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4 Hum. Rts. Q. 305 (1982)
Alexander Meiklejohn: Teacher of Freedom

handle is hein.journals/hurq4 and id is 315 raw text is: Book Reviews

ALEXANDER MEIKLEJOHN: TEACH-
ER OF FREEDOM, edited by Cynthia
Stokes  Brown    (California: The
Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute,
1981) 281 pp.; $13.95; paperback
$7.95.
The Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Insti-
tute's recent publication of its name-
sake's writings could come at no better
time. Liberal education and free
inquiry-the two aspects of life and
politics to which Alexander Meiklejohn
spoke most directly-both face a rocky
future. The impetus towards more open
government and a less icy atmosphere
for journalists and researchers has been
reversed, and some key reforms watered
down. For instance, just a few weeks
after the CIA resumed domestic covert
operations, the assistant director of the
organization, Robert Inman, tells the
American Association for the Advance-
ment of Science that researchers should
begin voluntarily submitting their work
for a national security review, or else
possibly face a legislative requirement
that they do so. In higher education,
technocratic thinking has replaced the
art of intelligence so honored by Meikle-
john, while radical professors are more
frequently being singled out for pink
slips and promotionless careers.
Considering characteristics of current
times, from the Moral Majority's politi-
cal clout to the hyperpatriotic stance of
the Reagan White House, Meiklejohn
would certainly despair, just as he did
with McCarthyism and the narrow-mind-
edness which led to his own dismissal
from the Amherst College presidency.
The Scottish born philosopher-educator
would  probably cite the present
political era as evidence that this coun-
try's experiment in self-government and
freedom was failing.
However he would couple that

unhappy diagnosis with what seems to
be an unflagging optimism: a belief that,
given the right atmosphere and the
proper education, the common person
can make the hard choices needed to
successfully run a truly democratic
society.
The Institute's anthology, edited by
Cynthia Stokes Brown, covers Meikle-
john's thinking from his student days to
his still productive final years in Califor-
nia and includes a short biography by
the editor. The volume is divided into
five sections, but the themes are consis-
tent: Meiklejohn defending his notion of
the liberal college; Meiklejohn advocat-
ing open-minded education in general;
and Meiklejohn, towards the middle and
end of his life, arguing for a strict inter-
pretation of the First Amendment.
It is natural that Meiklejohn, who
died in 1964 at age 82, should have
moved from philosophizing about edu-
cation to studying and defending
freedom of speech. For his ideas about
the former to be meaningful-particu-
larly as they applied to the Experimental
College he ran at the University of Wis-
consin from 1927 to 1932-an interpre-
tation of the First Amendment was
required that allowed the expression of
any idea given the proper setting, such
as a classroom.
Together, free speech and democrat-
ically distributed liberal learning would
provide the country with a sort of grand
iterative process-replacing the invisi-
ble hand, either left or right, with the
human mind -in which everyone partic-
ipated to attack and solve national and
international problems. Give a person,
any person, a little coaching, access to
books and data, and time to think, and
eventually he or she will be able to
tackle with other citizens whatever
social or political questions need to be
addressed. A democracy only works if
its people are educated, and education

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