The Social Character of Freedom of Expression
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Moon, Richard (Author)
Title
The Social Character of Freedom of Expression
Abstract
Freedom of expression protects the individual's freedom to communicate with others. The right of the individual is to participate in an activity that is deeply social in character. The value of freedom of expression rests on the social nature of individuals and the constitutive character of public discourse. This understanding of the freedom, however, has been inhibited by the individualism that dominates contemporary thinking about rights its assumptions about the pre-social individual and the instrumental value of community life. While the social character of human agency is seldom mentioned in the different accounts of the freedom value, it is the unstated premise of each. Once we recognize that individual agency and identity emerge in the social relationship of communication, the traditional split between intrinsic and instrumental accounts (and between speaker and listener -based accounts) of the value of freedom of expression dissolves.
Genre
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Archive ID
1876381
Place
Rochester, NY
Date
2009
Accessed
9/10/23, 8:16 PM
Language
en
Library Catalog
Social Science Research Network
Citation
Moon, R. (2009). The Social Character of Freedom of Expression (SSRN Scholarly Paper 1876381). https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1876381
Author / Editor
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