0 If you are shackled by something, it prevents you from doing what you want to do: --
1 one of a pair of metal rings connected by a chain and fastened to a person’s wrists or the bottoms of the legs to prevent the person from escaping: --
Shackle (1955) characterised such a situation as involving unknowable potential states of the world to which probabilities could not be attached.
We say this with some trepidation because academic researchers require the freedom to do research for its own sake-and they should not be shackled by real world concerns.
But we are not shackled to experience; we must even separate ourselves from it in order to attain or to reconstruct the "grammar" of this confused multimessage.
Perhaps because in the high noon of modernity, that past, uncontaminated by modernity, allows a freer space for imagining a future less shackled by the present.
Broadly speaking, the opera is less shackled by convention than often assumed: its manipulation of the tradition that feeds it is, on every level, radically novel.
The only one who is projecting feelings onto the idol is the iconoclast with a hammer, not those who should be freed, by his gesture, from their shackles.
Experimental social games in which subjects are not allowed to speak to one another are a bit like sports competitions where subjects must compete with their legs shackled together.
The past had become a dead weight that held society back; it shackled people's minds and stifled their sense of patriotism.