In what way? You've provided an example of a way of doing so, haven't you? And I even went to the trouble of asking questions which, had you responded to them, might have assisted in disclosing what you think that "right" entails. — Ciceronianus the White
But I understand it's difficult to do, though you apparently don't. The consideration of questions which arise in considering possible situations can tell us something of the beliefs of those asked. — Ciceronianus the White
Would a student's refusal to attend a class taught by a professor because he/she/whatever is a Marxist (or Objectivist--by which I mean a follower of the L. Ron Hubbard of philosophy, Ayn Rand--or Libertarian, etc.) be an exercise of the HROFS?
Would a professor's insistence on teaching the Marxist (or Objectivist or Libertarian) view of a particular subject be an exercise of the HROFS?
Would a student or professor's refusal to attend a speech by the proponent of a particular ideology be an exercise of the HROFS?
Would a student or professor's non-violent protest of a speech being given a person on campus (you know, "singing songs and a-carrying signs") be an exercise of the HROFS? Would it be a violation of the speaker's HROFS?
Would a university's refusal to invite a person to speak because it disapproves of what that person may be expected to say be a violation of that person's HROFS? — Ciceronianus the White
damn sight more robust than your uneducated guesswork. — Isaac
If as you say, it's an empirical matter, explain how you would gather such data. — counterpunch
It's not that complicated - sociological research, interviews, questionnaires, measures of equality in segregated communities, historical analysis...there's tons of ways we can gather data. Maybe not very robust data, but a damn sight more robust than your uneducated guesswork. — Isaac
The argument against the sort of language that is being opposed it that it creates an environment in which the subjects of that language are less free to pursue their lives than they would be in the absence (or at least less pervasive use) of that language. That, for example, someone expressing racist views at a university has the effect of making those views seem more legitimate, which in turn encourages more open expression of those views in people's actions which in turn restricts the liberty of the subjects of those views. This either does happen or it doesn't. Whether it does or doesn't is an empirical matter. — Isaac
There is no right to not be offended in the declaration of human rights.
— counterpunch
Who said anything about being offended? — Isaac
Because ensuring it clashes with many of the other liberties we want to ensure everyone has. — Isaac
Because ensuring it clashes with many of the other liberties we want to ensure everyone has. — Isaac
How do you propose to measure liberty?
— counterpunch
How do you propose to ensure equality of you don't? What would equality mean in an un-quantified variable? — Isaac
In order to ensure equal liberty you must a) measure the liberty each party has, and b) establish how much liberty the action in question removes/gives to each party. Both are empirical matters. — Isaac
Again, how to you measure the interests of populations far removed from your own without any empirical information about them?
You're basically just suggesting that you should sit in your ivory tower and pronounce "We shall ban speech A because I've had a bit of think about it and I reckon it will have the effect of removing liberties to too great an extent, but we shall allow speech B because (after a coffee) I had another little think and it seems to me that it won't have that effect". I know this will come as a deep shock to you, but we're all just a bit reluctant to run the world based on effects an uneducated layman reckons might come about... — Isaac
I don’t know much about the UK education system, so I’m not quite sure what their measures would exactly entail, or how much the government gets to decide curriculum. But I don’t like the idea that universities should be legally required to actively promote free speech for the same reason I don’t think they should be legally required to actively promote Marxism. When the state compels people to promote a certain stance under the threat of sanction we have entered the realm of censorship. — NOS4A2
Well, just what does it mean to say free speech is a "human right"? Does it mean the state should be prohibited from restricting it? Does it mean that other people should be prohibited from restricting it, by the state? Does it mean that institutions, as opposed to individuals, should be prohibited from restricting it? What would constitute a violation of the human right of free speech? What would be the exercise of the human right of free speech? If we're unable to define a human right we shouldn't insist there is one. — Ciceronianus the White
For a few reasons, the discussion here could become vague and unproductive. Without the exact context, the current government vs. universities confrontation can easily be framed as a brute political intervention: the government tries to impose its own arbitrary rules on universities and knock down their autonomy.
