In Greek "necessity"-
anangke,
serves also as the word for "force," "constraint,"
"compulsion," "violence," and "duress."
...Apparently the Greeks understood very well the connection
between necessity and violence, and the
requisite that a citizen be a man [sic]
of leisure indicates that necessity had passed from his life,
and he could avoid violence in his thought and behaviour.
Freedom to the Greeks could only
exist after the conquest of necessity, which demeans man, causing
him to have to live with force and violence, his very existence
under duress. In that condition he could not be political.
Under the pressure of necessity, he resorted
to violence.
Earl
Shorris