What empirical facts do you see in the quote? The most I see are implications about recommendations.
And I can't parse
And in general, he didn't seem to be saying about moral views.
And I can't parse
And in general, he didn't seem to be saying about moral views.
Sorry, that's missing a word: "he didn't seem to be saying anything about moral views". This was in reference to your earlier comment,
So you can have diversity of moral views, but not when those views would be relevant to the subject at hand? We couldn't let morally icky views into discussions where they are relevant, though Friedman would still allow them to be employed where their icky moral views would not infringe on the topic they're hired for.
in which ...
Related: Heuristics for Evaluating the Soundness of the Academic Mainstream, Admitting to Bias, The Ideological Turing Test