Ideas about ideas, at a time when ideas feel endangered
This piece is co-written with Dr Nason Maani and cross-posted here.
Let us start with the present.
We are living in an unusual time. After many years of gains for more open liberal societies, populist forces are in ascendance. Several countries that nominally are open, democratic, and have freedoms of expressions are actively working to suppress media, universities, and other outlets that generally have been engaged in developing and disseminating ideas. Other countries, including some of the largest in the world, have long been operating in a sort-of unsteady social compact, where the population benefits from increasing prosperity, as long as it does not raise too many ideas that may threaten a status quo.
Whither then ideas?
We think ideas matter and are the core of liberal societies. We are interested in the enormous progress afforded by liberalism through core values of pluralism, diversity of perspectives, reasoned and rigorous debate, and gradual improvement of the world we live in, not as a partisan project, but as an intellectual foundation to a better world. And that matters to all we do in health as an aspirational foundation to that very world.
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