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The signal lost in the noise

John Corlett (Faculty of Health and Community Studies, Grant MacEwan University, Edmonton, Canada)

On the Horizon

ISSN: 1074-8121

Article publication date: 31 October 2022

Issue publication date: 2 February 2023

108

Abstract

Purpose

The case studies were examined in the context of a lack of confidence in what constitutes truth and knowledge.

Design/methodology/approach

A case study design taken examining specific instances where the emergence of populist political tactics in an unfettered media world has undermined public belief in what counts as knowledge and to cast doubt on the validity of the idea of truth.

Findings

From the examples used, it was seen that not just scholarship, but scholars themselves, found themselves under attack when presenting views that, however rigorously reasoned and supported by research fact, were deemed unacceptable by the extreme political right.

Practical implications

The knowledge creation purpose of universities is under threat and “business as usual” as a response will not address that threat.

Originality/value

This calls into question the future of universities and their professoriates in a post-truth world and asks what the academy can do to adapt to continue serve the common good when knowledge gives way to the powerful influence of the evidence-free rhetorical sound bite in the formulation of public policy and public opinion.

Keywords

Citation

Corlett, J. (2023), "The signal lost in the noise", On the Horizon, Vol. 31 No. 1, pp. 54-61. https://doi.org/10.1108/OTH-07-2022-0039

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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