collectivity" is not a goal that can satisfy the
individual. Each one wants to be able to face a future with a personal meaning.
Freedom not to act
If it is true that freedom means the power to act, it must also involve the power not to act. To
be free is to able to say Yes or No. "I am free to do this". But - are you free not to do it? If not, you are
not free. Freedom implies retaining one's self-dominion in the face of alternatives. If one can only say
Yes, or only say No, one no longer has freedom. Oscar Wilde made himself the object of his own
irony when he quipped: "I can resist anything - except temptation". If that was really the case, then he
was not free. But at least he realized it.
The most tremendous freedom man has is his power to commit suicide. Almost everyone at
some time or other feels he would like to escape from life. Many people today commit suicide after a
minor failure, in a situation of passing depression. No doubt that is a sign of their freedom, but it is a
weak freedom unsustained by any solid system of values. There is greater and stronger freedom in the
Cf. Chesterton's remark in Orthodoxy: "I could never conceive or tolerate any
Utopia which did not leave to me the liberty for which I chiefly care, the
liberty to bind myself".
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person who, in moments of stress, resists the immediate impulses of feeling, etc., and assesses more
deeply what is involved in taking one more chance at life rather than in ending it.
Freedom and motivation
A common position among determinists is to hold that man can never be really free because
he is always swayed by motives. In this view, motivation determines a person, taking from the
autonomy that a truly free decision requires. This is confused thinking, based on "the false supposition
that freedom implies the exclusion of all motivation"5. A person cannot decide between different
options without having preferences; and his preferences must rationally correspond to considerations
and conclusions, which are exactly what constitute motives. In fact, every decision or voluntary
choice presupposes the existence of motives, to the extent that without any motive it could not be
properly called a human decision.
There is a point which should be obvious but is nevertheless worth recalling. While it is true
that every exercise of freedom - every decision or choice - must be motivated, this does not mean that
all the motives which inspire a decision are necessarily univocal or unilinear, that is, all pointing in
the same direction. It is the opposite which more often occurs, with pros and contras, reasons in favor
of a particular decision and reasons against.
For instance, when pondering an exceptional offer of promotion in his work, a person can
count a substantial increase in salary among the reasons for accepting; while at the same time, as
reasons to refuse, he weighs the possible negative effect on his or her spouse's health or on their
children's education, if the new position implies changing from one country to another with a worse
climate or which is less developed materially.
When there are important arguments in favor of one way of acting but also important
arguments against, it seems elementary that a fully mature and reasonable person should weigh the
matter thoroughly and in full depth. Yet there are many decisions where even the mature person may
find it hard to make a totally detached and rational examination of all the pros and cons. Prejudices
(originating in the will more than in the mind) easily lessen the objectivity of our approach and incline
us to the "easy" solution or decision as if it were necessarily the best. Few people, however mature or
rational, are exempt from the tendency to center on arguments favoring what is immediately
convenient to them. The less mature and reflective a person is, the stronger this tendency will make
itself present.
It follows that not all the motives which should enter into the decision-making process are
necessarily pleasing or welcome to the person deciding. Some can annoy him, as being considerations
he would much rather not have to take into consideration. But, if they are in any way solid, they
should have their place in the rational process that leads in the end to a decision. The person may feel
as if these reasons were being imposed on him; but this will scarcely prevent him from heeding them.
"The idea of freedom is substantially identified with the capacity man possesses to determine
himself in favor of one alternative in preference to others"6. If a person, even before having an initial
contact with a matter requiring a decision, were determined to one eventual choice, he would not in
fact be free. Therefore the first approach of a free person to any such matter must be one of
indetermination.
On the other hand, if he continues to remain in such a position of indetermination or
indifference, it is clear he will never come to a choice in the matter. A choice involves precisely a
self-determination, a free commitment of oneself, in a definite direction. A will which is permanently
undetermined is paralyzed; it is unable to choose, or it ends up making haphazard and aimless
"choices" that have nothing to do with the true exercise of human freedom. "Freedom is not in fact
something anarchical or irrational; it does not consist in the absence of causality or of motivation ...