Also, it may look obvious that it intends to determine the content of applying the freedom of speech. So, could you briefly outline your vision of the actual context of the current collision? Due to the Brexit and the COVID pandemic, the UK would’ve currently experienced an intensification of the spectrum of social and political conflicts. — Number2018
You’re right. Cancel culture is a huge problem, and it is forging a generation who fear ideas. I just think there are better ways to defend free speech than let the state violate it. — NOS4A2
I don’t trust that a “free speech champion” should compel people to advocate for free speech under fear of fine and sanction. That seems to me the opposite of free speech. — NOS4A2
And it’s not a question about whether a university ought to give a platform to fools, but weather a university should bend to the pressure of protesters and deny both the rights of a speaker and those who wish to see him. — NOS4A2
You said it was a balance of harms. How do you propose to establish harms if not empirically? Guesswork? Shall we do an augury? I'll get the sheep's entrails... — Isaac
My participation begins on page 7. Take a look. you might be surprised at what I say. — creativesoul
Oh dear, yet another white person that does not know what white privilege is, — creativesoul
No, I do not think that you do. If you did, you wouldn't have said the things that you have. — creativesoul
Oh dear, yet another white person that does not know what white privilege is, nor the benefits of acquiring such knowledge. So many people equate privilege to being wealthy. It's not about being wealthy. — creativesoul
Well, karma's a bitch. — baker
Are you black by any chance? — baker
This is simply small town mentality, it has been around for millennia. It just seems more egregious when it's broadcatsed on tv and the internetz. — baker
Flat Earthers, propagandists, bullshitters, conspiracy theorists, and purveyors of fake news — unenlightened
commercial interests or governments domestic and foreign, or wealthy individuals using donations to influence. — unenlightened
"rampant post modernist, neo marxist, politically correct censorship spewing forth from the humanities departments," — unenlightened
I know you're a fuckwit. — unenlightened
You're openly admitting that it's completely proper to deny a professor the right to freely state the earth is flat. — Hanover
Upon what principle can a professor deny the earth is flat with impunity, but he can't deny climate change is occurring, that vaccines don't work, that masks don't stop covid, that the 2020 US election was stolen by the Democrats, that life begins at conception, or that there is an organization of rich liberal pedophiles running the world? — Hanover
That is to say, if you're going to deny the right to free speech to those claims you find outlandish, how are you going to define what is outlandish? And how are you going to do this without allowing a political agenda to creep in? — Hanover
So the proposal is, that because academics are politically biased, politicians should interfere in the freedom of academia to shape it in a more politically unbiased way. Really? Academics are politically biased and politicians not? — unenlightened
We already have climate change deniers paraded year after year in the name of free speech all over the media, speaking of political correctness gone mad; and now we are to have it imposed on universities too, because it quite suits Putin to thaw out Siberia and open up his Northern coastline. And it's political, so academics all shut up and listen! — unenlightened
Freedom imposed by law with legal penalties for not obeying its strictures is tyranny in double-think. — unenlightened
Which depends on the extent to which it restricts liberty...which is an empirical question about reality (real people having real liberties, actually restricted). Since you've no interest in establishing what is empirically the case, there's little point in pursuing that line is there? — Isaac
So there are limits to free speech. On what grounds? — Isaac
What speech in question? Does the word "blackmail" cause you distress? Because there are calls emanating from universities to censor all words using the term "black" in any negative way, even though the etymology of the word blackmail is Gaelic - bla-ich, and has nothing whatsoever to do with black people. Do you think that a reasonable limit on free speech? — counterpunch
So why the song and dance about free speech? — Isaac
You think the speech in question does not cause sufficient harm, others (in the universities) think it does. — Isaac
I suggest you read the conclusion of the section from which you quote. Arguably, he was a strong agnostic - but he certainly did not — Banno
For Hume, I imagine, he believed morality to be God given. — counterpunch
Personally I think the government, especially one as censorial as the UK, should not compel universities to promote free speech with the threat of sanction. I believe universities should be able to do what they want. If people need a little safe-space university, where scary ideas are verboten, let them have it. — NOS4A2
No.
Hume was an atheist. — Banno
I didn't get it, because it's obviously very confused. And I'm happy to leave you alone. — Wayfarer
But Hume didn't propose any such idea. He is famous for framing the very is/ought, fact/value dichotomy that is behind the question posed by this thread. — Wayfarer
Free speech doesn't bypass academic merit. It bypasses politically correct censorship. — counterpunch
So... Universities ought give a platform to fools? I'm at a lose to see what your point is. — Banno
Free speech doesn't bypass academic merit. It bypasses politically correct censorship. — counterpunch