No academic freedom from epistemic responsibility

In Vasiliki Kosta, Academic Freedom: Constructing Its Content for EU Law. Cambridge University Press (forthcoming)
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Abstract

The aim of this paper is to give substance to the broadly accepted claim that the freedoms that scientists and scholars enjoy as members of the academic community come not just with moral responsibility but also with epistemic responsibility. The paper elucidates what it means that there is no academic freedom from epistemic responsibility. After a general Introduction, Section 1 introduces the notion of epistemic norms and the responsibility that results. Section 2 focuses on one basic epistemic norm and spells out what follows from it for discussions on academic freedom, for instance, in cases of Holocaust denial. Section 3 addresses two challenges that result from invoking epistemic responsibility, namely the challenge of how to prevent conservativism and the challenge of how to prevent undue moralizing or politicizing of the academic space. After a reply to these challenges, the resulting epistemic responsibilism is spelled out.

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Maria Kronfeldner
Central European University

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