Many humans share the views of many humans, all throughout history. What difference does that make, really?
It makes a difference cuz some things are true and some are false. And it matters cuz, typically, when folks claim to have special knowledge that only they can access, these folks are lookin' to get a leg up and make a profit on that supposed special knowledge (fleecin' the rubes). I make no claim to knowing anything that you yourself don't already know.
One of the main questions that comes up in philosophy is "What do we know?" And many people will claim different answers to that. It's one of my favorite questions, along with WHY people claim to know.
Good questions: so, Lace, how and why do you know what you know?
Okay. It sounds nice, but I'm saying that there's more to it from my perspective. We are all PRODUCTS of so many factors (family, human history, culture, etc.), yes? So, I'm not so sure man really belongs to himself. Rather, he's part of a product line with built-in flaws and limitations, which are being upgraded across generations... perhaps.
Sure, my parents, as example, brought me into the world, loved me, raised me: does that mean they can lay claim to me? Demand service or servitude? Of course not. They can no more claim me than history or culture.
I'm not sure this statement is true, Henry -- I can imagine that people all throughout history have thought in various ways of belonging. Some theists may think they are nothing without a god... and that they own nothing, rather they belong to god. Some ancient peoples may have thought they belonged to their tribe... or their families/ancestors... rather than themselves. Some people (such as myself) think in terms of being part of a larger system/network, and don't think in the terms you've laid out.
Seems to me: the intuitive sense of ownness is universal. Every man has it. Sure, thruout history, various cultures, sects, religions, bloodlines etc. have laid claim to people, and yeah, many of those laid claim to have evidenced
submission or
resignation but not a one truly, for example, believed he was property of the King or warlord or the shaman. As I say elewhere unless he's worn to the nub and broken, no man willingly accepts the yoke (of inferior position or degrading life or an actual yoke). As I say, any slave, unless driven mad, will, given the opportunity, seek freedom.
I don't know that this is the whole truth.
It's not...it was an example only.
Can we believe any of it?
If it involves anyone telling you they have a better handle on your living than you, and they should have authority over you, no.
If it involves the compromise, the accommodation,
meetin' in the middle, no.
So, you evidently give humans much more credit than I do.
I do. As I say elewhere: the long haul movement of man, cultures, politics, etc. is away from the slaver king and toward a wholesale recognition, respect for, and defense of, individual liberty.
Or is it simply focused on immediate control and profit? I honestly don't think people typically mastermind much further as you seem to suggest. I think their drives are mainly in the moment, to serve their ego and needs.
Seems to me institutionalizing certain systems, like governance, is a sure sign of long term planning.
Henry, it simply doesn't make sense to separate ourselves from the systems we are part of.
In some things this is true. I live in Earth, a -- from my perspective -- vast cluster of interlocking systems. In a sense, I'm a part of this cluster, but I'm autonomous within it. I'm a part that gets to, as I say, bend, end, and begin causal chains. I'm not, as you might say, a product or event, but an
agent. I'm a person, not a thing.
Some systems ought to be resisted. Mob rule and it's pretty sister democracy, the state, any form of corporatism, these are examples of systems that parasite on man, that are used by men to use men.