The indetermination which must be introduced into freedom has nothing in common with that other
indetermination characterizing freedom of indifference, i.e. a reasonless choice, a motiveless willing.
Freedom of indifference is something non-sensical"7.
It is through a process of discovering motives that a person abandons his position of
indifference, and is enabled to come to a choice for or against a particular action, thus exercising his
freedom. It is an elementary mistake therefore to think that because a choice is motivated, it is less
free. No one makes a true human choice without a motive. Actions without motives would not be
free; they would be irrational, the actions of a sleepwalker or of an idiot.
Freedom and responsibility
Motivation precedes human action; consequences follow it. The exercise of freedom cannot
fail to consider the possible consequences of each choice: for oneself and for others. In fact, this
foreseeing of the consequences is normally a part of motivation itself.
ibid. p. 358.
ibid. xvi.
Love
When speaking of freedom, we cannot avoid referring to love, since love has every title to be
regarded as the maximum expression of freedom. It is in fact only if the free aspect of love is stressed
that its dignity is safeguarded. This ultimately means saving our dignity, as beings capable not only of
giving or receiving love but also of understanding and appraising different types of love, that is, the
various possibilities of loving that are presented in life, and of reacting according to our criterion of
choice toward a concrete love.
The common sense of humanity has always considered love to be an absolutely necessary
element of happiness. The person who does not know how to love, or who is not loved by anybody, is
truly unfortunate and unhappy. If this is so, it confirms the anthropological presupposition we are
following: man does not fulfill himself alone; he needs a complement. If he does not understand the
true nature of love, if he cannot distinguish between love and its counterfeits, if he is unable to love,
he will not find fulfillment.
Love involves an attraction between two persons which unites them in a desire to share major
aspects of life. There is the love of friendship by which, if it is genuine, each friend not only enjoys
the companionship of the other but also desires what is good for him or her. The love of friends is so
characterized, but does not call for any further special commitment. Some friendships last a lifetime;
others are temporary. Married love, in contrast, goes much farther. The person who marries chooses
not only to love, but to do so with a distinctive love that is committed, exclusive and permanent. We
shall take a closer look at this later on.
"Love is a centrifugal tendency that moves from inside to outside, but which needs an external
stimulus to begin its movement. Therefore loving someone means coming out of oneself and being
prepared to share. To be loved is to be treated as an exception, with special consideration"10. When
love is reciprocated, we can speak of two freedoms that meet in a movement toward mutual gift and
acceptance of each other.
To fall in love means to realize that one is incomplete, and cannot be whole or happy without
the loved one11. And to want to fall in love, even when one does not yet feel attracted to any concrete
person, is equally a sign of the sense of incompleteness.
10
To fall in love produces a number of paradoxical consequences. The person who begins to
love can no longer feel self-sufficient12. His need for someone else is experienced in too deep a way.
But this very dependence opens the person's horizons as the conviction grows that life promises even
more than he or she had first sensed. Gordon Allport, former Professor of Psychology at Harvard
University, writes: "Hitherto self-sufficient, the lover finds himself no longer so. The welfare of
another is more important than his own. In this way" - Allport adds - "the self is extended13. The
importance of this last conclusion cannot be exaggerated. When a person loves, the closed circle of
the individual is broken, opening not only toward the person loved but, if the love is real, toward the
whole outer world.
For the lover, life begins to move around a new center of interest. A person on his own can be
dogged by the sense of being a poor specimen of humanity, but if he loves and is loved, the
conviction springs up that his life has become endowed with extraordinary richness. Love can be the
only way out of that narrow and obsessive self-awareness which is the wretched prison of many. One
of George Eliot's characters reflects: "Nothing but complete and intense love could have initiated me
into that enlarged life which grows and grows by appropriating the life of others; for before, I was
always dragged back from it by ever-present painful self-consciousness"14.
