What is the point of free speech? Truth, said J.S. Mill, and he was partly right. Free speech is not a fisticuff free-for-all. What matters is knowledge, especially the knowledge needed to govern ourselves in a democracy. ‘Post-truth’ has been the word of the year, made manifest in speech that manipulates and deceives, in the media, and in social media. The problems of trust identified by Onora O’Neill are more pressing than ever. But the abandonment of truth would be the death, not the vindication, of free speech. A living democracy needs and deserves better. This lecture was held at the 2017 Holberg Symposium: "Ethics for Communication" in honour of Holberg Laureate Onora O'Neill. BIOGRAPHY Rae Langton is Professor of Philosophy at Newnham College, University of Cambridge and Fellow of Newnham College. She has testified to the Leveson Enquiry on media ethics, and is writing up her John Locke Lectures (Oxford 2015), about the ethics of communicative speech acts, entitled ‘Accommodating Injustice’.

Award Ceremony for the 2026 Holberg Prize and Nils Klim Prize
354 views

The Holberg Masterclass with Lyndal Roper: ‘Bodies, Gender, Psyche, Movement’
409 views

The 2026 Holberg Lecture: 'Who Owns Fertility? The Reformation’s Sexual Politics'
700 views

An Evening with the Holberg Prize, feat. Lyndal Roper and Majse Lind.
240 views

The Nils Klim Symposium: ‘Storying the Person in a Mental Health Crisis’
384 views

The Holberg Symposium: ‘Where is History Moving? New Directions in Writing the Past’
468 views