The Unreasonable Destructiveness of Political Correctness in Philosophy
The Unreasonable Destructiveness of Political Correctness in Philosophy
The Unreasonable Destructiveness of Political Correctness in Philosophy
Article
The Unreasonable Destructiveness of Political
Correctness in Philosophy
Manuel Doria
Advanced Studies Research Group and Fuzzy Sets Laboratory PIT, Production Engineering Program, COPPE,
UFRJ P.O. Box 68507, 21945 972, Rio de Janeiro RJ, Brazil; [email protected]
Abstract: I submit that epistemic progress in key areas of contemporary academic philosophy has
been compromised by politically correct (PC) ideology. First, guided by an evolutionary account of
ideology, results from social and cognitive psychology and formal philosophical methods, I expose
evidence for political bias in contemporary Western academia and sketch a formalization for the
contents of beliefs from the PC worldview taken to be of core importance, the theory of social
oppression and the thesis of anthropological mental egalitarianism. Then, aided by discussions from
contemporary epistemology on epistemic values, I model the problem of epistemic appraisal using the
frameworks of multi-objective optimization theory and multi-criteria decision analysis and apply it to
politically correct philosophy. I conclude that philosophy guided by politically correct values is bound
to produce constructs that are less truth-conducive and that spurious values which are ideologically
motivated should be abandoned. Objections to my framework stemming from contextual empiricism,
the feminine voice in ethics and political philosophy are considered. I conclude by prescribing the
epistemic value of empirical adequacy, the contextual value of political diversity and the moral virtue
of moral courage to reverse unwarranted trends in academic philosophy due to PC ideology.
Keywords: cognitive biases; multi-criteria decision analysis; epistemic appraisal; epistemic values;
ideology; metaphilosophy; multi-objective optimization; political correctness; social constructionism;
social oppression
1. Introduction
Western philosophy is under threat. The grand intellectual tradition that for over two thousand
years has fostered iconoclastic freethinkers of the highest caliberfrom Socrates to Hypatia of
Alexandria and from William of Ockham to Giordano Brunohas been infected by a spirit of uncritical
conformity that is incompatible with its original pursuits. This time, the foe is not a persecutory
institutional religion but a persecutory secular ideology. This ideology has become so ingrained in
humanities departments all over the (so-called) First World that it has become a received view, a default
position under which all other perspectives are evaluated. And dissenting points of view have been
stormed, not mainly by intellectual argument the way they should, but by political rhetoric and social
bullying.
The crux of the matter was pinpointed by social psychologist Jonathan Haidt [1]. Haidt, speaking
in the context of contemporary North American higher education, argued that universities as a whole
have been pursuing two mutually incompatible teloitruth and social justice 1 . As research aiming
1 Naturally, to talk about truth and social justice in theses cases is an abstraction; save for hardcore Fregeans, seekers
of truth do not aim for a particular object called The True but intend to reach at the end of rational investigations true
truth-bearers (beliefs, statements, theories, etc.). Analogously, what sincere partisans of social justice desire are actual concrete
changes in the socioeconomic sphere.
2 It must be pointed out that postmodernism, stipulated as one of the central progenitors of this ideology I criticize, has generated
virulent thought patterns which overtly promote anti-scientific thinking that may end up with the loss of lives; for instance,
the accusation that evidence-based medicine is fascist [5] may influence the adoption of non-evidence-based medicine.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 3 of 56
Postulate 1 (Cultural-Biological Parity). The cultural content of ideologies Ii are the products of processes
of cultural evolution whose mechanisms behave sufficiently similar to Neodarwinian biological evolution to
enable warranted analogies involving biological systems.
Postulate 2 (Content Pluralism). The cultural contents of an ideology I include socially transmitted cognitive
mechanisms, beliefs, and values.
Following James Balkin [19] (Chapter 5), I take the phenomenon of ideology to be irreducible
to a single type of component or bearer of content (such as explicit beliefs with propositional form).
A memetic approach to human culture is not restricted to study procedural knowledge in the form
3 In analytic philosophy, one of the most comprehensive expositions of ideology is Mario Bunges set-theoretical account
of a sociopolitical ideology, which is a kind of belief system, a subtype of epistemic field (see [9] ( p. 91); [10] (pp. 228237)
and [11] (Chapter 4)) for description and discussion). Such an approach would be especially congenial to my work
given my usage of his construct of a field of inquiry, the other type of epistemic field, which structurally is very similar to
sociopolitical ideologies.
4 The literature of cultural evolution is extensive and evolving very rapidly. Memetics differs from other theoretical
accounts of cultural evolution due to an assumption that the processes of cultural evolution are isomorphic to biological
evolution concerning details of the individuation of cultural information (discrete) and transmission (relatively high fidelity).
For an evolutionary account of culture outside memetics, see [12]. Introductory defenses of memetics are found in [13,14].
A comprehensive critical assessment is found in [15]. For some incisive criticism of memetics, see [16,17].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 4 of 56
of beliefs or their linguistic representations; more importantly, it also encompasses skills that can be
culturally transmitted. Specifically for a memetic understanding of ideology, we are interested in
a wide variety of cognitive mechanisms (such as patterns of inference chains, heuristics, narrative scripts,
idealized cognitive models, etc.).
Postulate 3 (Unconscious Processing). The contents of an ideology I are by default processed without major
willful deliberation in the minds of the adherents A.
Postulate 4 (The Worldview Constraint). An ideology I furnishes the minds of its adherents with both
pretheoretical contents (such as intuitions and platitudes) and with the conceptual resources which allow for
deliberate theoretical elaborations, under varying degrees of specificity, over a set of issues which are deemed to be
relevant for the adherent.
I second Marxist sociologist Gran Therborn [24] in his claim that the operation of ideology
in human life basically involves the constitution and patterning of how human beings live their
lives as conscious, reflecting initiators of acts in a structured, meaningful world. Ideologies are
comprehensive charts that readily ground, inform and guide human action under a myriad of reflective
decision-making contexts. They carry the resources needed to construe answers for a variety of possible
inquiries. In other words, ideologies are worldviews. The set of domains over which an ideology informs
can vary extensively, from the most general and abstract (such as viewpoints in ontology or legitimate
practices of knowledge-acquisition) to the more specific and concrete (such as particular notions of
social causation or even a partial description of a particular economic theory). The more an ideology
has nurtured a culture of internal criticism, the more one may expect it to have its tenets publicly
expressed in theoretical form.
Postulate 5 (Biocultural Symbiosis). For an ideology I, there exists at least one social group S, whose set
of collective goals G0 intersect with the set of goals G of the ideology I.
With this postulate, ideologies become worldviews which advance the interests of at least one social
group. This account of ideology is descriptive instead of pejorative; there can be benign ideologies
insofar as social groups can have benign goals.
Postulate 6 (Ideological Core). An ideology I is partially constituted by a web of beliefs p1 , ..., pn partitioned
by a gradient assigning different degrees of importance, from the essential to the optional. The furthest a belief
p from the core, the less one adherent is obliged to endorse p. The content of p is propositional and can be
empirically extracted.
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This postulate is inspired by Imre Lakatos [25] account of research programs where a scientific theory
is said to have a robust hard core, extremely resilient to refutation, surrounded by a myriad of auxiliary
hypothesis sporting greater changeability. Using an analogy with evolutionary developmental biology
(Postulate 1), I take it that ideological cores roughly work like co-adaptive gene complexes involved with
essential biological functions [26]; changes in core beliefs are highly pleiotropic, that is, when changed,
they reverberate significative changes over many other beliefs in the network. I also submit that
mutations over beliefs deeper in the core of an ideology are also more likely to be deleterious; that is,
they are more prone to produce nonviable cultural entities.
For instance, the religious ideology of Islam has as a core belief that Muhammad was the last
and greatest of all prophets sent by Allah. Can there be a species of Islam divorced from the belief in
a historical Muhammad 5 ? I take it that the overwhelming unpopularity of such a position is evidence
for the nonviability of Islam that suffers such a significant memetic deletion.
Postulate 7 (Rational Dogmatism). The social costs of abandoning a belief p increase the nearer p stands at
the core of I and the more committed the adherent is to I. When the truth of p is disputed, we should expect that
adherents will predictably incur in behavior and cognition aiming at securing the alethic endorsement of p.
In ordinary parlance, ideology and irrationality are usually seen as inseparable friends and
dogmatism and rationality as polar opposites. I submit, given contemporary developments in
moral philosophy, behavioral economics, and social psychology, that this is mistaken.
While reluctant and consistent dogmatism over beliefs which have been overwhelmingly refuted
by empirical evidence is a gross intellectual failure from the point of view of the standards that ought
to regulate scientific practice, not so necessarily from the point of view of the norms that guide human
social reality. In contrast to the default conceptions of rationality, researcher Dan Kahan [28] situates
identity-protective cognition theory, which shall be deployed to explain ideological dogmatism, in the
tradition of expressive rationality defended by philosopher Elizabeth Anderson [29].
