Of course I do not consider myself an automaton. But, in a very good sense my freedom is very seriously limited, due to my upbringing. From a very young age I was taught that lying is wrong, stealing is unacceptable, etc… Theoretically I am free to do any of these acts, but - due to my upbrining - I cannot bring myself to to do them. I simply do not want to do them. So, is this freedom “genuine” in your eyes? Because that is the question.
If you say that my freedom is not “genuine” then where does “genuine” freedom start? Do I have to act against my “nature” to prove that I am free? That would be sheer nonsense. If you say that my freedom is “genuine”, then God could instill the same psychological barriers into everyone - and still have “genuine” freedom without any evil.
Of course I have plenty of freedom otherwise. I am not constrained in my ability what to have for dinner, how to dress, what books to read. The fact that I would not be able to torture someone is not relevant. And, of course I can love, both as an emotion, and also I can act in someone else’s best interest, even to my own detriment, if necessary. I can also hate others, but I cannot bring myself to act on that emotion. So, in your eyes, do I have “genuine” freedom?
True and genuine freedom must bring us to an inner peace, don’t you think? If you can do everything you like, live as immoral as you can, but it does not bring to us any satisfaction, then is it true freedom. In a sense, you’re right, you can do everything you want, but if you do everything you want, does it make yu any freer? Or does it plunge you into a deeper misery.
Take this for an example,Brian, a type 3 obese man can eat whatever he want, free of any gym scheduling, and can choose when to sleep or when to wake up, when to eat and what to eat, according to you, it’s genuine freedom isn’t it? Isn’t that genuine freedom when he can act “in accordance” of his “nature”? But does his eating habit bring him to the true freedom? Does it bring him peace? Does it make him feel light and open and free to do what he really love other than eating the frozen pizza in front of the tv screen?
Then we have Leo, a man who eat with moderation, who watches his calories daily. Every morning at 7 he like to jog, he go to the gym after work at 4 PM. most of his food are either lean or are vegetable. Now according to you, since this man put barrier on himself, thus he has no freedom. But does he has the true freedom? He can walk and run without having an inhaler in his hand, he has the capacity to play with his children, to enjoy nature, to jog, to hike, and on one side effect incredible sex.
If a man is truly free, and as you mean he can do whatever he wants, then shouldn’t that man also have the freedom to put those limits on himself to achieve the true freedom that Leo has? Indeed Lao tzu himself once said:
“Heaviness is the root of lightness
Serenity is the root of restlessness”