Life and the world take on new radiance for the lover: "love does not make one blind but
seeing - able to see values"15. A sign of true love is the new joy toward life that it induces. "The
enthusiasm that love awakens is capable of renewing even what seemed totally sunk in inertia. Love
gives meaning to life. The human being who discovers genuine love is often said to have been reborn,
to have changed, or to have recaptured the meaning of everything. Without love it is as if a decisive
and harmonizing component were missing in this puzzle of life and happiness, a component capable
of leading the person to make sense of the maze of contradictions in which each of us seems caught"16.
Love and freedom: "free love"
Don Juan, the hero-villain of plays, novels, and poems, is the prototype of the unrepentant
libertine. The original Spanish legend tells how he seduces a girl of noble family and then kills her
The self-sufficient person has never known, or has long forgotten, what it is
to love someone else. To fall in love, perhaps against one's deliberate will, can
release him or her from the trap of self-sufficiency.
12
13
The Mill on the Floss, Bk. VII, Ch. 3. I confess that the notion here of
"appropriating", with its one-sided and individualistic overtones, leaves me less
than content. Better if it had been expressed as "opening up to and
assimilating".
14
15
16
father, who tried to avenge her. Later, seeing the funerary statue on the father's tomb, he mockingly
invites it to dine with him. The stone ghost duly arrives and, coming to life, seizes the defiant Don
Juan and drags him down to hell.
The 17th-century dramatist, Molire, is among the best known of those who put the story on
the stage. As a good Frenchman, Molire has Don Juan explain his philosophy of "free love". He feels
he will "lose" his freedom in a committed love, and is not prepared to place his heart under such
restrictions: "I love freedom in love, and I could never resign myself to enclosing my heart within four
walls"17. There is a strong modern tendency to echo or absorb this idea of Don Juan; but those who do
so show that they have failed to understand true love or to find it. Real love reasons differently. The
heart in love wants indeed to be bound to the other: but does not thereby feel enclosed, but rather open
- to everything and everyone. Konstantin Levin, one of the main characters in Tolstoy's Anna
Karenina, goes to a stag party the day before his wedding. His friends there pull his leg - that he is
about to lose his freedom. He accepts the charge, turning it into a claim of happiness: "Just the
contrary: I am happy at this loss of freedom"18. What the person in love fears is not the loss of
freedom but the loss of love. It is not so much that love is seen as a greater value than freedom, but
rather that freedom "feels freer" in choosing to love.
This "freedom of love" must be understood also in order to clarify the relationship between
love and feelings, or (as one goes deeper into the analysis of love) the relationship between feelings
and will. It is true that love is normally accompanied by feeling. But, more importantly, it is always if it is authentic - an operation of the will19: "therefore it can be corrected, increased, perfected. This
conclusion is not in fashion: nevertheless it is based on reality. If love were only a feeling, an inner
sense of the variations of joy or exaltation, etc., one would have to say that love goes and comes as it
wants, that we are not free in its regard, since it overpowers us and we can do nothing to defend
ourselves from it"20.
If love were no more than a feeling, then those would be right who hold that once feeling has
disappeared, love has necessarily gone with it. This modern argument is often the cloak of selfishness.
Others may have no claim on my good feelings, nor may I be able to summon them up, since feelings
are seldom forthcoming as one wishes. But I can always give good will, all the more so where good
will is due; as, in humanity if not in legal justice, it is due to all my fellowmen. A society not prepared
to accept this principle gradually becomes inhuman. Now in many situations love, in the precise sense
17
18
19
20
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of wishing well to another, is due in strict justice21. Thus parents have a duty to love their children,
just as children owe love to their parents; affection that is "felt" may dwindle or disappear, but love as Aristotle defines it: "to love is to wish good to another"22 - can and ought to be maintained. We will
return to this in our chapter on marriage.
A strongly felt attraction toward another can be easily mistaken for an outward-going and truly
donative or self-giving love, whereas all it may want is its own satisfaction, without being prepared
for any commitment that could break the bonds of attachment to self - a necessary condition if one is
to experience the liberating openness of true love. "Love can assume a debased form in which all the
powers of devotion are bent to serve the ends of a limited ego. That debasement springs from timid
self-defense against the shock of the greater, deeper world that can be entered only by the one who
truly loves"23.
