"The freedom of each individual can only be the freedom of all"
About this Quote
Liberty, Duerrenmatt suggests, is not a private possession you can lock in a safe. Its value is contingent: your freedom only exists in a world where everyone else’s freedom is structurally protected. Coming from a Swiss playwright and novelist who made a career out of exposing the absurd logic of “reasonable” societies, the line reads less like a kumbaya slogan and more like a warning about the hidden traps in liberal self-congratulation.
The intent is pointedly political, but Duerrenmatt’s subtext is theatrical: watch how quickly a society that treats freedom as an individual perk starts justifying exclusions. If my comfort depends on your silence, then my “freedom” is already a kind of coercion. The sentence is built like a moral boomerang: any attempt to cordon off liberty for the deserving, the respectable, the compliant will circle back as a precedent for limiting everyone else. Duerrenmatt’s world is full of systems that claim neutrality while quietly selecting victims; this line calls out that selection mechanism.
Context matters. Writing in the shadow of mid-century Europe, Duerrenmatt understood how easily democracies outsource brutality and call it order. Switzerland’s own posture of neutrality, too, invites the question of whether freedom can be insulated from the fates of neighbors. The line’s force comes from its conditional “can only be”: not aspirational, not decorative. It’s a hard constraint. If freedom isn’t universalizable, it isn’t stable; it’s just privilege with better branding.
The intent is pointedly political, but Duerrenmatt’s subtext is theatrical: watch how quickly a society that treats freedom as an individual perk starts justifying exclusions. If my comfort depends on your silence, then my “freedom” is already a kind of coercion. The sentence is built like a moral boomerang: any attempt to cordon off liberty for the deserving, the respectable, the compliant will circle back as a precedent for limiting everyone else. Duerrenmatt’s world is full of systems that claim neutrality while quietly selecting victims; this line calls out that selection mechanism.
Context matters. Writing in the shadow of mid-century Europe, Duerrenmatt understood how easily democracies outsource brutality and call it order. Switzerland’s own posture of neutrality, too, invites the question of whether freedom can be insulated from the fates of neighbors. The line’s force comes from its conditional “can only be”: not aspirational, not decorative. It’s a hard constraint. If freedom isn’t universalizable, it isn’t stable; it’s just privilege with better branding.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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