Can it be restored as a home of free speech and free inquiry? The Open Mind conference, put on by Heterodox Academy, says yes. At the very least, I would recommend watching the video of the wrap-up session with Jonathan Haidt and Deb Mashek.
I think that the very name “heterodox” is a give-away that their prospects or success may be slim.
I have liked Wendy Kaminer for many years, ever since I read I’m Dysfunctional, You’re Dysfunctional. She recently had an op-ed on the ideological turn of the ACLU. In her panel remarks at the conference, she indicates that she is worried that she is part of a generation of liberals who is aging out of the system, to be replaced by a generation that has grown up to expect and embrace speech codes. I fear that on campus, demographics is destiny. The diversity uber alles crowd is going to drive out the truth-seeking uber alles crowd. The HxA’ers may not realize it, but they could just turn out to be a tenured version of the IDW.
1. This post has the right tone given the subject matter.
2. I really wish “Open Mind” had used an open platform. (And Kaminer’s op-ed on free speech isn’t free, it’s behind the WSJ paywall too, though her argument failed to really engage with the ACLU’s position – why not balance values and use good judgment to decline to allocate scarce resources to defend the indefensibe, negative-value hate speech?) Most workplaces block facebook-hosted content entirely, I don’t have a facebook account, put in some effort to block various (and ubiquitous) facebook tracking efforts on third-party websites, and don’t want to have to log in to facebook to watch a simple video. That’s inconsiderate online behavior. Fortunately, The Independent Whig created and posted transcripts (though I lament the fading of the norm of removing mere verbal pauses and unflattering tics, the ums and uhs, from transcripts, which comes across much different in print than in person or video.)
3. I’m glad some of these people have carved out a kind of publicity and event niche for themselves, but in a way, achieving a personal success in such ventures can be counterproductive to the extent that one fails to actually expand the Overton Window and halt the march of the PC inquisition, and gives the prominent participants too much to lose by running afoul of the orthodoxy.
4. Once again this HxA event was deeply disappointing, as Stephen Messenger said, “The overall feeling I have by the end of the day after I left there was I just sat through a day of, ‘Aren’t we great? Don’t we just get it? And aren’t we smart and aren’t we intellectual and don’t we just know what the right things are what should be done?'”
Fundamentally, Haidt and company still refuse to actually make a concrete case for their position by taking on the specifics of the current problem, instead of making a futile generalized argument appealing to abstract ‘values’ which are not actually shared in common, an indispensable component of social capital. He’s trying to draw on the social capital joint bank account, but the funds are insufficient. (Of course, while the absolute value of social capital permits engagement with a common background of values, it doesn’t always have a positive sign – one way of buidling the absolute value again is to thoroughly succeed in eliminating the old values and replacing them with new ones. That’s what’s happening now, as we passed below the zero point some time ago.)
Here’s what I mean. Think about it from the perspective of someone – perhaps a typical progressive academic or administrator – skeptical of Haidt’s alarmism.
Haidt doesn’t get into any of that because he can’t: this is the meta-level prohibition of speech that sits on top of ground-level prohibitions.
So, yes, certainly going nowhere.
I’m curious, what would an effective response be to the hypothetical progressive academic/administrator?
Depends what you mean by ‘effective’, but if you mean ‘persuasive’, then the gloomy answer, unfortunately, is, “There isn’t one.”
Academy can segment, we pick the speech codes we like. At least we get it sorted, but we then put public funding in a quandary of picking winners and losers. The group doing STEM speech codes will get all the do-re-me.
It seems that the answer to the question is “no”:
https://quillette.com/2018/07/02/through-the-looking-glass-at-concordia-university/
BTW, this article was written by a woman of drearily conventional “progressive” views, and is replete with gratuitously annoying leftwing virtue-signalling. The writer fails to reflect, however, on the possibility that what is happening in the universities is just the working out of the implications of her own leftist principles.