Limited egos often imagine themselves marked out for great destinies. But they may be
incapable of passing from the petty world of virtual greatness to that real self-giving love without
which a person never truly grows. Henry James' polished characters are almost all painfully small and
egotistic, though few seem to realize it. This lends all the more interest to his well-known story, The
Beast in the Jungle. There he shows how a vain and mindless obsession with being called to
"something great" can enclose a man within himself, thus making him blind to the one love which
could have been his and which, as he understands too late, might have filled "the sounded void of his
life"24.
Doing someone else's will
Understanding how love and freedom relate can also help to dispel many frequent but
mistaken notions about the relationship between freedom and obedience: the idea, for instance, that to
obey - which implies doing someone else's will - means to renounce your own will, and reveals an
immaturity of character by which you let yourself be placed in an alienating situation of inferiority
and dependence.
21
That love may at times call on the individual to subordinate his needs and
interests (and especially his emotional requirements) to those of others, is
simply unacceptable to modern psychotherapy. "'Love' as self-sacrifice or selfabasement ... strike(s) the therapeutic sensibility as intolerably oppressive,
offensive to common sense and injurious to personal health and well-being. To
liberate humanity from such outmoded ideas of love and duty has become the
mission of the postFreudian therapies and particularly of their converts and
popularizers, for whom mental health means the overthrow of inhibitions and the
immediate gratification of every impulse": P. Lasch: The Culture of Narcissism,
p. 13.
22
Rhet. ii, 4.
23
24
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But is this always so? Is immaturity shown by the team player, or by the soldier who follows
the indications of his captain? Coaches of sports teams frequently discard talented players because
they find them too immature - too self-centered or too preoccupied with their own "independence" - to
fit in with others.
An enforced commitment (for instance, that of a slave to his master) is degrading and does
violence to freedom. A commitment inspired by love is uplifting and allows a constant exercise of
freedom charged with a sense of fulfillment. Here it is not even an adequate analysis to say that love
makes it easy to "do someone else's will". Behind this, there can still be the idea that a commitment
calls on a person to renounce his own will. That is not so. In a certain sense, it could not legitimately
be so; for no one can be called on to abdicate the exercise of his will without thereby giving up one of
his titles to full humanity. The fact is that a commitment is a determination of a person's own will. I do
not "abandon" my own will to do someone else's. I exercise my will - for good and personal reasons in choosing what someone else has also chosen. Here there is not absence, but rather a stronger
presence, of personal choice. I will to make someone else's will my own.
There can be opposition between two wills, or there can be perfect, mutual, and willed
identity. A person in love wants to do the will of the loved one: he wills to do it. The other person's
will is what his will yearns for; he comes out of himself so as to find what he wants.
True love, while wanting to be united to the other, not only respects him or her, but is uplifted
and opened out to other people and to all values. When the opposite occurs, love has been more
egoistic than real. A classic example is offered by Emily Bront's Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff's
love for Catherine, just as hers for him, is not reciprocal and donative love that can unite them in a
participative way. It is possessive love of the other, over whom each feels a total and even bitter
claim. So too, it has no purifying effect on relations with others, but leads only to increasing rejection
and hatred.
In Anna Karenina, as we noted earlier, the final reflections of Anna herself show how
everything and everyone appear as hateful to the person whose last sense of love has died. Konstantin
Levin offers the counterbalance to Anna. In chapters 14 and 15 of Part IV of his work, Tolstoy gives a
fine portrayal of how, to the person who has just fallen in love, everything and especially everyone
appear to be endowed with a new aura of goodness. Towards the end of his other masterpiece, War
and Peace, he shows Peter Bsoukhow with that same new appreciation which the lover acquires:
"the radiance of his soul, throwing its light on all who came in his way, enabled him to detect at once
what there was of good or kindness in each"25. Are these just subjective impressions induced by a
25
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certain state of mind, or are we really dealing with a keener positive perception that love indeed gives
that ability to "see values" which Frankl notes? Whatever the answer, it does seem that the opening
out from self involved in true love, enables a person to see not just the loved one but others too with
new appreciation, while the absence of love darkens and warps a person's outlook towards life and his
fellow creatures.
