Saturday, October 15. 2016
        
                
        
                        
                                                    
            
            
                 Open Letter to Professor László Lovász, President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
[hyperlinks added, not in original letter]
 
14 October, 2016
 
Dear Professor Lovász,
 
We, the undersigned members and doctors of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences [HAS], representing a variety of world-views and academic interests, hereby wish to express our concern about the antidemocratic processes that have been taking place in Hungary in the last few years, especially the threat to freedom of the press. We consider it highly damaging to amend Hungary’s constitution to diminish the role of checks and balances that is normal in democratic states and to exploit the refugee crisis to arouse xenophobia.
  
In addition to the deep crisis in education, research and the health system, we are particularly troubled about the nationalization of the public media and their use as government mouthpieces, along with the liquidation of the existing independent press, as in the restructuring of  Origo, and, in the last few days, the closure of  Népszabadság.
 
We consider it important that, as a prominent embodiment and forum of our nation’s intellectual sphere, the Hungarian Academy of Sciences should be playing an investigative role as well as implementing substantive debate about these matters of concern for the whole of society. Our concerns are particularly reinforced by the letters that have been sent to the President of the Academy by external and honorary members  in the last few days. The significance of the issues raised is underscored by the fact that these respected scholars, concerned for Hungary’s future, have elected to resign as members to protest the inaction on the part of our Academy.
 
We hence respectfully request that the President see to it as soon as possible that the leadership of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences initiates discussion toward committing itself to launching scholarly investigations as well as conducting debates concerning these urgent issues facing Hungarian society. 
 
As our letter concerns important matters of public interest, we are simultaneously making it public.
 
Yours sincerely 
 
(signatories in alphabetical order) Ács Pál, literary historian, HAS Doctor 
Bazsa György, physical chemist, HAS Doctor 
Csányi Vilmos, ethologist, HAS Member 
Erdélyi Ágnes, philosopher, HAS Doctor 
Erős Ferenc, psychologist, HAS Doctor 
Falus András, biologist, HAS Member 
Ferge Zsuzsa, sociologist, HAS Member 
Györfi László, mathematician, HAS Member 
Jánossy András, physicist, HAS Member 
Juhász István, mathematician, HAS Member 
Kardos Julianna, chemist, HAS Doctor 
Katona Gyula, mathematician, HAS Member 
Kertesi Gábor, economist, HAS Doctor 
Kertész János, physicist, HAS Member 
Kornai András, mathematician, linguist, HAS Doctor 
Krausz Tamás, historian, HAS Doctor 
Laki Mihály, economist, HAS Doctor 
Mellár Tamás, economist, HAS Doctor 
Nagy László, biologist, HAS Member 
Radnóti Sándor, philosopher of art, HAS Doctor 
Sali Attila, mathematician, HAS Doctor 
Sarkadi Balázs, biologist, HAS Member 
Solymosi Frigyes, chemist, HAS Member 
Somlai Péter, sociologist, HAS Doctor 
Szalai Erzsébet, sociologist, HAS Doctor 
Tóth Bálint, mathematician, HAS Doctor 
Váradi András, biochemist, HAS Doctor 
Vicsek Tamás, physicist, HAS Member 
 [ Translated by David R. Evans]
              
            
            
            
         
        
        
        
        
        
             
    
    
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