"Freedom" in the usual understanding of the meaning is that one could have chosen differently than they did.
I repeat: is there ANYTHING, anything at all, that you DO call "free"? Or have you defined the word for yourself in such a way that it cannot be used for anything? Give me an example of something that IS "free", according to you, or else I just have to assume that any sentence you utter with that word in it is just, by definition, meaningless.
No one could have chosen differently than they did because, all influences considered, they chose what they wanted MOST.
So far, this sentence is just saying "What the decision is has to be what the decision is." Of course we choose what we want: "choosing" and "wanting" and "deciding" and "willing" are all just different verbs referring to the same process, and A does equal A. If there is no reason for what we choose except that we choose what we want, that is MY definition of "free". But then you go on to assert that there are always some other reasons:
God has locked up humans in a lifetime made up of a sequence of choices that are ALWAYS made in the direction of the strongest sets of influences that dictate what they actually prefer MOST at the point in time that they make the choice.
Your assertion that previously-existing influences "dictate" the choices appears to be factually false; the choice could follow either one influence or the other, and there is nothing in the previously-existing situation that dictates which it will be; naming that influence "strongest" AFTER THE FACT is evading the issue that nothing in the
previously-existing conditions dictated the result at all.
The REASONS that we choose "something" over "something else" are the CAUSES of our choice.
We cannot always articulate "reasons" why we chose what we did; and if we do articulate such "reasons" after the fact, sometimes they appear to be just rationalizations (they may even appear so to ourselves, even while we're making them up!)
That would mean that we had to have chosen randomly, i.e. not based on any reason, or combination of reasons.
I don't like that word "randomly" which carries the implication that the process is like some kind of giant dice-throw, when it might not be like that at all. A neutral term is "independently": whatever the process is, it is independent of the material conditions, that is, not determined by anything material. My particular favorite word for it is that we choose "freely" in such a case: but that is precisely the word that you have some allergy to.
A Lead weight?? I am sorry, but that is completely false and you (like most Americans) have been grossly misinformed. There is a reason why you think this: because historians have only recently begun to take stock of the ENORMOUS contribution slavery made to the entire world order. It was always hushed away and ignored by most historians.
I think the historians you are listening to have their own axe to grind. The "blame the West" mentality may be a useful correction to the "white man's burden" self-congratulatory mentality, but I don't see it as more accurate.
Once the "slavocracy" was crushed, the United States (except the South of course) was free to become an enormously attractive economy, drawing hordes of people from all over the globe. It doesn't fit well with your thesis (that the slaver economy is all that made us prosperous) that the prosperity didn't really start to take off until the slaver economy was gone.
Europe shot ahead due to the raw materials it got through colonization of Asia and Africa and the slave based Atlantic economy.
How, pray tell, did Europe ever manage to dominate Asia and Africa in the first place? Wasn't it because Europe had shot ahead ALREADY?
I am not a superstitious person, but if I was, I would go as far as to say that it is "cursed".
Lincoln said something very similar (not sure of the verbatim quote, and not going to Google it now, but much like this): "If this war must continue until every last bit of treasure wrung from unrequited toil by blood and the lash is sunk into the ground, then we can only say, as was said thousands of years ago, The ways of the Lord are true and just altogether."
"Morton Fried and Elman Service have hypothesised that Ubaid culture saw the rise of an elite class of hereditary chieftains, perhaps heads of kin groups linked in some way to the administration of the temple shrines and their granaries, responsible for mediating intra-group conflict and maintaining social order."
OK, so maybe I have been overstating how bleak the beginnings of Sumer were. But the records speak of constant, and I mean CONSTANT, warfare between the neighboring towns and raids from the surrounding non-agricultural peoples. Sargon of Akkad achieved (bloodily, of course) the first large-scale, relatively peaceable (once he was finished) empire; but it didn't last long since soil had been overused and the river-waters diverted to the max, so that a drought period was enough to push the whole system over the edge.
First of all, I am not even talking about just the United States (where 2% of the pop. own 90% of the wealth), but I was talking about the HUMAN SPECIES AS A WHOLE.