The theory of identity-protective cognition [30,31] advances the following picture; our nature
as rational social mammals drives us into acceptance inside social groupssocial belonging is
a fundamental source of well-being. And, if the thesis that ideology is inescapable rings true,
group-membership comes with a package of beliefs and values over which endorsement under varying
degrees (Postulate 7) is expected. This conceptual and affective bundle structures our experience into
worldviews (Postulate 4).
When the ideological core is challenged, a myriad of phenomena may take place. For instance,
opposing viewpoints can be unconsciously registered (Postulate 3) as threats to the individual and the
collective integrities, eliciting emotional responses of anger and priming insults and other aggressive
behaviors. The thresholds of confirmation for antagonistic hypothesis may be subjected to unrelenting
goalpost-turning, accumulating ad hoc explanations just like a scientific research program facing
an experimental anomaly.
But in defiance to these values, there exists one arena in which uniformity and exclusiveness appear to
be the norm, and that is the sphere of political affiliation. Survey data on the politics of the American
professorship, varyingly gauged as a function of self-reported ideological labels (for instance, ordinal
variables such as extremely liberal or slightly liberal) and party affiliation (predilection for voting
in Democratic candidates) display a noticeable tendency towards the political Left [3336]. This pattern
is even more skewed when we consider the clusters of the humanities and social sciences in isolation,
thereby confirming another stereotype about academia in general.
But why should that matter? Nave reflection could suggest that there exists no logical connection
between the political affiliation of a researcher and the epistemic quality of his rational inquiry.
Under the account of ideology I have sketched, if pure mathematicians working with category theory
were overwhelmingly fascists, and astrophysicists specializing in extragalactic celestial mechanics were
overwhelmingly constitutional monarchists, it would be hard to say how the cognitive output in their
research fields could be compromised by their political beliefs because the associated sociopolitical
ideologies have nothing relevant to say and prescribe concerning the contents of metamathematics
and astronomy.
But in academic reality, practical connections between politics and academic compromise
abound anytime the referents of ideological cores are the very objects being studied. The empirical
evidence suggests that political homogeneity simpliciter is epistemically detrimental to fields of
inquiry that engage with politically controversial subjects. The pervasive phenomenon of motivated
confirmation bias [37], the often automatic cognitive tendency to perceive novel evidence as being
supportive of previously accepted or believed hypotheses, gets hypertrophied in the presence of
rising ideological polarization inside a group [38], the phenomenon in which pre-existing dominant
ideological commitments are strengthened and exaggerated. This synergy may create an echo
chamber, a homogeneous batch of content that only gets rehearsed and circulated inside its boundaries
(see [39] for a discussion of a computational model of an echo chamber). This process, once kicked
off in academic settings, may viciously imperil the very (so-called) self-correcting institutional
mechanisms of science, such as the peer-review process (see [40] for a comprehensive analysis of this
dynamics in the context of contemporary social psychology).
The most troublesome and detailed empirical data comes from American researchers in social
and moral psychology studying political diversity and the effects of political bias in their own
overwhelmingly liberal or left-wing fields. Concerning the consequences of this ideological
hegemony in psychology, researchers have found evidence for discrimination in publishing, hiring,
symposium invitation and grant application by scientists of a conservative persuasion [41]. Research
has also challenged certain political stereotypes. For instance, there is evidence that intolerance
against ideological out-groups, ordinarily perceived to be a prototypical feature of conservative
right-wingers, is just as present in liberal left-wingers [42]. Specific ways in which established
empirical results in psychology could have been distorted by left-wing ideological bias were also
delineated. For instance, the institution of double standards under which the truth of an empirical
hypothesis supportive to a conservative worldview is required to satisfy impervious standards of
confirmation as the truth of hypothesis of undetermined alethic status which is congenial to a liberal
worldview is presumed [43].
This extrapolation from existing data is warranted for many reasons. First, existing survey
data mentioned in the previous section on the political affiliations of philosophers display
intense homogeneity.
Second, from a historical point of view, since the social sciences have been the last to emerge from
philosophy, I hold that they can be reasonably expected to have a significant shared academic culture,
from the general values guiding scholarship to particular research methodologies. The mere fact that
the humanities and social sciences often share the same superordinate department in universities may
promote this condition. As an additional factor, the paradigm of critical theory which Ill claim has
had a foundational role in the sociopolitical ideology behind PC, blurs the institutional distinctions
between philosophy and social science by design.
Third, some existing investigations exposing particular political biases in the scholarship of
neighboring academic disciplines in the humanities reproduce the pattern found in psychology. For
instance, in the context of American law, a statistical analysis made by political scientist Adam Chilton
and legal scholar Eric Posner exposed that researchers who vote Democrat write more ideologically
charged articles than researchers who vote Republican [44].
Fourth, the theoretical backbone of prevailing political ideologies has historically been articulated,
innovated and advanced to a large part by philosophers working in normative ethics and political
philosophy, from sketched generic frameworks to upfront detailed sociopolitical systems. In the
actual world, there is no classical liberalism without John Locke, communism without Karl Marx or
anarcho-primitivism without Henry David Thoreau. As philosophy became a professional career,
a thinker with ideological impact is likely to be affiliated with a particular university. Therefore,
we should expect academic philosophy, comprised of a network involving teachers, students,
classrooms, conference rooms, and journals, to be a prolific spawning ground of political ideologies.
Fifth, there is some evidence that suggests that philosophers, particularly those dealing with
normative disciplines, are in general less well-equipped than scientists to identify bias. For instance,
philosopher Alan Hjek [45] has argued that in contrast to other professional academics, members
of his profession are in general less conscious of their tacitly employed heuristics. In conventional
philosophical methodology, the over-reliance on intuition as a source of content for philosophical
argument is particularly problematic. The analogical claim that when intuitions are at hand, the
philosophical expertise of professional philosophers grants a carry-over effect to philosophical
cognition that is similar to the one appreciated by professional scientists has been challenged in
light of recent results in the research program of experimental philosophy [46]. More dramatically in
the subfield of moral philosophy, one of the very intellectual arenas that just scream for political
controversy, the expertise of professional philosophers as sources of better intuitions has been
questioned [47]. Under an experimental setting, while reasoning about moral dilemmas, professional
moral philosophers have displayed significantly more susceptibility to framing effects (bias related to
irrelevant differences in the presentation of a problem) than professional non-philosophers [48].
Finally, throughout the very tradition of analytic philosophy, self-congratulatorily exposed as
a bastion of uncompromising rationality, semantic exactness and logical rigor, where we should prima
facie expect the least ideological bias (so much for faulty intuitions), there exists anecdotal evidence
of key philosophers reasoning on political causes in ways that would be deemed irrational under
standards of objectivity [49]. To sum it up, contemporary cognitive psychology is consistent with the
fact that one can sport a very cunning and logical mind when dealing with certain matters while being
the subject of incapacitating blind spots" in other areas.
The journal Public Health Ethics rejected a paper on the moral consequences of scientific research
in genetic anthropology [50]. The author argues 7 that the reasons for the rejection are due to the
fact that the paper considered, ex hypothesi (and not as an actual factual statement) the thesis that
racial differences in behavior and cultural achievement are partially genetic in origin.
A lecturer discontinued the teaching of a popular practical ethics course at the University of Texas,
which had run for over three decades 8 . His decision was motivated by persisting systematic
disruptions of his class in recent years by outsiders and undergraduates that resisted the exposition
and debate of viewpoints deemed to be morally unacceptable (un-PC) in topics such as abortion,
immigration, and affirmative action.
The editors of the distinguished Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy, motivated by the empirical
hypothesis that pervasive and systematic sexual discrimination towards women in philosophy is
the leading cause of their academic undercitation, have led the to ask the invited authors to inflate
the citations with publications from scholars of minority status. The truth of the discrimination
hypothesis of sexism in academic philosophy has been challenged with bibliometric data [51].
The American Philosophical Association has been asked by an expert in disability studies [52] to
remove the phrase blind peer review because it is allegedly discriminatory against blind and
visually impaired people.
The student union from the School of Oriental and Asian Studies of Buckingham University has
demanded that most White philosophers studied under the philosophy syllabus be dropped and
replaced by philosophers from the African and Asian continents 9 .
Events such as these abound in the centers and peripheries of Western academia (for a critical
assessment of this trend, see [53]) and are part of a grander social dynamics. In this scenery, we can
add a profusion of neologistic phrases and expressions such as trigger warning, safe space and
white privilege entering public discourse, the shift for traditional left-wing concerns with the
working class towards the identity politics of generally smaller social groups and the perceived sense
of detachment between older liberal professors and their Millennial far-left students.
