TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking Seriously Campus Debates Surrounding Invited Speakers
T2 - Open-Mindedness and the Ethics of Inquiry in Higher Education
AU - Taylor, Rebecca M.
N1 - Thanks to Wayne Riggs, Nancy Snow, Ashley Taylor, Jack Kwong, Maribel Santiago, Emily Robertson, and Ashley Floyd Kuntz for providing constructive feedback that informed the development of this article. I am also grateful to the organizers and participants of the \u201COpen-Mindedness and Perspective\u201D conference hosted at the University of Oklahoma, especially Nancy Snow and Wayne Riggs, where I first developed this project, and to participants in the Philosophy of Education Writing Workshop at the University of Illinois for valuable feedback. My work on this project was supported by a research grant from the Center for Ethics and Education at University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison and a research award from the National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation. The opinions expressed in this publication are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of these organizations.
The author disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/ or publication of this article: My work on this project was supported by a research grant from the Center for Ethics and Education at University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison and a research award from the National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation. The opinions expressed in this publication are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of these organizations.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - Context: College campuses in the United States are currently engaged in public and ongoing negotiation of the value and limits of free speech in educational contexts. Responses to invited campus speakers from students, faculty, and campus leaders point to diverging perspectives on the roles and responsibilities of higher education institutions and their members as communities of inquiry. Considering these perspectives raises questions about the epistemic aims of colleges and universities. Purpose: The purpose of this article is to investigate perspectives on the ethics of inquiry and on the value and demands of open-mindedness in higher education. Specifically, I examined one case of an invited campus speaker who sparked considerable debate-Charles Murray's invited talk at Middlebury College in 2017. Research Design: This study employs the methods of empirically engaged philosophy, a philosophical approach to inquiry that engages with empirical evidence in considering educational aims and implications for institutional structures and policies. I apply conceptual tools stemming from the philosophical theories of knowledge and justice to a thematic content analysis of public statements made by faculty, administrators, and students in the Middlebury case. Conclusions or Recommendations: Through analysis of this campus speaker case, I observed two alternative perspectives on the ethics of inquiry-rational individualism and just collectivism. These two perspectives shared a number of common commitments, including the importance of cultivation of the mind as a primary aim in higher education; the value of open-mindedness, debate, and protest in the pursuit of truth; and the importance of justice, equality, and inclusion. They diverged in their epistemic orientations (individual vs. collective responsibility), their views on the proper bounds of open debate within an institution oriented toward truth-seeking, and what virtuous open-mindedness requires of individuals and collectives. This study contributes to a contemporary understanding of the unique ethical responsibilities of colleges and universities as inquiring organizations, whose members may hold divergent epistemological orientations. By investigating the relationship between open-mindedness, inquiry, and justice in contemporary public discourse in higher education, this study addresses a need for deeper engagement with the philosophical foundations of higher education.
AB - Context: College campuses in the United States are currently engaged in public and ongoing negotiation of the value and limits of free speech in educational contexts. Responses to invited campus speakers from students, faculty, and campus leaders point to diverging perspectives on the roles and responsibilities of higher education institutions and their members as communities of inquiry. Considering these perspectives raises questions about the epistemic aims of colleges and universities. Purpose: The purpose of this article is to investigate perspectives on the ethics of inquiry and on the value and demands of open-mindedness in higher education. Specifically, I examined one case of an invited campus speaker who sparked considerable debate-Charles Murray's invited talk at Middlebury College in 2017. Research Design: This study employs the methods of empirically engaged philosophy, a philosophical approach to inquiry that engages with empirical evidence in considering educational aims and implications for institutional structures and policies. I apply conceptual tools stemming from the philosophical theories of knowledge and justice to a thematic content analysis of public statements made by faculty, administrators, and students in the Middlebury case. Conclusions or Recommendations: Through analysis of this campus speaker case, I observed two alternative perspectives on the ethics of inquiry-rational individualism and just collectivism. These two perspectives shared a number of common commitments, including the importance of cultivation of the mind as a primary aim in higher education; the value of open-mindedness, debate, and protest in the pursuit of truth; and the importance of justice, equality, and inclusion. They diverged in their epistemic orientations (individual vs. collective responsibility), their views on the proper bounds of open debate within an institution oriented toward truth-seeking, and what virtuous open-mindedness requires of individuals and collectives. This study contributes to a contemporary understanding of the unique ethical responsibilities of colleges and universities as inquiring organizations, whose members may hold divergent epistemological orientations. By investigating the relationship between open-mindedness, inquiry, and justice in contemporary public discourse in higher education, this study addresses a need for deeper engagement with the philosophical foundations of higher education.
KW - activism
KW - campus speakers
KW - epistemology
KW - higher education
KW - inquiry
KW - justice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85208405276&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85208405276&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/01614681241261174
DO - 10.1177/01614681241261174
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85208405276
SN - 0161-4681
VL - 126
SP - 86
EP - 109
JO - Teachers College Record
JF - Teachers College Record
IS - 3
ER -