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    Speech regulation erodes the good faith on which civil as... — Carmelics
    Home/Rights & Liberty
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    Supports→Regulating speech is foolish and counterproductive for civil society

    Speech regulation erodes the good faith on which civil associations depend

    Rights & LibertySocial Contract
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    Rights & LibertySocial Contract

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    Civil associations depend on good faith (fides)Regulating speech causes men to think one thing and say anotherRegulating speech is foolish and counterproductive for civil society

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    Such associations are too morally opprobrious to merit protection from...74%Civil associations depend on good faith (fides)74%Just as attempts to regulate beliefs fail, attempts to regulate the ex...73%If regulation is more harmful than the behavior being regulated, the p...69%

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    SEP: spinoza-political
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    Next, the argument shifts from considering what the sovereign can do to what it would be practical or prudent for a sovereign to do. Spinoza offers a battery of pragmatic reasons in defense of non-interference. For instance, he argues that “a state can never succeed very far in attempting to force people to speak as the sovereign power commands” (TTP 20, 251). Men are naturally inclined to express what they believe (ibid.), and so just as attempts to regulate beliefs fail, so do attempts to regu

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