What is going on? I state that these events all resonate a same underlying theme: a demand for
social justice. It is in this setting that contemporary critics of PC, not so much from the ivory towers
but those standing on the roads of asphalt and engaged with internet culture, berate their adversaries
as social justice warriors (SJWs) 10 . In the age of polarizing figures from Caitlyn Jenner to Donald
Trump, social justice is simultaneously appraised by the millions as both sacred value and unholy
sin. But what exactly is this vilified social justice that these warriors are fighting for?
In its leanest sense, social justice simply refers to distributive justice; families of theories in
normative economics, ethics and political philosophy centered at the fair allocation of material and
non-material goods in human societies (for a critical overview, see [54]).
At first sight, it is true that the sense of social justice associated with SJWs is strongly
committed to soaring demands of distributive justice in social policy (such as affirmative actions
for minority groups and international reparations for slavery and war) and the enforcement of norms
deemed to be equity-contributing in both the public and private sphere (such as sensitivity trainings
and zero-tolerance policies in businesses). But these, I claim, are but some of the salient practical
7 http://www.thecollegefix.com/post/26076/
8 http://insider.foxnews.com/2016/12/05/ethics-professor-university-texas-bonevac-students-stifle-politically-correct-
debates
9 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/01/08/university-students-demand-philosophers-including-plato-kant/
10 The phrase entered public consciousness to such a degree that it merited an entry in Oxfords Dictionary: https://en.
oxforddictionaries.com/definition/social_justice_warrior
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 9 of 56
manifestations of an underlying worldview that cannot be readily identified with any established
left-wing political ideology.
11 I refer the reader to some partly historical contemporary investigations and expositions of these trends which are consonant
with this project. For a detailed incursion into PC and postmodernism and hypotheses on its intellectual ancestors, see [56].
For the ideological takeover of social science by frameworks developed by critical theory and postmodernism, see [5759].
An introductory exposition of the origin and content of social liberalism as the hybridization of classical liberalism with
socialist thought can be found in [60]. For the academic efforts to practice social science irrespective of relevant empirical
generalizations from the biological sciences, a classic exposition comes from cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker [61].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 10 of 56
psychometrical research methodology. First-rate academic critics of intelligence testing do not merely
use crude memes; they employ technical arguments (for instance, see [6567]).
Finally, I am not claiming that anything resembling my formalized constructs is necessarily
explicit in the minds of everyday PC adherents. I do claim, however, that they can be reasonably
reconstructed out of several implicit beliefs. What I shall supply are artificial constructs, products of
deliberate cognitive effort to make sense of the worldview of PC promoters under the assumption that
they are behaving rationally.
12 https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/cchr/downloads/pdf/publications/GenderID_Card2015.pdf
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 12 of 56
up by the reference class PoC can also be properly defined as the aggregation of all non-White
populations. We could also define polygeneric populations. The LGBT community, for instance,
is polygeneric from the point of view of at least two equivalence classes designating social genera,
those of sexual orientation, and gender identity. These constructs are elaborated in greater detail over
the Appendix A.3, A Social Taxonomy of Human Populations.
I postulate the following placeholder to minimally characterize a human society:
Postulate 8 (Human Society). A human society S is the largest human population x living under a shared
set of recognized social institutions I which enforce a set of social norms N.
Human societies are aggregations of all members of social kinds responding to the same set of
social norms. This postulate is good enough for our purposes, congruent with legal, cultural, political
and geographical aspects of human societies.
13 Economist Christopher J. Ruhm has described a mathematical model of this exact situation [73].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 13 of 56
inequality (for a comprehensive technical exposition of the measurement of economic inequality in all
its complexity, see [75]). We then have the following definition:
Definition 1 (Inequality of Outcome). Two human populations x and y with respectively n1 and n2 atomic
individuals and collective wealths w1 and w2 evaluated as m1 and m2 units of an arbitrary system of currency $
are said to be economically unequal if and only if
m1 m
6= 2
n1 n2
Readers may refer to Appendix A.4, A Toy Model of Wealth, for a sketch of an idealized
measurement-theoretical account of material wealth and economic property.
What about the aspect of social equality characterized as the absence of discrimination?
To investigate it, we first need to describe social oppression.
Axiom 1. A relation of oppression xOy is asymmetric (anti-symmetric and irreflexive). That is, if xOy, it is
not the case that yOx.
Let us recall that x and y refer to whole human populations. We call x the oppressor, dominant or
privileged group and y the oppressed, subordinated or marginalized group.
The irreflexivity of relations of oppression could be disputed. For instance, consider the reported
phenomenon of internalized homophobia in homosexual men from the mental health literature [78].
Couldnt this be a case of reflexivity, the oppressed being their own oppressors? I submit that this is
better explained in the PC worldview as being the workings of unjust social institutions enforced by
an ideology named Heteronormativity (Table 1) under which the fundamental causative agents of
the oppression are homophobic heterosexuals and not homophobic homosexuals.
Axiom 2. There are as many relations of oppression O1 , ..., Oi as there are social genera G1 , ..., Gi partitioning H.
Axiom 3. If x oppresses y, then both x and y are of the same social genus G .
A same individual human being can be the surrogate of multiple relations of oppression insofar
as they are different types of oppression relations. This is the cornerstone of intersectional theory [86],
which encourages an analysis of social oppression at the level of the multiple social identities housed
by human beings, that can simultaneously enact the role of oppressor and oppressed in relation to the
different social genera he finds himself embedded in.
If G has two species, both the oppressor x and the oppressed y are the largest aggregates of
members from their respective species, being monospecific populations.
If G has three or more species, the oppressor x is the largest aggregate of members of the social
species, being a monospecific population. The oppressed y is the aggregate formed by the largest
aggregates of each remaining social species, being a polyspecific population.
The relata of relations of oppression are entire collectives. For instance, when a person suffers
racism, this is to be interpreted as an attack on an entire marginalized racial community by the
dominant racial group. Under the oppressive ideology of Aetonormativity (see Table 1), which takes
adulthood to be normative, the aggregate formed by children and seniors suffers ageism from the
aggregate of adults.
Axiom 5. If x oppresses y, then there is inequality of outcome between x and y where y is the worse off population.
As privilege theorist Bob Pease puts it, it is only when we understand that social inequalities
are human creations designed to benefit a few that we can see the possibilities for challenging
inequality [87] (p. 14). In the PC worldview, social inequality is a result of certain social groups not
acting fairly against other social groups. This notion can be interpreted as an expected consequence of
a strong form of social constructionism which takes the etiology of social inequality to be the product
of purely sociocultural factors.
This axiom merges both accounts of social equality from the social justice worldview (absence of
discrimination and equality of outcome) with social oppression. To see how, logically this axiom has
the form p q. By the rule of contraposition, we have q p or to put it simply, if there is equality
of outcome between x and y, there is no oppression between x and y.
Axiom 6. If there is inequality of outcome between x and y, either x oppresses y or there exists at least one x 0
that is oppressing another y0 whose set intersects with the set of y.
This reasoning is due to the intersectionality of social genera. For instance, consider the population
comprised by Kenyans living in English society. Were the oppressive relation of xenophobia between
the English and Kenyans eliminated, this would not imply that both groups are now economic equals
for Kenyans are disproportionally not of the same racial group of the English and thus can also be
subjected to the oppressive relation of racism by White Englishmen.
Axiom 7. Take the inverse relation of the relation of oppression xOy, the relation y is oppressed by x.
The inverse of this relation is the privilege relation xPy.
Here is my attempt to elucidate the formal structure and some of the semantic content of the
pervasive but obscure notion of privilege. Privilege is a posited theoretical term that refers to
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 15 of 56
a nonobservable property (in this case, a 2-place relation) of oppressive human populations of a certain
social kind.
This reading is motivated by a common trope employed by privilege theorists. For instance, Bob Pease
takes privilege to be the flipside of discrimination; whoever oppresses is privileged [87] (p. 4). Similar
metaphors involving the sides of coins are employed by other theorists over the literature [88,89].
Isnt the inverse of the inverse of xOy simply xOy? For the sake of charitableness, we have the
following traditional resource from the analytic philosophy of language at hand; relations of oppression
xOy and privilege xPy are co-extensive (they have the same set as extension) and co-referential
(both refer to the same system of social institutions). However, oppression and privilege vary in their
intensions, that is, they are different modes of presentation for the same phenomenon.
For instance, imagine a primeval egalitarian society with two monospecific populations x and
y of the same genus, each collectively possessing a wealth evaluated at 1000 electrum. Then x
consolidates power and starts oppressing y by instituting unjust taxes and reaps some of the wealth of
y. After some time, x possesses a collective wealth of 1500 electrum and y, 500 electrum, becoming
social unequals. The system of tributes has two faces; x is advantaged by it and y is disadvantaged
by it. The enrichment of 500 electrum by x in tributes from y co-occurs with the impoverishment of y
of the very same 500 electrum.
