Setting Fire to Reason

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Advocacy
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Beatrice
Brandenburg
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Censorship
Chilling effects
Citizens
Clearly wrongful harms
Collateral
Collateral costs
Communicative
Constitutional
Counter speech regulation
Criminal
Criminal law
Dangerous speech
Defensive
Democracy
Democratic
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Enforcement
Epistemic
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Ex ante
forthcoming
Freedom
Hate speech
Human rights
Illocutionary speech
Imminent
Imminent harm
Incendiary
Incite
Incitement
Justification
Law
Legal speech
Legitimate
Legitimate speech
Liberal
Liberal democracies
Media platforms
Misinformation
Moral duty
Normative
Permissible
Plausible
Plausibly
Police
Potentially liable
Presumptively
Proportionality
Proportionate
Protected speech
Reasonable disagreement
Restricting speech
Restrictions
Speakers duties
Speech
Speech acts
Speech advocating
Speech interests
Speech law
Speech regulation
Speech restrictions
Strict scrutiny
Underlying moral
Unprotected speech
Wrongdoers
Wrongful harm
Wrongful speech

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691260358
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The responsibilities of speakers and platforms in a world where content can go viral

The debate over free speech is often marked by two extremes: in one corner, those who think that the right to free speech is nearly absolute; in the other, those who defend sweeping prohibitions on harmful speech. In Setting Fire to Reason, Jeffrey Howard rejects both extremes. He argues that free speech is among our most important moral rights, but—like all rights—it has limits, determined by moral duties we owe to each other. Yet exactly how these moral limits should be translated into law is complex, depending on the particular speech regulation at issue and the risks of government abuse.

Using incitement as his central example of harmful speech, Howard sets out an integrated framework of speakers’ rights and duties, determining when and why speech restrictions can be justified. In developing this original theory, Howard pinpoints the ethical duties of social media platforms, assesses the role of counter-speech as a weapon against harmful communications, and explores how the law and morality of free speech can and should diverge.

Jeffrey W. Howard is professor of political philosophy and public policy at University College London, where he is director of the Digital Speech Lab. He is coeditor of the journal Political Philosophy.

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