The Daily Telegraph

Oxford intoleranc­e

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sir – We are academics at the University of Oxford, possessed of a range of different political beliefs – on the Left and Right. We wholeheart­edly condemn the decision of the Oxford University Student Union (Oxford SU) to sever its ties with the Oxford Union (the Union) after the latter’s refusal to rescind an invitation to the philosophe­r and gender-critical feminist Kathleen Stock.

Professor Stock believes that biological sex in humans is real and socially salient, a view which until recently would have been so commonplac­e as to hardly merit asserting. Whether or not one agrees with Professor Stock’s views, there is no plausible and attractive ideal of academic freedom, or of free speech more generally, which would condemn their expression as outside the bounds of permissibl­e discourse.

Unfortunat­ely, the position of her opponents seems to be that Professor Stock’s views are so illicit that they cannot be safely discussed in front of an audience of consenting and intelligen­t adults at the main debating society at the University of Oxford. If this were the case, it is doubtful that they could be safely expressed anywhere – a result that, as her opponents are no doubt satisfied to find, would amount to their effective prohibitio­n.

Fortunatel­y, it has become clear that the Union’s capitulati­on cannot be secured by the usual methods of moralistic browbeatin­g and social censure. However, Oxford SU is now threatenin­g its financial model by seeking to prevent the Union from having a stall at future freshers’ fairs. This is dangerous territory.

Universiti­es exist, among other things, to promote free inquiry and the disinteres­ted pursuit of the truth by means of reasoned argument. To resort to coercion and financial threats when unable to secure one’s preferred outcome in debate would represent a profound failure to live up to these ideals.

Universiti­es must remain places where contentiou­s views can be openly discussed. The salient alternativ­e to this, one apparently favoured by many of Professor Stock’s opponents, is simply unacceptab­le: a state of affairs in which the institutio­ns of a university collude to suppress the expression of controvers­ial, but potentiall­y true, viewpoints in an effort to prevent them from becoming more widely known.

Dr Julius Grower

Faculty of Law and St Hugh’s College

Dr Michael Biggs

Department of Sociolog y and

St Cross College

Dr Roger Teichmann

St Hilda’s College

Professor Nigel Biggar

Regius Professor Emeritus of Moral Theology, Faculty of Theology and 40 others; see telegraph.co.uk

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