Lectures
See Past Events Link for Past Lectures "Reason must in all its undertakings subject itself
to criticism; should it limit freedom of criticism by any prohibitions,
it must harm itself, drawing upon itself a damaging suspicion. Nothing
is so important through it usefulness, nothing so sacred, that it
may be exempted from this searching examination, which knows no respect
for persons. Reason depends on this freedom for its very existence.
For reason has no dictatorial authority; its verdict is always simply
the agreement of free citizens, of whom each one must be permitted
to express, without let or hindrance, his objections or even his veto." |