You are comparing to Rome, which was about (I'm only claiming "roughly") as much ahead of the SPECIES AS A WHOLE in its day, so far as general prosperity is concerned, as the US is now. The senatorial class in Rome was a couple thousand out of a population ~100 million, that is 0.002%, and while I doubt the senatorial class held "90%" of the wealth, the extent of inequality in ancient times is something you seem to be missing utterly; I mean you are orders of magnitude off if you think "nothing has changed" in that regards.
How many people in the world live on less then $2 a day?
The New Testament cites a "penny" as a good daily wage; work at that rate is something people would line up for. This "penny" (
denarius) was about 1/7 ounce of silver, or ~70 cents; that is only a good measure of the price of
metal goods relative to unskilled labor, the price of other basic goods like foodstuffs being considerably lower relative to metals (this is what makes "currency" conversions between ancient and modern times problematic, that the ratios between metals, foodstuffs, and labor are out of whack); it is estimated that the amount of bread one could buy with one denarius would cost about $20 in 2005 US dollars ("a loaf of bread for a penny" is cited in Revelation as an example of dire scarcity, the measure-unit mentioned being about a kilo, thus quite a large "loaf" but still, it was obviously expected that a penny should buy much more); however, the price of food in the US is four or five times higher than in places where people are living on $2 a day.
That is to say, the working class in the Roman Empire (one of the most prosperous countries of its day) was considerably more secure than the present-day African poor in terms of sustenance (they could expect to buy maybe three times as much food with their daily money), but actually had less possibility of acquiring material goods. Have you been to Third World countries much? I haven't, not much really. But in these impoverished African villages, some people will have wind-up radios, and lots of people will be dressed in castoff surplus Western clothing, incongruous Yankees baseball caps and University of Michigan sweatshirts and the like; in the boondocks of Kurdistan, I was invited into a hut, mud-wattle construction but divided into rooms (not just the kind of place where the sheep live with the family), not "village chiefs" just an average-seeming family, and in the living room (nice carpets on the floor) they opened up the cabinet with the good tea-set (I was being highly honored; obviously they seldom used these). In Roman times, few people would have even one change of clothes (if they lost their clothes, they were naked until someone took pity); a household would have some pottery (cups, dippers, plates, jugs) and some leather sacks and pouches, but at most one knife, and not much else.
You think we can just compare the lower-middle classes of the developed nations and use that as the "norm" when comparing to the "norm" of the world population thousands of years ago?
The
existence of lower-middle classes anywhere is somewhat of a difference, isn't it?
Do you know how 95% of the population of China and India lives?
About like the
upper class during the beginning of Sumer; nothing like the upper class of Rome, certainly, but better than 95% of the population of Rome.
I picked "8000" because it was the beginning of civilization and agriculture
Yeah, and I was taking that to mean that you thought things
before civilization and agriculture really got started were just as good as today. Never mind, I'm understanding you better now. But why are you accepting that the Agricultural Revolution was "real" progress, and not seeing anything at all since then as having been progress?
I can't believe you are actually arguing AGAINST the fact that the Roman elite lived a life of unbelievable luxury....
By the standards of their day, certainly; they monopolized much of the resources. Objectively, they were quite well-fed, had ample leisure time, and were well entertained during that leisure time, and many of them had long life-spans; but on the downside, they had an unusually high chance of early death through violence, no better chance than the lower classes of seeing the majority of their children get through infancy (medicine was a joke), and I was pointing out that in terms of clothing, shelter, and other basic goods they were surprisingly ill-equipped.
The fact that they were the first one to brew wine and beer suggests that they were doing a little more then subsistence farming and living
You are mistaking wine and beer for "luxury" items. Water was largely undrinkable once manure fertilization was widespread, so weak beer was the common drink (remained so until surprisingly recent times); and grapes could not be stored for later any other way but fermentation (bottled grape juice was a 19th-century invention).
And you are being incredibly naive. The industrial age only started in the 18th century!
That was by no means the start of technical progress. The High Middle Ages (before the 14th-century retrogression in the face of the Hundred Years' War and Black Death) well exceeded the Roman level of prosperity.
And why are you assuming that because we survived WWI and WWII (which was basically just a single 30 year long war), that we will survive anything in the future??
I explicitly said the opposite, that we always have the potential to go either way. Why are you paying no attention to what I post? It is UP TO US whether we survive upcoming crises or not.
Throughout the entire "cold war" the world stood on the brink of being knocked back to the stone age.
And yet we chose to do right, or right enough.