Table 1 summarizes eight different types of social oppression posited by PC normative sociologists
as being prevalent in Western societies (this selection is not exhaustive; for other examples, see [87]
(p. 13)). To say that the literature dedicated to exposing of these forms of social oppression is enormous
would be an understatement. The general sentiment one may apprehend by the content exposed
by contemporary normative sociologists working under critical theory and its various offshoots is
that Western nations are terrible places for minorities to live, being social battlegrounds filled with
multiplicities of invisible violence.
For four of these relations of oppression, those of racism, xenophobia, ableism and ageism,
the oppressed populations are polyspecific. One of the oppressive groups appears to be polyspecific
too, violating Axiom 3, the group of able people. This uneasiness can be fixed by replacing the
genus of ability with several smaller genera (such as visual ability, auditory ability, motor
ability, etc.).
Some forms of prototypical social oppression also appear to violate this schema. For instance,
consider anti-Semitism and Islamophobia as forms of oppression directed, respectively, against Jews
and Muslims. Both seem to conflate discrimination on race, ethnicity, nationality, and religion. They can
fit the schema by being segregated into racism, xenophobia and religious bigotry 14 .
It appears that the ideology promoting fat shaming has not been named; following the
etymological pattern, I suggest calling it Leptonormativity.
These axioms allow us to ground additional famous theses of the SJW worldview. For example,
take a staple of SJW discourse, the denial of the existence of acts of reverse discrimination, such as
so-called reverse racism 15 , racism perpetrated against a racial group taken to be socially dominant:
14 The existence of an ideology of Christian normativity present in Western societies under which that which is non-Christian
is devalued by default has already been proposed [90].
15 See for example the following bold article, which neatly summarizes common arguments for the inexistence of reverse
racism http://www.dailydot.com/via/reverse-racism-doesnt-exist/.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 16 of 56
Theorem 1 (Impossibility of Reverse Racism). For a society S and two populations x and y inside S, if x
is racist towards y, y cannot be racist towards x.
A favorite argument by PC proponents for the non-existence of racism against White people
living in Western societies (but not, presumably, against White people living in Zimbabwe) involves
defending the claim that the very concept is incoherent. This can be done for instance by redefining
the concept of racism, like critical race theorists have summarized with the famous pseudo equation
racism = prejudice + power [91]. But under the framework Im describing, the logical impossibility
of reverse racism is a simple result. If being racist involves enacting the relation of oppression
associated with the genus of race and relations of oppression are asymmetric (Axiom 1), then only
dominant racial collectives can be racist. The same can be generalized for other social genera (such as
the non-existence of heterophobia in heteronormative societies).
We can now state what I hold to be a necessary condition for certain policy or action to merit the
stamp of social justice:
Postulate 10 (Necessary Condition for Social Justice). For two economically unequal human populations
x and y belonging to a same social genus G under a relation of oppression xOy, an action a at a time t0 is
socially just only if a would cause the decrease of the inequality of outcome between x and y at a future time t+ .
We could also call such actions socially progressive. This condition is not sufficient because arguably,
not every kind of redistribution of wealth would be legitimate (for instance, by an overt theft of assets).
Postulate 11 (Generalized Difference Principle). Consider a human society S, two socially unequal human
populations x and y respectively from the species S 1 and S 2 belonging to the same genus G and a comparative
factual statement p involving a deprecation of y in comparison to x with respect to a certain attribute M. If p is
a statement on the propensity of M in the species S 2 , then:
16 This was chiefly inspired by Neven Sesardics similar use of the difference principle [95]. ( p. 224)
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 17 of 56
If y is oppressed by x and p is not asserted but there exists significant risk of p being interpreted as
an assertion, then p also exemplifies an action of the class of immoral acts Z associated with G ,
being therefore socially oppressive
Postulate 12 (Hierarchy of Oppression). For a given society S with n social genera where there exist
relations of oppression, there exists an asymmetric binary relation of moral severity which takes relations of
oppression O as relata, forming a set {Oi I ... O j I }, I = (1, ..., n).
physical abilities, partially underpinned by group differences in the muscular, skeletal, endocrine 17
and respiratory systems, are not distributed equitably with respect to the partitions inside the social
genera of race, sex and age. This conclusion is suggested by empirical evidence (see [101] for an
overview mostly focused on racial differences in athleticism). More; even with access to the best
technology and infrastructure, not anyone can reach the elite level of an Olympic athlete in an arbitrary
sport. The potential for athletic achievement is similarly not equitably distributed; it is ultimately
constrained by genetic factors [102,103].
Ill explore here a central belief of the PC worldview and supply a charitable formal representation
of its content. I call this belief anthropological mental egalitarianism (AME). AME encircles more
specifically the denial of the existence of significant mental differences in between socially oppressed
groups and their respective groups of oppressors of a same social genus, differences which are partially
underpinned by differences in their nervous systems mediated by genetic factors. For reasons of
charitableness, I restrict significant differences to mean significant differences in potential. What is at
stake are not the actual mental abilities and competencies of members of socially oppressed groups
(which may form considerable gaps in comparison to their respective oppressive groups) but what
they could be were the relevant socially oppressive ideologies removed through the implementation of
socially progressive policies and norms.
This contextualization with socially oppressed groups is important. According to the GDP as
stated (Postulate 10), that there exists room for a PC partisan to tolerate natural inequality among
groups when it is the case that it is currently benefiting the worse off socioeconomically. However,
even this is risky and may undermine the entire PC worldview by sheer force of external consistency.
I explain at greater length in Section 6.2 that from the point of view of the standards that guide
scientific research, it is irrational to consider that natural talents are consistently distributed only to the
populations of the socially oppressed. It is also inconsistent with the very tenet of the PC worldview
that takes economic inequality to be a social construction. For natural talents presumably naturally lead
to a differentiated acquisition of resources.
I argue that some version of AME stands one of the core beliefs of the PC worldview and that its
denial is arguably the supreme intellectual taboo in the first world. For a famous example, in 2005,
Lawrence Summers, then the president of Harvard University, suffered considerable public backlash
for stating the empirically adequate hypothesis that women are more underrepresented than men at
top academic positions in science and technology partly because the normal distributions of mental
abilities (aptitude, in his words 18 ) in women, in comparison to men, had lower variabilitymeaning
that men are more typical in the extremes of the human cognitive spectrum. Since Summers uttered
these statements, the hypothesis for the greater phenotypical variability of men has accrued even more
evidence [104] and may constitute a difference between the sexes of fundamental importance. For this
remark, Summers was denounced as sexist, and it is speculated that this may have contributed to
both his resignation as president of Harvard University and even to have cost him a top position in the
Obama Administration 19 .
What I informally refer to as the mental involves both general and specific features of human
beings posited by psychologists and encompassed in the categories of cognition, affect and behavior.
It includes a multitude of traits such as negative affectivity and general intelligence, social intelligence
and social anxiety, aggressiveness and creativity and delayed gratification and openness to experience.
17 Given the intimate integration of the endocrine and nervous systems, studied in the epistemic field of neuroendocrinology,
and given the role of hormones modulating behavioral responses of all kinds, one who acknowledges natural group
differences in endocrinology but denies natural differences in behavior may be at risk of being inconsistent.
18 A transcription of his speech can be found via the InternetWaybackMachine at http://web.archive.org/web/
20080130023006/http://www.president.harvard.edu/speeches/2005/nber.html
19 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/summers-sexism-costs-him-top-treasury-job-1033373.html
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 19 of 56
I assume, under a principle of ontological conservativeness, that all of them have at least an ordinal
structure, being representable through comparative structures (see the Appendix A.1 for the definition
of a comparative structure). From a measurement-theoretic point of view, what arguably is the
most studied psychological attributegeneral intelligenceis commonly assumed to have a richer
structure, judging by the kinds of statistical procedures used to manipulate and interpret data on
intelligence testing (such as standard deviations and the averaging of data sets). This conclusion has
been disputed 20 . The various ways the information about a given attribute represented on a scale
of real numbers (such as having one or two semantic poles or affective valences) are psychologically
interpreted will also not undermine the argument if we make some adjustments (see the discussion
below Postulate 15).
To give more clarity to what is meant by potential and the relationship between biology and
social genera, I shall elaborate two additional postulates centered on the issues of the social construction
of social kinds and the environmental etiology of the psychological phenotype.
Postulate 13 (Necessary Condition for the Social Construction of Social Kinds). For a given social
genus G partitioned into species S 1 , ..., S n , we say that G is socially constructed only if there exists no
nontrivial clustering algorithm T which takes as input a raw data set D exhibiting information about the set
of individual human beings H which outputs clusters S 1 0 , ..., S n 0 that approximate the equivalence classes
S 1 , ..., S 1 .
