Versions of CensorshipCensorship and all it implies in terms both of our historical understanding and of issues of enormous moment in contemporary life defies brief definition because it is an idea that always engages our prejudices, penetrates to the dim regions where our manners and mores take form, and shapes our attitude to the rule law, while at the same time the responses it evokes, whether pernicious or benevolent, depend upon the actualities of the historical moment. Censorship is fascinating because its theory demands some decision on its practice whenever there is an intellectual or political crisis; it is a measure of individual rationality and liberalism. History, which has accelerated so powerfully in recent decades, has diffused our attention, and we tend to overlook the most urgent of the threats to ourselves from ourselves. |
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Inhalt
Areopagitica On the Background of | 1 |
Areopagitica by John Milton | 6 |
On Whether Plato Would Have Expelled Milton from the Republic | 33 |
On Miltons Intolerance of the Roman Catholic Church | 42 |
The Index Librorum Prohibitorum from The Vatican Story by Bernard Wall | 46 |
On Reason Truth and Church Policy | 50 |
The Condemnation and Recantation of Galileo | 54 |
On the Historical Galileo and the Figure of Parable | 61 |
On the Dangers of Preventing the Questioning of Authority | 164 |
Corruption of the Poor and Unlearned by Certain Opinions from Report of the Arguments of the Attorney of the Commonwealth at Trials of Abner ... | 165 |
On Freedom of Speech | 169 |
Freedom of Speech and the First Amendment from Free Speech in the United States by Zechariah Chafee Jr | 170 |
On Restricting the Sale of Pernicious Material | 199 |
Smut Corruption and the Law by Patrick Murphy Malin | 201 |
CENSORSHIP and IMAGINATION | 217 |
COMMENT | 219 |
A Few Tips About Science from The Life of Galileo by Bertolt Brecht | 64 |
On Political Freedom and Other Peoples Beliefs | 71 |
The Expediency of Toleration from Tractatus Theologico Politicus by Benedict de Spinoza translated by A G Wernham | 73 |
CENSORSHIP and FACT | 83 |
COMMENT | 85 |
Of the Liberty of Subjects from Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes | 87 |
On the Exercise of Government and the Exercise of Science | 90 |
Soviet Genetics The Real Issue by Sir Julian Huxley | 94 |
On Governmental Direction of Science | 114 |
Natural Science and National Security from In the Matter of J Robert Oppenheimer quoting John J McCloy et al | 116 |
II CENSORSHIP and the NEWS | 121 |
On What News Is | 125 |
A NineteenthCentury Opinion of Newspapers from a letter of Thomas Jefferson to John Norvell June 11 1807 | 127 |
On the Function of the Modern Newspaper | 129 |
The Factual Heresy from A Discord of Trumpets by Claud Cockburn | 131 |
On Opinion and the Public | 137 |
Liberty of the Press in the United States from Democracy in America by Alexis de Tocqueville | 139 |
The Unlimited Power of the Majority from Democracy in America by Alexis de Tocqueville | 144 |
On the Emergence of Popular Opinion as a Curb on Power | 148 |
The Wilkes Affair from Memoirs of the Reign of George III by Horace Walpole | 150 |
Defence of the Freedom to Read a letter to the Supreme Court of Norway in connection with the Sexus case by Henry Miller | 221 |
On the American Legal Attitude to Obscene Literature | 229 |
Opinion by Judge Bryan on Lady Chatterleys Lover | 230 |
On Political Influence and the Writer | 249 |
Ketman from The Captive Mind by Czeslaw Milosz translated by Jane Zielonko | 251 |
On Political Persecution of Writers | 274 |
Preface to De VAllemagne by Germaine de Stael | 276 |
On Literature and Nationalism | 282 |
The Prevention of Literature by George Orwell | 283 |
COMMENT | 298 |
From Letter to M dAlembert by JJ Rousseau translated by Alan Bloom | 301 |
On the Theatre as a Forum | 316 |
Speech Against Licensing the Stage by the Earl of Chesterfield | 317 |
On George Bernard Shaw and Theatre Reform | 331 |
The Necessity of Immoral Plays from the Preface to The ShewingUp of Blanco Posnet by George Bernard Shaw | 332 |
COMMENT | 345 |
DreamCensorship by Sigmund Freud | 347 |
On Authority and Freedom | 356 |
The Legend of the Grand Inquisitor from The Brothers Karamazov by Feodor Dostoyevsky translated by Constance Garneti | 357 |