Free Speech and Censorship The notion of free speech as a natural right of man has its origins in the teachings of the Enlightenment, and arose as a means of protecting the philosopher/scientist against the political/religious authorities with which he was prone to collide, and therefore be either exiled or condemned to death. It is as though the philosophers said to the new rulers, “Let us be free to investigate nature as we will and communicate our discoveries to each other, even if those discoveries seem to contradict or offend you or the priests, and in return we promise that what we discover will lead to the material and physical prosperity of mankind.”
This exclusively academic right to freedom of speech however soon devolved into a general such right, applicable to any citizen, and the reason for this lies in the very notion of the Enlightenment: the life lived according to reason, Socrates’ ideal, had now come within the grasp of everyman: once the LIGHT of reason has been shone on human life for every man to see the truth, he will unqualifiedly choose light over darkness, truth over falsehood, reason over unreason...
This modification for the plebs of the life lived according to reason was, of course, quite different from that of the original philosophers. It hinged on calculation of material self-interest as opposed to the purely philosophical one of obedience to, or love of the discovery of, nature—which sometimes conduced to actions contrary to self-interest. One need only consider Archimedes’ ignorance of the invading Roman army at Syracuse, or Thales’ failure to realize he was about to step into a well as he absentmindedly contemplated the heavenly bodies, or Allan Bloom putting the lit-end of his cigarette to his lips while engrossed in a discussion.
At any rate, once the scientists and commoners had become allies against altar and throne, the former could not, in principle, deny the latter any of their own rights, and this lead to the citizenry daring to express whatever opinion they will against their leaders and their country’s and religion’s most sacred opinions or symbols: one could now either burn the American flag in protest of the Vietnam War, or declare he was more popular than Jesus ever was, as John Lennon did, or immerse a crucifix in a vat of his own urine and name it Piss Christ, or drive a pickup truck up and down the road in SW Virginia flying a flag that reads, “FUCK BIDEN: and fuck you if you voted for him”, with impunity.
Let us now return now to the ancients, to the Socrateses, Archimedeses and Thaleses of antiquity, who pursued the truth according to reason for their own personal satisfaction: had they foreseen these consequences of an Enlightenment, what do you think they would have thought?