The key term here is raw; the data set must be suitably unprocessed, devoid of idiosyncratic human
manipulation. For instance, some have argued that the the social genus sexpartitioned into
the equivalence classes male and femaleis socially constructed predicated on the phenomena
of intersexuality, involving individuals with a myriad of chromosomal, developmental and
anatomical variations which statistically diverge from the typical phenotypes formed under the
20 See [105] for a formal philosophical criticism of the prospect of quantitative psychology. Measurement theorist Fred
Roberts [106] ( p. 64) follows a convention from the literature in which raw intelligence scores are ordinal-scalable but
standard intelligence scores are interval-scalable.
21 But even this may be disputed for the empirical generalization known as the first law of behavioral genetics [108] state
that there exists no human behavioral trait with zero heritability.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 20 of 56
XY sex-determination system of the human species [109]. However, even under high estimates for
the prevalence of intersexuality (i.e., [110]), 98% of the members of an arbitrary human population
x1 will be clustered into the equivalence classes male and female. For a social construction,
the male-female binary appears to be doing a very lousy job at not carving nature at its joints.
One must be cautious in the inference from statistical atypicality to social construction not to incur
in a nonsequitur. For instance, in the case of intersexuality caused by major genomic structural variation,
a mechanical expert system informed of the number of autosomes and allosomes (the non-sexual and
sexual chromosomes, respectively) of individual humans would have no problem objectively sorting
the populations into the equivalence classes generated by the equivalence relation is of the same
karyotype as.
Another important thesis of the PC worldview associated with social constructionism captures
similar anxieties with the scientific understanding of the biological dimension of humanity and
expresses the attitude of divorcing biology from behavior and mind. I thus present:
Postulate 14 (Mental Environmentalism). For a given mental attribute M which is not invariant across
the population of all human beings H, the causal contribution that explains the variation of M throughout H
that is attributable to genetics is insignificant.
Why, of all biological factors, should genetics be privileged? This emphasis is a consequence of
the science of behavioral genetics which has developed the important (and controversial) measures of
heritability 22 to estimate the relative causal importance of genetics in the explanation the phenotypical
variation of a given phenotypical trait in a selected population. What makes genetics special is in
some sense contingent; perhaps in the near future, advanced gene therapy will be able to transform
the deepest part of our biology into environmental factors just like education and nutrition. But for
now, I hold, following the arguments by philosopher of biology Neven Sesardic [95] (Chapter 5),
that heritability entails non-modifiability or non-malleability. That is; the more the causal contribution of
the variation in a given trait is ascribed to genetic factors, the harder it is to reshape it for it implies
that there is less that is under existing practical human control.
The conjunction of the latter postulates can inspire a new axiom that is the converse of Axiom 5
from SOT, that is, the implication from inequality of outcome to social oppression. For if no social
kinds are objective natural kinds, then their very partitioning is under human control, being a cognitive
process that is a part of the social environment. And if there are no genetic contributions to the very
phenotypical traits required for economic prosperity, then their full range also stands in the realm of
social engineering. Natural environmental factors, such as droughts and disease, may be responsible
for inequality of outcome but those factors are in the realm of modifiability (for instance, through
irrigation and medicine). Therefore, from the lenses of the PC worldview, if we observe human
economic inequality, this gives credence to the hypothesis that oppressive institutions are at work.
A more formal description of AME can be found in Appendix A.6. I will assume that
the measurement processes being represented here are temporally indexed to the present time.
As individual psychology changes over a lifetime, the ascribed numerical values of a given mental
22 The concept of heritability has been subjected to intense scrutiny by scientists and philosophers of science. For a recent
novel criticism, contemporary geneticists have been struggling with the so-called missing heritability problem (often
in the context of heritability in the narrow sense; see [95] (p. 21); for several given phenotypical traits measured as having
a high heritability, the associated genetic variants which have been traced via genetic sequencing appear to explain very
little of the total predicted heritability. Some scientists [111] have proposed transgenerational epigenetic inheritance to
account for the missing heritability; this account is more consonant with PC for the causes of epigenetic factors may exist
inside the range of environmental modifiability. However, alternative explanations which secure the notion of heritability in
genetic factors exist. For instance, a team of statistical geneticists [112] has argued that the missing heritability problem
emerges under the assumption that the contribution of a conjunction of expressed genetic variants can be modeled as a
linear (additive) combination. When the interactions among genetic variants are modeled as nonlinear, the problem may
significantly dissolve.
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trait may fluctuate. For instance, there is cross-cultural evidence which suggests that people tend to
become more introverted as they age [113].
Axiom 8. For a given mental attribute M, a fixed representation standard for M and any individual human
being x, there exists a monotonic increasing function ( x ) that uniquely assigns a numerical value n to x.
Axiom 9. There exists a numerical value representing the maximum potential of x at M. The value n is
either lesser or equal to .
Postulate 15. For any given time t, a given mental attribute M, a fixed representation standard for M and any
individual human being x, is the global maximum point of the monotonic increasing function ( x ).
Through the conjunction of Axiom 10 and Postulate 14, we can state the modal claim that
the mental attributes of human beings, besides their actual realizations (captured by Axiom 9) also
have maximum manifestations. Discussions on lower and upper bounds of mental features are not
unknown. For instance, the case of sensations, encompassed by psychophysical variables such as
brightness and loudness is straightforward; the components of our sensory systems bear a lower
threshold that allows the minimum interaction with some type of energy and an upper threshold
which may represent either nondescript registration or nerve damage. What about traits such as
general intelligence? The philosophical literature on superintelligence appears to be committed to
a supremum for the intelligence, broadly considered, of humans [114].
Postulate 17. Only the maxima of mental attributes are relevant for social justice
Potentials are prima facie closed intervals with both maxima and minima. I assume that only the
former are relevant for our discussion. If this postulate holds true, certain adjustments are warranted.
For instance, take the Big Five model of personality which posits introversion-extraversion as
a continuum with two psychologically distinct poles. For traits with this kind of structure, it is better
in our framework to divide them in two given the possibility that both valences could be positively
correlated with economic affluence 23 .
Axiom 10. For any two individual human beings x and y with their upper bounds for M respectively evaluated
as x and y , there exists a function of comparative significance that takes x and y as inputs and
outputs 1 when the disparity is significant and 0 when it is not
23 For this particular example, current empirical evidence suggests that this is not the case; extraversion has significant positive
correlation with income, new promotions and negatively correlated with unemployment [115,116]. It appears to be unlikely
that the other tail of this continuum sports a significant violation of this monotonicity.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 22 of 56
It is hard to deny the reality of individual differences in mental potential. I suspect that most of
those who are sympathetic to the PC worldview acknowledge it 24 . For the sake of charitableness,
I advance that even if it is the case that statistical innate group differences exist, they may not matter.
And how could they matter? From the point of view of social justice, it is sound that differences in
psychology are significant if they are causally connected with increases in wealth (Section 4.5). But by
how much? Consider the example of general intelligence. According to factor-analytical results of [117]
employing a North American data set, a one point increase in IQ is associated with an increase of up
to $616 of income a year 25 . Is a change in one IQ point significant enough? Ill leave the specification
of such discontinuous function for the partisans of social justice.
Axiom 11. For a given mental attribute M, a fixed representation standard for M and any two individual
human beings x and y where x and y are members of two distinct species S 1 and S 2 from a same social genus G ,
x and y have their upper bounds for M respectively evaluated as x and y , if we randomly pick x and y
from S 1 and S 2 , then the probability that the function (x , y ) will output 0 (not a significant difference in
potential) is greater than 50%.
This axiom is a weak denial of the existence of natural group differences. It states that typically,
the differences in the natural endowments of members from different groups are not socioeconomically
significant. This increase in charitableness, however, comes at the expense of external consistency
with SOT, which demands stronger social constructionism. Axiom 6 states that there can only be
inequality of outcome between two groups x and y in the presence of social oppression. But under
Anthropological Mental Egalitarianism, there can be small group differences of wealth whose
etiology is traceable to group genetic differences in psychological aptitudes. One way to make
both theories consistent with each other could involve replacing standard equivalence relations =
for approximation relations .
4.10. PC redux
I finish this section with a tentative compilation of sufficient conditions that make a certain
construct c un-PC:
Postulate 18 (Sufficient Conditions for Political Incorrectness). For any construct c bearing a certain
content p, c is said to be politically incorrect anytime when:
Denials of AME that are un-PC are already pre-specified by the GDP. The existence of a necessary
connection between PC and the social construction of genera may be disputed. In defense, I view these
propositions as forming a network (Postulate 6) with a certain stability. The placement of the fourth
condition was partly motivated by the hypothesis that the acceptance that there are social genera
24 For instance, feminist philosopher Anne Phillips writes: Despite my scepticism about whether systematic differences of
ability or disposition can be mapped onto these particular categories (gender, ethnicity and race), I am not so nave as to
doubt the existence of individual difference. Individuals vary in their abilities, characters, and dispositions, and though the
variance is often exaggerated by social and educational inequalities, people are indeed different in what they want and are
able to do [74]. (p. 13)
25 The same study establishes a connection between higher IQs and financial distress, pointing to possible nonlinear
relationships between wealth and general intelligence.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 23 of 56
which are natural kinds may initiate a runaway effect that may eventually prompt the denial of mental
environmentalism and then, full-blown thoughts and utterances that violate the GDP.
