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What does MIT stand for? Faculty, alumni want answers.

MIT campus in the fall

(Paper Cat / Shutterstock.com)

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology prides itself as a hub of brilliant minds and innovation. Last year, MIT researchers filed 439 patents, and through its intellectual property enabled the creation of 25 companies. The institute is affiliated with , 11 of whom are current faculty. But in recent years, MIT faculty and alumni have had to sacrifice time spent on innovation in order to fight against political orthodoxy. Now community members are organizing 鈥 forming the and advocating for the adoption of stronger academic freedom protections, such as the Chicago Statement. (See our 鈥Fast Facts鈥 overview for more.)

While MIT is a private university, its describe a place where students and faculty are encouraged to engage in unfettered intellectual exploration. Yet according to 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 College Free Speech Rankings, the largest survey ever conducted on students鈥 free speech attitudes, MIT is failing to uphold that mission. Only about one fifth (21%) of MIT students believe their administration makes it 鈥渆xtremely鈥 or 鈥渧ery鈥 clear that they protect free speech on campus. Furthermore, less than one fifth (17%) believe that if a controversy over offensive speech were to occur on campus, it is 鈥渆xtremely鈥 or 鈥渧ery鈥 likely that the administration would defend the speaker鈥檚 right to express their views. These survey results, paired with an uptick in recent years of institutional censorship of faculty, show that the community鈥檚 concerns are more than warranted. 

Dorian Abbot and diminishing academic freedom

The most recent and arguably most egregious failure by MIT to uphold its mission occurred in October 2021, when the institute rescinded its invitation to host University of Chicago Geophysicist to speak at its annual , hosted by the . Abbot鈥檚 offense: an critical of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. In the op-ed, Abbot argued that DEI 鈥渧iolates the ethical and legal principle of equal treatment.鈥 He offered an alternative framework called 鈥淢erit, Fairness, and Equality (MFE) whereby university applicants are treated as individuals and evaluated through a rigorous and unbiased process based on their merit and qualifications alone.鈥  

In response, a Twitter mob of faculty and alumni demanded MIT rescind Abbot鈥檚 invitation. MIT subsequently kowtowed. 

鈥淏esides freedom of speech, we have the freedom to pick the speaker who best fits our needs,鈥 Robert van der Hilst, the head of the MIT department. 鈥淲ords matter and have consequences.鈥 

2020 College Free Speech Rankings
FIRE's 2021 College Free Speech Rankings showed only small percentages of MIT students felt their school strongly protected speech on campus.

FIRE was highly critical of MIT鈥檚 response. Others offered , as well. In a to van der Hilst, the described the decision as an 鈥渆gregious violation of the principles of academic freedom and an abnegation of MIT鈥檚 own stated commitment to freedom of thought.鈥 Abbot, too, wrote a in which he called out MIT for abandoning its mission.

This was not the first time Abbot had faced backlash. In 2020, graduates in Abbot鈥檚 own department at the University of Chicago tried to get his teachings restricted for his supporting 鈥渁cademic freedom and merit-based evaluations.鈥 Yet the students were overruled by University of Chicago President , who issued a in support of free speech for faculty. By contrast, MIT decided that on its campus, faculty鈥檚 free speech rights were subordinate to the censorious demands of a loud few.

Ultimately, Princeton University鈥檚 hosted Abbot鈥檚 , titled 鈥淐limate and the Potential for Life on Other Planets.鈥 The lecture focused entirely on Abbot鈥檚 research regarding climate change and planetary visualization; he did not mention the canceled Carlson lecture or any other controversy. Abbot, unlike MIT, was able to separate scholarship from politics. 

Here it鈥檚 worth noting that disinvitations like Abbot鈥檚 aren鈥檛 uncommon. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Disinvitation Database has tracked nearly 500. Even other technical universities such as Virginia Tech, Texas Tech, Johns Hopkins, and Cal Poly have been subjected to 鈥 and given in to 鈥 attempts to disinvite speakers for commencement addresses and other campus events.

Abbot controversy par for the course

Abbot鈥檚 disinvitation was not the first time MIT signaled a weakening commitment to academic freedom. Among MIT鈥檚 great innovators in the digital age is Richard Stallman, who created the groundbreaking and the subsequent in the mid-1980s at MIT鈥檚 Artificial Intelligence Lab. Stallman鈥檚 work epitomizes MIT鈥檚 to 鈥渁dvance knowledge and educate students in science, technology, and other areas of scholarship that will best serve the nation and the world in the 21st century.鈥 

But in 2019, Stallman was pressured to resign from his positions as a visiting scientist at MIT鈥檚 Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and as president and board director of the Free Software Foundation (though he has since the board).

His offense? In an about , Stallman asserted that it is an 鈥渋njustice鈥 to use the word 鈥渁ssaulting鈥 to describe the conduct of deceased MIT professor Marvin Minsky, who with one of Epstein鈥檚 trafficking victims. Stallman explained that he believed the available evidence and testimony did not make clear Minsky鈥檚 knowledge of coercion or culpability. 

