Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Wilhelm von Humboldt on Individuality

Reason cannot desire for man any other condition than that in which each individual not only enjoys the most absolute freedom of developing himself by his own energies, in his perfect individuality, but in which external nature even is left unfashioned by any human agency, but only receives the impress given to it by each individual of himself and his own free will, according to the measure of his wants and instincts, and restricted only by the limits of his powers and his rights. 
From this principle it seems to me, that Reason must never yield aught save what is absolutely required to preserve it. It must therefore be the basis of every political system, and must especially constitute the starting-point of the inquiry which at present claims our attention.
Humboldt, Wilhelm von. "On the Individual Man, And the Highest Ends of His Existence." In Individualism: A Reader edited by George H. Smith and Marilyn Moore, Washington, D.C.: Libertarianism.org a Project of The Cato Institute, 2015.



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