26 In Bunges original scheme, epistemic fields come in two types; fields of inquiry and belief systems, of which I take ideologies to
be one of its species.
27 Naturally, to treat logical formulae as individuals x, x C is an abstraction. Treating them as logical formulae proper would
require the framework to employ second-order logic which would be extremely cumbersome.
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V is partitioned into proper subsets Si whose members stand under a partial order relation <,
the different families of evaluation standards
We could devise axioms for a black box model of the production of knowledge, where one or
more professionals a, a A targeting a problem p, p R engage in a research process f B which
takes as input a proper subset the fund of knowledge F and outputs a construct x, x C.
Under this framework, the metaphilosophical quest for a definiendum of philosophy would
typically center in the analysis of the problematics R of the field of inquiry of philosophy. I shall not
venture into this hard issue. Instead, Ill focus on other aspects I take to be both more readily scrutable
and which will be sufficient for my arguments; the set of goals G and the set of values V of philosophy.
Following developments from contemporary epistemology which will be discussed in greater
detail later in Section 5.3, goals come in two types: epistemic and non-epistemic. This distinction
will remain undefined and purely in the domain of intuitive appreciation; epistemic goals include
standards such as wisdom, understanding, learning and, most important for our investigation, truth.
Non-epistemic goals are a heterogeneous lot which includes economic profit, well-being, entertainment
and the other primary indictee of our investigation, social justice.
Legitimate fields of inquiry, in relative contrast to stagnant pseudoscience and pseudophilosophy,
other degenerate research programs and dogmatic ideologies, are cognitively progressive; this can be
informally characterized as the dual claim that their funds of knowledge tend, over time, to be
populated with more and more constructs which are better attuned to the goals of the field 28 .
If philosophy is a field of inquiry, it is no exceptionalthough the advancement appears to be
considerably slower than other fields of inquiry [118]. However, despite all the alleged actual and
potential insurmountable mysteries, antinomies, paradoxes and theoretical dead-ends as well as
unfortunate periods of wasteful degenerate philosophical research programs where the function of
our philosophical knowledge loses its monotonicity, I take it that that we stand today in a more fertile
ground than the one initiated by Nietzsches admired Greek sages 29 . For a candid but blunt example,
the seeds of Thales have ultimately germinated in the minds of a succession of thinkersfrom Aristotle,
Leibniz and Boole to Gdel, Church and Turingresponsible for the formal causes of the technological
marvel I am using to write this paper down 30 .
28 An easy and risky way to characterize this feature under this framework is this; let Ft0 be the fund of knowledge of
philosophy at a time t0 and Ft+ the fund of knowledge of philosophy at an arbitrary future time t+ . Then the statement
| Ft+ | > Ft0 is probably true.
29 The relevant quote comes from Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks: The very first experience that philosophy had on
Greek soil, the sanction of the Seven Sages, is an unmistakable and unforgettable feature of the Hellenic image. Other peoples
have saints; the Greeks have sages [119].
30 There exists extensive metaphilosophical disagreement on the possibility of progress in philosophy. The sort of progress
envisioned by my example would not be considered properly philosophical [120]. But even the case that perennial problems
(such as the mind-body problem and free will) are unsolvable, if true, would itself be a positive epistemic result by
demarcating limits to human knowledge.
31 This strong thesis resonates with Berit Brogaards [122] account of epistemic value monism under which truth is a primary,
overriding and non-negotiable epistemic goal.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 25 of 56
This metaphilosophical position may no longer be as fashionable, but I contend that it is hard to
make sense of philosophy which does not take truth as an epistemic goal. If one holds that philosophy
has nothing to do with the pursuit of truth, I take it as a conversation stopper and a performative
contradiction. For if metaphilosophy is philosophy, the disagreement with the metaphilosophical
inquiry of what philosophy is for is a disagreement on the truth of what philosophy is for. If one wishes
to follow the road of doing philosophy that rejects these basic constraints of rationality, one is at the
risk of, to paraphrase philosopher Daniel Dennett, to engage in nothing more than verbal ballet [123]
or to play intellectual tennis without a net [124] 32 . Philosophies so unrestrained are mere belief
systems, not fields of inquiry. The question of the possibility of philosophy being able to thrive as both
a truth-oriented activity and a vehicle for social justiceboth understand the world and to save the
worldwill be answered negatively in the next sections.
Up to this level of analysis, the postulated features of truth-seekingness and cognitive progress not
only underspecify philosophy but makes it indistinguishable from basic (as opposed to applied) science.
This is not an accident, but probably comes from shared inheritance for basic science is historically
an offshoot of philosophy. It is also not a demerit for the arguments I shall deploy in support of
a radical separation of philosophy from political correctness will be just as effective if applied to
basic science.
But what truth are we talking about? Modern mathematical logic has a built-in formal theory
of logical truth as model-satisfiability which has been famously advanced as an interpretation of the
classical (correspondence) conception of truth. I shall not assume this particular schematic structure
of truth. Instead, in the spirit of maximizing generality and neutrality, I characterize a bland conception
of truth for fields of inquiry which should be compatible with many different theories of truth. Truth,
being a goal, will be represented as a bounded comparative structure h T, <i with a pair of real numbers
setting a lower bound (absolute falsity) and an upper bound (absolute truth). For convenience reasons,
we can use the well-known interval [0, 1]. The relata of the ordering relation < are constructs x1 and
x2 being compared with respect to truth. If one holds that philosophical truth is strictly bivalent, one
may replace a continuous comparative structure for a discrete one so that the image of the function
of truth ( x ) only has two values, such as {0,1}. However, I believe the analysis is more fruitful if
we concede orders of truth for philosophical representata. For instance, assuming that the following
examples are rival positions and thus members of the same class K1 , for a philosopher to hold that x1
(neutral monism) is truer than x2 (materialism) and to hold that materialism is truer than x3 (substance
dualism) is to assign as the image for the function of truth ( x ) of these constructs three real numbers
y1 , y2 , y3 so that 0 y1 y2 y3 1.
5.3. A Formal Account of the Relationship between Philosophical Knowledge and Values
How do the members of an epistemic field legitimately evaluate a given construct as successfully
attaining a particular goal of the field? And what if the field has multiple goals or worse, multiple
conflicting goals?
This kind of problem has been entertained by both philosophers of science dealing with theory
choice and model selection and epistemologists dealing with belief justification, which we may generalize
as the problem of epistemic appraisal (for a contemporary overview, see [125]).
What must the relationship between a bearer of content x and a particular goal h, <i G be
for it to be successful? A received philosophical view Ill assume is that we are justified to hold x as
being on the road to achieve a certain -goal if x embodies the appropriate -values. In the words
of epistemologist and philosopher of science Stephen E. Grimm, a belief earns positive marks (counts
as justified, rational, virtuous, etc.), from an epistemic point of view, just in case it does well with
respect to the things with intrinsic epistemic value (i.e., helps to promote them or bring them about).
32 Dennett attributes this adage to philosopher Ronald de Souza, referring to philosophical apologetics.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 26 of 56
Likewise, a belief earns negative marks just in case it does poorly with respect to the things with
intrinsic epistemic value [126].
To formally characterize this relationship, we turn to a vibrant discussion in the contemporary
epistemology of science on epistemic or cognitive 33 values (such as empirical adequacy, predictive
accuracy, and external consistency; a finer-grained typology in the context of the epistemic field of
science is found at [128]). These epistemic values are contrasted with contextual, non-epistemic or
non-cognitive values (such as safety, social equality, and racial diversity). Fields of inquiry may employ
both, in variable configurations according to their set of goals.
Let us take epistemic goals to be accomplishable by constructs bearing the appropriate epistemic
values and the converse happening with non-epistemic goals. For instance, applied science, such as the
several branches of engineering, differs from basic science by having additional practical non-epistemic
goals which supply further normative requirements [129]. As an example, the field of inquiry of
aerospace engineering has an overarching non-epistemic practical goal of aircraft and spacecraft design,
the construction of machines that transit the atmosphere and beyond. These crafts, in turn, must
efficiently carry on a variety of specialized supplementary practical duties depending on the rolefrom
belligerent air supremacy to peaceful civilian transportation. Thus, the epistemic appraisal of an x
(such as the computational model of an aircraft) must also be guided by the relevant non-epistemic or
contextual values such as safety, resilience, acquisition cost, payload capacity, and firepower. Aerospace
engineers naturally also want their fluid dynamics to be approximately true 34 or else their aircraft
may not kick off the ground (much less reach escape velocity).