The backlash from students was and swift. Within days Stallman 鈥渄ue to pressure on MIT and me over a series of misunderstandings and mischaracterizations.鈥 

MIT could have reduced this pressure by issuing a public statement reiterating its to develop the habits of mind necessary to 鈥渄eal constructively with the issues and opportunities of our time.鈥 Instead, it issued no public comment. 

When faced with another political email controversy the following year, MIT鈥檚 leadership again failed to defend academic freedom. In 2020, was from his position as Catholic chaplain over an email about George Floyd. In the , Moloney argued that we do not know definitively whether racism was responsible for Floyd鈥檚 death.

In response to Moloney鈥檚 email, MIT students to administrators, including the . Suzy Nelson, MIT鈥檚 vice president and dean for student life, called Moloney鈥檚 comments 鈥渄eeply disturbing,鈥 explaining that 鈥渂y devaluing and disparaging George Floyd鈥檚 character, Father Moloney鈥檚 message failed to acknowledge the dignity of each human being and the devastating impact of systemic racism.鈥 

In the controversies surrounding Abbot, Stallman, and Moloney, MIT failed to protect the academic freedom of individuals who were engaging in discourse over matters of public concern. Whether one agrees with these individuals鈥 conclusions or not, it was clear that they were attempting to further the of the institute. Therefore, MIT鈥檚 actions (and inaction) were inexcusable.

MIT is not teaching its students to protect free expression

What makes all of this particularly disappointing is that until recently, MIT wasn鈥檛 a bad actor. FIREsends more than 100 letters every year (last year more than 200) to schools that violate students鈥 rights. MIT was not among the ranks of universities that had received a FIREletter until 2020, when FIREwrote in to voice concerns about policies restricting student press rights at MIT. We received no response.

Concerns have about MIT鈥檚 DEI . Rather than state the preeminence of free speech and free inquiry, the training informs students that the First Amendment 鈥渢ypically applies only to state institutions鈥 and that although freedom of expression is important, the university is 鈥渁lso committed to creating a learning community where students from all backgrounds feel welcome and can concentrate on their studies without facing hostility and discrimination.鈥 

How do MIT鈥檚 students reconcile the institute鈥檚 conflicting commitments to freedom of expression and freedom from expression? 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 College Free Speech Rankings once again offers some dismal answers. Three quarters (75%) of MIT students believe shouting down a speaker is acceptable to some degree; more than half (51%) believe blocking other students from attending a campus speech is acceptable to some degree; and a quarter (25%) believe using violence to stop a campus speech is acceptable to some degree. Clearly, MIT students would benefit from education on the First Amendment.

The MIT community fights back

MIT鈥檚 failures to protect and promote free inquiry have not gone unnoticed within the MIT community. The recently formed is 鈥渁 group of alumni, faculty, students and friends of MIT who have been woken up by the recent Abbot Affair and have come together to advocate for MIT鈥檚 support for free speech, open inquiry, and viewpoint diversity.鈥 At two MIT faculty forums in October and November of 2021, a secret ballot revealed that more than half of faculty feel that on an 鈥渆veryday basis,鈥 their voices, and the voices of their colleagues, are constrained by MIT. Over three quarters worry that their voice or their colleagues鈥 voices are 鈥渋ncreasingly in jeopardy.鈥

Through our and partnership with , FIREoffers concrete steps that universities such as MIT can take to defend free inquiry on campus.

Two MIT alumni have taken a financial stand against MIT鈥檚 intolerance. Tom Hafer and Henry I. Miller wrote a stating that they will stop donating to the institute for caving to 鈥渨oke鈥 ideology. They wish to restore MIT to the academically rigorous institute that taught them 鈥渢he essence of problem-solving鈥 that enabled them to thrive in their respective careers (Hafer developed systems for neutralizing rockets and drones, and Miller is a physician and molecular biologist). Hafer and Miller explain that MIT can redeem itself by adopting 鈥減rinciples of fairness.鈥 

We at FIREshare these alumni鈥檚 concerns. Through our and partnership with , we offer concrete steps that universities such as MIT can take to defend free inquiry on campus. FIREurges MIT to adopt a free speech policy statement in the model of the , which defends academic freedom by asserting that 鈥渢he University is committed to free and open inquiry in all matters, it guarantees all members of the University community the broadest possible latitude to speak, write, listen, challenge, and learn.鈥 Since the Chicago Statement was released in 2015, over 80 institutions have publicly committed to free speech in this way, signaling to faculty, students, alumni, and the public that freedom of expression is of paramount importance on campus. 

With 13 of the schools ranked in the top 25 of 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 College Free Speech Rankings having endorsed the Chicago Statement 鈥 果冻传媒app官方, faculty, and alumni are determined to bring academic freedom back to MIT. Now the administration just needs to remember what it stands for. 

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