Keen On America

Different Minds Are Great: David Oppenheimer on the Diversity Principle

Feb 22, 2026
David Oppenheimer, UC Berkeley law professor and author of The Diversity Principle, explores the long history and practical value of mixing different backgrounds and viewpoints. He traces ideas from Humboldt and John Stuart Mill to Pauli Murray, tackles critiques like Clarence Thomas’s, and explains how diversity boosts discovery, decision-making, and institutional strength.
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INSIGHT

Different Minds Are Great

  • Different minds are great rather than great minds thinking alike.
  • David Oppenheimer cites John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor Mill arguing that mixing viewpoints (women, Catholics, Jews) creates superior ideas in universities and politics.
INSIGHT

Diversity Produces Measurable Returns

  • Diversity creates measurable benefits across domains like business, science, classrooms, and government.
  • Oppenheimer references studies showing diverse boards increase profitability and diverse labs produce more significant discoveries.
ANECDOTE

How Diversity Came To American Universities

  • The diversity principle arrived in US higher education via German models and reformers like Charles William Eliot.
  • Eliot rebuilt Harvard to encourage clashes of ideas and opened access to Catholics, Jews, immigrants, and poor students.
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