Liberalism According to the
Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics, liberalism is "the belief that it is the aim of politics to preserve individual rights and to maximize
freedom of choice". But they point out that there is considerable discussion about how to achieve those goals. Every discussion of freedom depends on three key components: who is free, what they are free to do, and what forces restrict their freedom. John Gray argues that the core belief of liberalism is toleration. Liberals allow others freedom to do what they want, in exchange for having the same freedom in return. This idea of freedom is personal rather than political. William Safire points out that liberalism is attacked by both the Right and the Left: by the Right for defending such practices as abortion, homosexuality, and atheism, and by the Left for defending free enterprise and the rights of the individual over the collective.
Libertarianism According to the
Encyclopædia Britannica,
libertarians hold liberty as their primary political value. Their approach to implementing liberty involves opposing any governmental coercion, aside from that which is necessary to prevent individuals from coercing each other. Libertarianism is guided by the principle commonly known as the
Non-Aggression Principle (NAP). The Non-Aggression Principle asserts that aggression against an individual or an individual's property is always an immoral violation of one's life, liberty, and property rights. Utilizing deceit instead of consent to achieve ends is also a violation of the Non-Aggression principle. Therefore, under the framework of the Non-Aggression principle, rape, murder, deception, involuntary taxation, government regulation, and other behaviors that initiate aggression against otherwise peaceful individuals are considered violations of this principle. This principle is most commonly adhered to by
libertarians. A common elevator pitch for this principle is, "Good ideas don't require force."
Republican liberty According to republican theorists of freedom, like the historian
Quentin Skinner or the philosopher
Philip Pettit, republican liberty consists not simply in the absence of interference (negative liberal freedom), but in the absence of arbitrary dependence on others (as non-domination). A citizen is free when they are not subject to the discretionary will of any other party, public or private. According to this view, which originates in the Roman
Digest, to be a free man, means not being subject to another's arbitrary will, that is to say, dominated by another. They cite
Machiavelli who asserted that you must be a member of a free self-governing civil association, a republic, if you are to enjoy individual liberty. While republican ideas of liberty influenced parliamentarians during the
English Civil War, Thomas Hobbes developed a distinct conception of liberty in
Leviathan, that emphasizes freedom as non-interference, partly in response to the political instability, rather than as a direct continuation of republican non-domination.
Socialism Socialists view freedom as a concrete situation as opposed to a purely abstract ideal. Freedom is a state of being where individuals have
agency to pursue their creative interests unhindered by coercive social relationships, specifically those they are forced to engage in as a requisite for survival under a given social system. Freedom thus requires both the material economic conditions that make freedom possible alongside social relationships and institutions conducive to freedom. The socialist conception of freedom is closely related to the socialist view of creativity and individuality. Influenced by
Karl Marx's concept of alienated labor, socialists understand freedom to be the ability for an individual to engage in creative work in the absence of alienation, where "alienated labor" refers to work people are forced to perform and un-alienated work refers to individuals pursuing their own creative interests.
Marxism For Karl Marx, meaningful freedom is only attainable in a
communist society characterized by superabundance and free access. Such a social arrangement would eliminate the need for alienated labor and enable individuals to pursue their own creative interests, leaving them to develop and maximize their full potentialities. This goes alongside Marx's emphasis on the ability of socialism and communism progressively reducing the average length of the workday to expand the "realm of freedom", or discretionary free time, for each person. Marx's notion of communist society and human freedom is thus radically individualistic.
Anarchism While many anarchists see freedom slightly differently, all oppose authority, including the
authority of the state, of
capitalism, and of
nationalism. For the
Russian revolutionary anarchist
Mikhail Bakunin, liberty did not mean an abstract ideal but a concrete reality based on the equal liberty of others. In a
positive sense, liberty consists of "the fullest development of all the faculties and powers of every human being, by education, by scientific training, and by material prosperity." Such a conception of liberty is "
eminently social, because it can only be realized in society," not in isolation. In a
negative sense, liberty is "the revolt of the individual against all divine, collective, and individual authority." == Historical writings on liberty ==