John Stuart Mill (was Re: Student Protests Against Horowitz Ad)

Yoshie Furuhashi furuhashi.1 at osu.edu
Thu Mar 29 13:27:56 PST 2001


Daniel Davies wrote:


>I've always
>been fond of John Stuart Mill's rather subtle analysis on this
>point. He's very good on the fact that government censorship
>is a very small part of total censorship, but in a way that, I
>think, probably supports the newspaper thieves.
<snip>
>Mill points out that the most common, and indeed
>probably the most pernicious way in which ideas are censored is
>through the ridicule and conformity of common opinion. Far
>more genuinely radical ideas have been laughed out of existence
>by complacent, smug types with something to lose than have ever
>perished in gulags or autos-da-fe.

John Stuart Mill wrote in his essay _On Liberty_:

***** For a long time past, the chief mischief of the legal penalties is that they strengthen the social stigma. It is that stigma which is really effective, and so effective is it, that the profession of opinions which are under the ban of society is much less common in England, than is, in many other countries, the avowal of those which incur risk of judicial punishment. In respect to all persons but those whose pecuniary circumstances make them independent of the good will of other people, opinion, on this subject, is as efficacious as law; men might as well be imprisoned, as excluded from the means of earning their bread. Those whose bread is already secured, and who desire no favours from men in power, or from bodies of men, or from the public, have nothing to fear from the open avowal of any opinions, but to be ill-thought of and ill-spoken of, and this it ought not to require a very heroic mould to enable them to bear. There is no room for any appeal ad misericordiam in behalf of such persons. But though we do not now inflict so much evil on those who think differently from us, as it was formerly our custom to do, it may be that we do ourselves as much evil as ever by our treatment of them....Our merely social intolerance kills no one, roots out no opinions, but induces men to disguise them, or to abstain from any active effort for their diffusion. With us, heretical opinions do not perceptibly gain, or even lose, ground in each decade or generation; they never blaze out far and wide, but continue to smoulder in the narrow circles of thinking and studious persons among whom they originate, without ever lighting up the general affairs of mankind with either a true or a deceptive light. And thus is kept up a state of things very satisfactory to some minds, because, without the unpleasant process of fining or imprisoning anybody, it maintains all prevailing opinions outwardly undisturbed, while it does not absolutely interdict the exercise of reason by dissentients afflicted with the malady of thought. A convenient plan for having peace in the intellectual world, and keeping all things going on therein very much as they do already. But the price paid for this sort of intellectual pacification, is the sacrifice of the entire moral courage of the human mind. <http://www.bartleby.com/130/2.html> *****

Yoshie



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