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Is Learning (A)Political?
One of our readers sent us the following excerpt from on The New Criterion鈥檚 weblog:
Colleges and Universities do not exist to promote free speech. They exist to pursue and teach the truth鈥. This is not a novel idea. But it is one that Hamilton鈥檚 president, Joan Hinde Stewart, has difficulty in wrapping her mind around. In an about the controversy, Stewart began with some clich茅s about Hamilton鈥檚 belief that 鈥渙pen-ended and free inquiry is essential to educational growth.鈥 Well, fine. But surely a college president should understand that 鈥渙pen-ended and free inquiry鈥 is one thing, political agitation and proselytizing is another. Our society provides many outlets for the expression of political opinions. Thank God for that. It has also taken care to provide for educational institutions whose purpose is learning, scholarship, and pedagogy. Pace President Stewart, academic freedom is not the same thing as free speech. It is a more limited freedom, designed to nurture intellectual integrity and to protect those engaged in intellectual inquiry from the intrusion of partisan passions.
This statement seems to raise more questions than it answers, such as: Who defines 鈥渢he truth鈥? Can pursuing 鈥渢he truth鈥 be absolutely devoid of 鈥減artisan passions鈥? Can it occur without freedom of expression? How exactly do we define preventable 鈥減olitical agitation and proselytizing鈥? Isn鈥檛 Kimball鈥檚 statement itself a political opinion that college and university education should be apolitical? Would his opinion be considered 鈥減olitical agitation鈥? If Kimball were a professor, should it get him fired?
Furthermore, the statement 鈥淸A]cademic freedom is not the same thing as free speech. It is a more limited freedom鈥 is problematic. While academic freedom and free speech aren鈥檛 the same thing, they are a packaged deal. Ward Churchill has both the right to free speech about matters of public concern and the right to academic freedom to discuss matters relating to his discipline. This is not at all a limited free speech right. In fact, Churchill鈥檚 statements are well within protected speech enhanced by academic freedom, not reduced by it (see FIRE鈥檚 letter to the University of Colorado).
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