The sole epistemic goal we will be interested in is truth and the only epistemic values Ill be
interested in Ill call alethic epistemic values, those that are truth-enhancing. Other possible epistemic
goals (such as understanding or curiosity satisfaction) do not necessarily converge with truth.
For instance, educators teaching basic arithmetic with positive integers to small children, in an attempt
to make the subject more intelligible, (that is, to attain the epistemic goal of understanding) often utter
verbal heuristic devices such as you cant take a bigger number from a smaller number which are
strict mathematical falsehoods, either decreasing or neutralize the goal of truth [130].
Taking for granted concepts from the science of statistics, alethic epistemic values are now
provisorily defined:
Definition 3 (Alethic Epistemic Value). For a certain field of inquiry F with the epistemic goal of truth,
h T, <i G, a value h E, <i V is an alethic epistemic value if and only if the function of truth ( x ) is
positively correlated with the function of the value e( x ).
For instance, if we have good reasons to think that when a philosophical construct fares well in
semantic definiteness and formal rigor, its truth is being enhanced, then these are candidates for being
alethic epistemic values. If scoring well in ad hocness and unwarranted aprioricity has the opposite
effect, we have the opposite conclusion.
I similarly define a politically correct value, a type of non-epistemic value:
Definition 4 (Politically Correct Value). For a certain field of inquiry F with the non-epistemic goal of social
justice, h J, <i G, a value h P, <i V is a politically correct value if and only if the function of social justice
( x ) is positively correlated with the function of the value ( x ).
33 Larry Laudan [127] distinguishes cognitive from epistemic values. In his account, cognitive values encompass epistemic
values as a proper subset and the epistemic is strictly construed as the domain of necessary and sufficient truth-conditions
for a construct. My sketched account of what I call alethic epistemic values is not as strong and may involve weaker
contingencies between a value and the goal of truth.
34 As a matter of fact, in the context of modeling a design problem (Section 5.4), engineers do not need to expend resources
computing the truth of natural science which has already stood to massive empirical scrutiny. It is already a given, a part of
the fund of knowledge F.
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Definition 5 (Dummy Alethic Epistemic Value). An alethic epistemic value h E, <i is a dummy alethic
epistemic value if and only if there exists another alethic epistemic value h E0 , <i and the values of the function
e( x ) are proxy variables of e0 ( x ), that is, e0 ( x ) is better correlated with ( x ) than e( x ).
This last definition is stimulated by intuitions on the existence of possible hierarchies of alethic
epistemic values in which some are more basic than others and the possibility of there being alethic
epistemic values that are redundant, performing idle work. For instance, elegance 35 may be tracking
simplicity, in which case it would be a dummy epistemic value. However, in scientific practice, proxy
variables are often indispensable, particularly when the relevant variable researchers aim to track is
non-observable.
I posit that sound philosophical and scientific inquiry is often constrained by a shared set of
regulatory ideals, i.e., for an arbitrary family of evaluation standards from a basic science K1 and
another from philosophy, K2 , we should expect that K1 K2 6= {}. For instance, one of these which
I hold follows naturally from the character of philosophy as a truth-seeking field of inquiry is the
epistemic value of external consistency; philosophy ought to be consistent with the truths revealed by
other epistemic fields at least as epistemically secure as itself, the natural sciences being a prominent
example 36 . If your descriptive metaphysics is inconsistent with the most established developments of
quantum mechanics and general relativity, then your system loses epistemic value. If your normative
ethics is inconsistent with the most solid results of behavioral genetics and moral psychology, then this
is also a serious defect of your theory. And so on.
35 Several examples of simplicity and elegance in the history of science are described by biologist Ian Glynn [131].
36 Critics of a postmodern or non-naturalistic verve may object and claim that such inferences are scientistic (or any other
number of smear words). I reject any such charges of scientism as deliberate buzzword-infused ploys meant to avoid the
satisfaction of external consistency and the loss of epistemic value such a constraint would cause for philosophical theories
that ignore empirical truth.
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in boldface, conforming to a standard notation. First, let us check the structure of an MDCA problem
(adapted from [134] (p. 10)):
Now, for a generic MOO problem (adapted from [135] p. X and [136]):
These frameworks are commensurable. For instance, the criteria functions from MCDA just are
the objective functions from MOO. Researchers often engage with the two types of problem at different
stages of a same project 37 .
We may now draw several semantic equivalences that will allow us to frame the problem of
epistemic appraisal using the terms of fields of inquiry. Table 2 summarizes these correspondences:
37 As framed in [135], the MCDA evaluation problem is actually a proper part of a major MOO problem It should be
clear that multiobjective optimization consists of three phases: model building, optimization, and decision making
(preference articulation).
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Postulate 19 (Non-Optimality). I suppose that, in general, for a given multi-objective optimization problem
MO , there exists no solution x S that simultaneously attains the desired outcomes of objective functions f
(i.e., maximizations and minimizations) under constraints h and g.
The rule of thumb is that multiple objectives will conflict with each other. MOO is an art of
negotiation and compromise; the quest for a Platonic ideal aircraft, traffic system, or automated factory
is irremediably tragicthe optimal solution in the sense of scalar or single-objective optimization is
generally impossible, and one must be content to one of their possible efficient worldly realizations.
There are many types and hierarchies of efficient solutions; below the crown of scalar
optimality [143] (Chapter 2), what rules more firmly is the notion of Pareto efficiency (also called
Pareto optimality). Consider the following definition of Pareto-efficiency (adapted from [135,143]):
Definition 8 (Pareto Efficiency). For a MOO problem MO where the vector of objective functions f =
{1 (x), ..., m (x)} T is to be maximized, x S, a decision vector x is Pareto-efficient if and only if there does
not exist another x so that i (x) i (x) for all i = 1, ..., n.
A Pareto-efficient decision vector is strictly Pareto-efficient if and only if j (x) > j (x) for at least
one index j. Otherwise, it is weakly Pareto-efficient
38 Likert scales are a staple of survey data designed to extract information regarding preferences. They usually involve a small
even number of sentences ranked from either the most positive or most negative valence (such as strongly agree, agree,
indifference, disagree and strongly disagree.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 30 of 56
We call a set of Pareto-efficient solutions a Pareto frontier. Although these are often not computable,
we may strive for solutions which approximate the Pareto frontier. We say that all Pareto-efficient
solutions dominate over the rest of the solutions in the feasible region space.
Since the frameworks of MOO and MCDA are commensurable, each decision vector x may
correspond to a decision variant x.
Let us contemplate some simple examples of evaluation problems in epistemic appraisal for
philosophy. Consider a hypothetical metaethicist comparing three constructs, the thesis of moral
cognitivism, the thesis of moral noncognitivism and a hybrid theory of both. He holds that four
alethic epistemic values are relevant for his evaluation and posits ordinal values under a bounded
interval [0, 10]. Table 3 summarizes this scenario:
Starting from very instinctive standards of rationality, it is a no-brainer that our model metaethicist
should choose moral non-cognitivism over the others for it is either better or equivalent to the
alternative positions in every respect. x2 is the only Pareto-efficient solution of this set of decision
variants, and it thus dominates the others.
Now, consider a philosopher of mind evaluating theories of personal identity also under
four criteria. Table 4 depicts this scenario:
In this example, there is no decision variant dominating. All three options are Pareto-efficient.
How does one choose? There exists no transcendental procedure, no single general algorithm that
takes a set of efficient decision variants and outputs the most preferred one. Instead, there are several.
Engineers may often find themselves in the paradoxical situation of having a second-order MCDA
problem when choosing which method to use to solve a particular MCDA problem [144].
In the ordinal MCDA case, although the vast majority of algorithms involve aggregation
procedures employing addition and multiplication at some point, there are fortunately some purely
qualitative strategies. For instance, the approach of generalized concordance rules [145], which does not
assume the additivity of typical compare and aggregate approaches in multicriteria decision-making.
How MCDA may model evaluation problems in fields of inquiry should be easy to see.
What about design problems? Here things get more complicated. I intend to use the framework
of MOO to represent an ideal hunt for constructs that efficiently carry out the goals of the field through
the maximization of the associated values.
It is not clear if purely ordinal cases of MOO are feasible. Over the literature, in the context of
stochastic optimization, so-called ordinal optimization procedures exist as an antecedent backstage to
eschew computational burden for run-of-the-mill cardinal optimization [137]. Some decision theorists
(such as [134] (p. 58), in the context of scalarization techniques) have argued that even though
some mathematical manipulations in certain procedures have no empirical interpretation, (i.e., are not
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 31 of 56
Postulate 20 (Epistemic Effectiveness of a Field of Inquiry). The epistemic effectiveness of field of inquiry
F is a function of its power to produce quality constructs in C.
