About the Book
In universities and other truth-seeking
institutions, free inquiry is under threat.
The practice of free inquiry rests on
tolerating dissent and promoting data and logical argument over feelings,
status, party rule, or group affiliation. Many of the most noted successes of
the West are the fruits of free inquiry, but this legacy is now at risk. Furthermore,
our education system is failing to teach the values of free inquiry and free
speech, which are vital to preparing citizens to work alongside those with differing
opinions.
In
The
Free Inquiry Papers, an impressive array of academics come together to
address this urgent problem. Across 21 chapters, the authors lay out the arguments
for free inquiry, document the current threats, and offer solutions to protect
and advance free inquiry. The authors represent a range of academic and
political backgrounds, but they agree on three fundamental perspectives. First,
the current higher education regime now prioritizes activism and status over
the search for truth, especially in the social sciences and humanities. This is
neither politically nor scientifically sustainable. Second, improvements are possible
and would enhance the institutions' validity and credibility. Third, no one has
all the answers.
The erosion of support for free inquiry
matters for everyone, but it is especially dangerous for the institutions whose
mission is the production of ideas and knowledge. If we lose our ability to
debate and discuss ideas openly and honestly, then both science and democracy
will yield to a new dark age.