果冻传媒app官方

Eternally Radical Glossary

Eternally Radical Idea

The Eternally Radical Idea

As with many legal and philosophical theories, recurring themes in free speech culture can be reduced to 鈥渢erms of art,鈥 or phrases used to succinctly describe ideas and concepts. As the Eternally Radical Idea either generates or encounters these ideas, we will record them here for ease of reference.


Bedrock Principle, The:  The idea that you must not ban something simply because it is offensive is one of the most fundamental elements of freedom of speech and First Amendment law. See: The Bedrock Principle: Why Trump (and everyone) should oppose anti-flag burning laws (Sept. 14, 2020).

Censorship Envy: As defined by : 鈥淭he common reaction that, 鈥業f my neighbor gets to ban speech he reviles, why shouldn鈥檛 I get to do the same?鈥欌 See: The NYPost & Twitter Crash Into 鈥楾he Streisand Effect,鈥 鈥楥ensorship Envy,鈥 and 鈥榯he Slippery Slope Tendency鈥 (Oct. 15, 2020).

Censorship Gravity: The tendency of psychological, cultural, and political forces to pull societies back towards more closed societies and censorship. Stands for the premise that free societies are unusual and hard to maintain, regression to the mean is regression to closed societies. See: Fleabag, Noom, the Future of Freedom, & 鈥楥ensorship Gravity鈥 (Oct. 19, 2020).

Gurri鈥檚 Negation: My term to convey Martin Gurri鈥檚 observation in his book, 鈥淭he Revolt of the Public,鈥 that the explosion of social media and information technology that coalesced to accelerate 鈥淭he Fifth Wave,鈥 has tremendous power to tear down institutions, ideas, and people, but, as of yet, very little ability to create or sustain. See: Gurri鈥檚 Negation: 鈥楾he Revolt of the Public鈥 is this month鈥檚 book award winner (AND Interstellar Rockabilly!) (Feb. 26, 2021).

Gurri鈥檚 Nihilism: My term to describe the kind of nihilism Gurri describes in his book, in which negation is the primary approach and the lack of constructive or realistic suggestions or proposals amounts to a kind of de facto, and sometimes explicit, nihilism. See: Gurri鈥檚 Negation: 鈥楾he Revolt of the Public鈥 is this month鈥檚 book award winner (AND Interstellar Rockabilly!) (Feb. 26, 2021).

Heckler鈥檚 Veto: When an individual or group attempts to silence a speaker through noise, intimidation, or violence. The First Amendment requires government actors to avoid empowering the 鈥渉eckler鈥檚 veto鈥 against protected speech. The 鈥渉eckler鈥檚 veto鈥 is incompatible with free speech culture, as it limits the right to speak and the right to be heard by a willing audience on issues objectionable to groups powerful enough to bring to bear sufficient noise, intimidation, or violence. See: Dear University of North Texas: The 鈥楬eckler鈥檚 veto鈥 is not a good thing (Nov. 5, 2020).

Lab in the Looking Glass, The: The theory that the value of free speech is in knowing what people actually think. An alternative to the 鈥渕arketplace of ideas鈥 theory, which posits that free speech will permit true ideas to triumph over false ideas by giving them all a fair hearing. See: Coronavirus and the failure of the 鈥楳arketplace of Ideas鈥 (Mar. 13, 2020). See also: 鈥淧ure Informational Theory鈥 of Free Speech.

Mill鈥檚 Trident: My term for the observation made by John Stuart Mill in 鈥淥n Liberty鈥 that, in any argument, there are only three possibilities (being wrong, being partially wrong, or being wholly correct), and every possibility is improved or strengthened by freedom of speech and inquiry. See: Mill鈥檚 (invincible) Trident: An argument every fan (or opponent) of free speech must know (Feb. 16, 2021).

Moral Pollution: The phenomenon whereby, by virtue of its physical or conceptual proximity to someone or something immoral, an idea, a person, or an object is considered metaphorically contaminated. This can provoke powerful moral emotions like disgust and contempt. See: 鈥楳oral Pollution鈥 at the University of Chicago: The case of Dorian Abbot (Dec. 11, 2020).

Non-Delegable Constitutional Duty: The obligation of a state actor to ensure agents who perform delegated duties are doing so in accordance with constitutional obligations, including the First Amendment. In other words, the recognition that the state cannot empower an agent to perform an action the state could not perform itself. See: At Loyola Marymount, another student government plays censor after student senator is impeached for supporting Trump (Oct. 21, 2020).

鈥淧ure Informational Theory鈥 of Free Speech, The:  My primary and highly expansive justification for the value of freedom of speech can be stated as 鈥渒nowing the world as it is is the arduous project of human knowledge, and we cannot begin to know the world as it is without knowing what people think, believe, or what they鈥檙e willing to say they think or believe and why. Therefore all speech is of some value because all speech conveys some amount of information. Because it is hard to judge in advance what information is particularly useful to know, the broadest possible protection of opinion is necessary.鈥 See: Twitter as meditative practice: 鈥榃hy Buddhism is True鈥 by Robert Wright wins this month鈥檚 book award (Mar 24, 2021). See also: Lab in the Looking Glass.

Scout Mindset, The: A term coined by author and co-founder that refers to a mindset that is committed to knowing the world as it is, as accurately as possible, despite the reality of cognitive biases, stubbornness, pressure from 鈥渙ur tribe,鈥 the impossibility of perfect information, and the permanence of uncertainty. See: 鈥楾he Scout Mindset鈥 by Julia Galef reminds us that seeing the world as it is doesn鈥檛 have to make you miserable: The April 2021 Prestigious Awards (April 30, 2021).

Slippery Slope Tendency, The: My that, 鈥渨hen it comes to limitations on speech and the uniquely sensitive environment of college campuses鈥 [t]he slippery slope of censorship is demonstrably not a fallacy.鈥 In general, the recurring tendency of well-intentioned speech rules to expand in application until they encompass circumstances that seem obviously inapplicable. See: The NYPost & Twitter Crash Into 鈥楾he Streisand Effect,鈥 鈥楥ensorship Envy,鈥 and 鈥榯he Slippery Slope Tendency鈥 (Oct. 15, 2020).

Streisand Effect, The: As defined by , the process by which 鈥渢he simple act of trying to repress something鈥 online is likely to make it so that something most people would never, ever see鈥 is now seen by many more people[.]鈥 So named because of a 2003 story where attorneys for Barbra Streisand sued a photographer, who had been documenting the erosion of California鈥檚 coastline, for having photographed her coastal home. See: The NYPost & Twitter Crash Into 鈥楾he Streisand Effect,鈥 鈥楥ensorship Envy,鈥 and 鈥榯he Slippery Slope Tendency鈥 (Oct. 15, 2020).


 

Share