Acharya Prashant addresses the misconception that freedom leads to social disorder, chaos, or anarchy. He explains that the fear of freedom arises from a model of human behavior that ignores intelligence. Using the analogy of air molecules versus human beings in a room, he points out that while molecules collide randomly due to a lack of intelligence, human beings can move freely without conflict because they are intelligent. He asserts that anarchy and disorder do not stem from freedom but from a lack of intelligence. Intelligence creates its own natural order and does not require external dictation or rules. He further clarifies that while rules and regulations are necessary for those who act unintelligently, an intelligent person is guided by their own supreme force of awareness. He distinguishes between external freedom, which is granted by laws or constitutions, and internal freedom, which is the freedom of the mind. External freedom is of little use to a mind that is blind to its own conditioning. True internal freedom involves being free from dependencies, beliefs, and the domination of the past. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that one does not need to physically escape society to find peace or solitude; real aloneness is an internal state where the mind remains untouched and free even in the middle of a marketplace.