Thursday, November 7, 2013

“Men believe they are free,” says Spinoza, “because they are conscious of their desires; yet concerning the causes that determine them to desire they do not think, nor even dream about.” In the society of universal commerce we believe we are free because we choose how we will earn and spend our income. Concerning the causes that determine us to desire comfort and convenience, and therefore compel us to work to earn the money to procure them, we do not think, nor even dream about. Like puppets, we dance about unwittingly, our every action determined by the marketplace. It is not accidental that great philosophers have often been ascetics. The foremost obstacles that stand in the way of dedicating ourselves to the pursuit of truth and virtue are the desires that come, not from nature, but from the marketplace.

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