Acknowledgements
Foreword by John D. Peters, Yale University
Introduction
Part 1. Freedom of Expression under Threat: Emblematic Cases
1. I am not Charlie Hebdo. Defending Freedom of Expression but Not Its Content
2. The Paradox of Freedom of Expression on Campus
3. The Threat of Religious Fanaticism: Jyllands Posten and the Regensburg Address
4. The Rise of a New Orthodoxy: The Intolerance of Secular Relativism
5. Facebook’s Content Moderation Rule: Private Censorship of Public Discourse
Part 2. The Liberal Tradition of Freedom of Expression and Its Contradictions
6. The Sustainability of the Liberal Rationale: Main Critiques
7. A Fabricated Notion of Tolerance
8. The Epistemological Shortfall: A Homogenous Concept of Discourse
9. The Anthropological Shortfall: Modernity’s Idea of Mankind
10. The Neutrality of the Public Space: A Useful Fiction
Part 3. Historical and Philosophical Development of Freedom of Expression
11. The Origins of Freedom of Expression
12. Old-School and New-School Censorship
13. The Classical Tradition of the Founding Fathers of The United States
14. The Contemporary Tradition in the United States: Holmes and Harvard
15. The European Tradition: Hate Speech Laws
Part 4. Reconstructing the Foundations of Freedom of Expression
16. Reframing Freedom of Expression as a Human Good
17. Reconsidering the Legal Grounds
18. Reshaping the Harm Principle. Pragmatics of Language and Natural Ethics
19. Repairing the Relationship Between Secular and Sacred
20. Revisiting the Limits of Freedom of Expression