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We feel free because we lack the very language to articulate our unfreedom.
Slavoj Iek
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Interpretation

What this quote means

We may believe we are free, but often we cannot express the constraints that limit our freedom.

The quote by Slavoj Žižek suggests that our perception of freedom is often misguided. While we may feel liberated, the inability to identify or articulate the constraints of our existence leads to a deceptive sense of freedom. This lack of language to express our unfreedom can obscure the actual limitations imposed on us by societal norms, structures, and ideologies.

Themes

FreedomLanguageUnfreedomConstraintsAwareness

In practice

Example use cases

During a debate on social freedom and expression.

More from Slavoj Iek

This, then, is the truth of the discourse of universal human rights: the Wall separating those covered by the umbrella of Human Rights and those excluded from its protective cover. Any reference to universal human rights as an 'unfinished project' to be gradually extended to all people is here a vain ideological chimera - and, faced with this prospect, do we, in the West, have any right to condemn the excluded when they use any means, inclusive of terror, to fight their exclusion?
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I believe in clear-cut positions. I think that the most arrogant position is this apparent, multidisciplinary modesty of "what I am saying now is not unconditional, it is just a hypothesis," and so on. It really is a most arrogant position. I think that the only way to be honest and expose yourself to criticism is to state clearly and dogmatically where you are. You must take the risk and have a position.
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Word is murder of a thing, not only in the elementary sense of implying its absence - by naming a thing, we treat it as absent, as dead, although it is still present - but above all in the sense of its radical dissection: the word 'quarters' the thing, it tears it out of the embedment in its concrete context, it treats its component parts as entities with an autonomous existence: we speak about color, form, shape, etc., as if they possessed self-sufficient being.
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Zionism itself has paradoxically come to adopt some antisemitic logic in its hatred of Jews who do not fully identify with the politics of the state of Israel. Their target, the figure of the Jew who doubts the Zionist project, is constructed in the same way as the European antisemites constructed the figures of the Jew – he is dangerous because he lives among us, but is not really one of us.
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