![]() ![]() ![]() Yet the free market may be equally problematic. While the spread of facts is to be welcomed, that of false "facts" is more troubling:Ĭonstraints on the travels of facts may be seriously detrimental to our well-being. ![]() In the introduction to How Well Do Facts Travel?: The Dissemination of Reliable Knowledge (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2010) Mary Morgan explains that sometimes accepted "facts" are false or unreliable. ![]()
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