The philosophy to which Dr. Cone appeals in the interest of freedom is the same sort of philosophy as the philosophy of the Greeks. It is Immanuel Kant’s philosophy that has set the tone for all subsequent schools of philosophy. This is true particularly of the I-thou—I-it philosophy to which Dr. Cone appeals. Kant was even more insistent, if possible, than was Socrates that man must be his own final interpreter both of himself and of his world. Even more obviously than did the Greeks, Kant holds