To be bound by love to someone else can give a needed sense of completion, and a new
happiness. It is true that the bond with the other links you also with his or her sorrows, and so enlarges
your possibilities of suffering. However, while allowing that Freud is therefore correct when he says,
"we are never so defenseless against suffering as when we love"26, it must be added that this new
capacity for com-passion is also a personal enrichment.
The essentially volitional aspect of love - the irreplaceable role of the will in all genuine love has special importance in the evaluation of certain statements which are not infrequently heard: for
instance, "I cannot love this person" ... This may be a handy formula which in the end simply means,
"I am not prepared to make the effort, if not to love, at least to accept or forgive him or her". One can
allow that acceptance or forgiveness may be difficult in such a case27; but then it is a difficulty, not an
impossibility, which one is faced with. This can also be true in the case of an apparently opposite
affirmation: "I cannot help loving this person", used perhaps as a justification for a relationship that is
considered immoral (love for someone already married; certain ways of expressing love in extramatrimonial relations, etc.). Unless a person knows how to govern love, he or she cannot claim the
power to love and will not be capable of persevering in love.
Love has many types, and many counterfeits. In the end, it is the most definitive measure of
personal worth, for the person is most genuinely revealed in the kind of love he is capable of: "each
one is worth what his love is worth"28.
Freedom and authority
But how can human freedom be preserved in the face of the massive and impersonal business
or political forces of the modern state which so dominate the individual? Is there any way of keeping
a sense of freedom when the individual is enmeshed in the legal restraints of modern life? Yes - if the
26
"Talis est quisque, qualis eius dilectio est": St. Augustine, In Ep. ad
Parth., II, 14.
28
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laws correspond to justice, and if people have been grounded in love for justice itself, considered as a
basic inter-personal value on which the whole of social life needs to be built29.
Social or legal authority suggests "rules" - rules and regulations which, by inexorable
tendency, seem to multiply indefinitely. The hankering after an existence free from institutional or
corporate regulations underlies many currents of modern thought. Popular works of social criticism30
argue for a new way of life that will be more spontaneous, more natural, more unregulated. To a large
extent, this radical reaction is understandable. Modern man is so exasperated at having so long had to
obey soulless forces - government, business corporations, etc. - , so fed up with being regulated, that
he now does not want to have any rules or to obey anyone other than himself.
Nevertheless, both social and personal living need rules. The completely unregulated society
tends to disintegration: and so does the unregulated self. "Obeying self" often means following the
whims of the moment; and that too tends to be soulless, or soul-destroying. Not a few of our impulses
can enslave us more than any bureaucracy or police force, and alienate us from others.
A society seeks to protect itself with equitable rules, and with some system of enforcing their
compliance. An individual needs to do something similar in his own inner life, i.e., in that mixture of
mind, will, passions, and prejudices which, if not harmonized and molded into some sort of unity,
gives rise to growing interior chaos. Self-dominion is no easy matter; yet if a person cannot rule
himself, something else or someone else will.
Freedom, the sensation and the reality of personal freedom, does not depend on having no
regulations, no directions, no goals - just drifting - , but on self-regulation in the search for worthwhile
values, and in the free choice and steady ability to respond to those values.
-------------------"The power to choose is at the service of the power to complete yourself ... Each person is a
reality given and a reality to be achieved"31. What matters is not so much what you choose, but who
you become as a result of your choices. This is not to say that what you choose is unimportant. On the
contrary, the value of what you choose, just as the value of what you love, has a decisive bearing on
the personal worth that you acquire as a result of your choices. So we pass on to consider the question
of "values".
29
30
1970.
31
14