A received hierarchy of quality of constructs in the context of evaluation and design problems
is thus:
Given this crude characterization, a field of inquiry that consistently produces more efficient
constructs relative to the problems it entertains is a more effective one. This leads us to the
following consequence:
Postulate 21 (The Curse of Multiple Goals). In general, for a field of inquiry F, the more goals in G it has,
the more ineffective it is at the development of constructs in C which are efficient.
This conjecture emerges from considerations of Section 5.3 where each goal is associated which
a cluster of values which have, as elaborated in Table 2, a direct correspondence with objective functions
of a MOO problem.
This claim may look like a trivial truism; of course it is expected that the more targets a field
aims to secure, the harder it is to secure them. But the point Id like to emphasize is that the growth
of difficulty is generally not linear; it increases dramatically fast as m rises. This is partially due to
an assortment of formal phenomena dubbed the curse of dimensionality (first exposed by [147],
in the context of dynamic programming) that take place with mathematical optimization as the number
of objective functions increases.
These complex problems are a breeding ground for the infamous NP-hard decision
problems where the computational resources required to reach a sufficiently strong solution may
grow exponentially. Many families of algorithms effective at attaining or bordering the Pareto
front in MOO with a small number of objectives do not scale well with a greater number of
objectives. For instance, many evolutionary algorithms struggle to find Pareto-efficient solutions
when m 3 [148]. Also, one of the most used procedures to test for the quality of two Pareto-efficient
sets, the hypervolume indicator, has a #P-hard (Sharp-P) complexity class, being as hard to solve as its
associated NP decision problem [149].
Up until this point, many criticisms are possible. Ill briefly consider two of them. First, by
taking as relevant these results from theoretical computer science in the context of mathematical
optimization, we are implicitly representing the production of knowledge in an arbitrary field of
inquiry F as a classical computational process, a program implementable in a Turing machine. Black
box model for black model, it could be argued that professional experts are best modeled as more
powerful computational systems (such as oracle machines) and thus, being able to circumvent the
imposed difficulties in the formal framework Im grounding my analysis in, rendering them irrelevant.
39 An extensive discussion of several technical senses of meaningfulness in the context of the axiomatic representational
theory of measurement is found at [146].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 32 of 56
Second, it can also be questioned that since approximate solutions at a small distance from the
Pareto frontier scanned by much faster heuristic algorithms are often good enough and attainable with
fewer resources, by analogy the activities of professional philsophers may be modeled by much more
realistic heuristic algorithms.
The first line of argument is congruent with standard practice in operations research. In design
problems, a priori expert knowledge compacting expectations of what a good solution looks like
can be incorporated in the model, relieving burdens (for example, in the context of an evolutionary
optimization [150]). In evaluation problems, this is even more obvious as experts are consulted to
place decision variants under preference relations, and this feedback is used to build decision-making
procedures. Under a formal decision setting, experts can indeed be modeled as oracles of a sort.
However, I claim that, particularly for the less methodologically robust fields of inquiry (such as
philosophy and the social sciences), we should be very skeptical of the powers of their professional experts
to find even good enough solutions in the feasibility spacemuch less efficient solutions (for instance,
political psychologist Philip E. Tetlock has documented the underwhelming predictive accuracy of
social scientists over even general economic and political trends [151]). Philosophy, in particular, may
be the field of inquiry most pessimistic of the status of its cognitive achievements [120,152]. Also,
as already acknowledged in Section 3.1, existing empirical evidence on expertise effects behind properly
philosophical inquiry (such as epistemology and ethics) is not consistent with philosophers having
particularly special epistemic powers.
Under this framework, I posit that the main reason why philosophy, in contrast to science, is more
ineffective is due to lack of robust standards under which contradictory efficient decision variants are
to be evaluated. Science arguably has the tribunal of experience as the primary, if not overriding,
standard of excellence, up until the point it faces empirical underdetermination.
Is philosophy doomed? If each goal deploys a portfolio with a myriad of values whose structure
we know little about, we appear to be hostages of the curse of dimensionality. Postulate 21 may
seem to undermine optimality in truth-seeking pursuits. Or does it? There are two basic routes
when engaging with a MOO problem; either one treats it as a MOO problem in its own right
and incurs in any computational burdens involved or one attempts to transform it into a much
more tractable single-objective optimization problem (SOO) through a particular process of scalarization.
Scalarization names families of different algorithms that transforms a vector of multiple objectives
f = { f 1 (x), ..., f n (x)} T into a scalar { f (x)}.
In the name of optimism, I thus deploy the following bold conjecture:
Postulate 22 (Scalarization of Vectors With the Same Type of Goal). For a vector of functions
f = {1 , ..., n } associated with the portfolio of -values from a goal h, <i, it is assumed that f can be
scalarized into f = {} without significant loss of information.
This sums up the optimism that optimality may still be at hand for fields of inquiry that seek
truth, and truth only. Also, consider this; take our portfolio of alethic epistemic values {e1 , ..., em }.
Given Definition 5, some of these may be just redundant dummy alethic epistemic values and thus may
be removed. This procedure would be an instance of the technique of dimensionality reduction [153] that
is employed in MOO.
Definition 9 (Truth-Seeking Field of Inquiry). For a field of inquiry F, F is truth-seeking if and only if:
All families of evaluation standards Si have at least one (and probably more than one) alethic
epistemic value h E, <i
For all non-scalarized design problems, each function ei of the vector of objective functions f is to be
maximized
For all scalarized design problems, the scalar of truth ( x ) is to be maximized
In the context of any evaluation problem MD , where Si includes at least one non-alethic epistemic
value h, <i with an associated monotonic increasing function , no decision variant x1
where ( x1 ) > ( x2 ) may be preferred by a decision maker in A if for at least one ei ( x1 ),
ei ( x 1 ) < ei ( x 2 )
This characterization ensures that no construct even a bit defective on matters of truth will come
to dominate other solutions.
Examples of evaluation problems in the field of inquiry of philosophy include not only deciding
which intuitions, premises and theories to choose but may also involve activities such as the filling
of a finite list of key speakers in conferences and deciding whether to accept or reject a paper given
contradictory appraisals of referees. If philosophy is truth-seeking, I argue that those academic
activities should also strive to satisfy the above requirements.
Definition 10 (Politically Correct Field of Inquiry). For a field of inquiry F, F is politically correct if and
only if:
This definition is weaker than the preceding, in the name of charitableness; for a field of inquiry to
be politically correct, it does not need to assign a priority to political correctness; it merely needs to be
taken into account, by being in the portfolio of values involved in the appraisal. One could strengthen
this characterization as much as one wants.
We now turn to the final definition:
Definition 11 (Epistemic Appraisal of Politically Correct Philosophy). For the field of inquiry of
philosophy P, if P is politically correct, the epistemic appraisal in P can be thus modeled:
As a design problem, it is at best a 2-objective MOO problem representing the search for
Pareto-efficient constructs x, x C in a feasible space X with the vector of objective functions
f = {[ ( x ), ( x )] T } where ( x ) is the scalar of truth and ( x ) is the scalar of social justice and both
functions are to be maximized
As an evaluation problem between n 2 comparable constructs, { x1 ; ..., xn } Ki and a set of
evaluation standards S, S V, it is an ordinal MCDA problem where:
In the context of both evaluation and design problems, the violation, willful or not, of the priority
of alethic epistemic values over everything else in the family of evaluation standards Si employed
In the context of evaluation problems, the underestimation of the actual values (in the sense of
assigned information) of alethic epistemic values associated with politically incorrect constructs.
In the context of design problems, the placement of unwarranted a priori inequality and equality
constraints over the objective functions associated with alethic epistemic values which are
prejudiciously deemed to be implausible because they are un-PC
For a contemporary example in the philosophy of science, take the thesis in philosophy of biology
that Homo sapiens not only is not a monotypic biological speciesthe social genus race" being a natural
kindbut that one of the reasons for believing so is motivated by the alethic epistemic value of external
consistency with research on cognitive differences across racial groups in contemporary differential
psychology and behavioral genetics [154].
This particular thesis incurs in many sins; first, according to the PC worldview, it denies the social
construction of the social kind race (Postulate 12). In its frank denial of Anthropological Mental
Egalitarianism (Axiom 11), it violates the Generalized Difference Principle (Postulate 10) with respect
to the social genus race, being typified as racist and therefore, being socially oppressive.
If one adheres to the PC worldview, one acquires reasons from the point of view of the expressive
rationality of identity-protection cognition (Postulate 7) to reprobate this thesis. In our model of
a design problem, this can be represented by the supply of low inequality constraints over the
empirical adequacy and external consistency of the construct. As an evaluation problem, confirmation
bias suggests that a serious PC adherent would be bound to give low scores for the alethic epistemic
values of the thesis.
Again, the kind of rationality that is traditionally treasured as guiding philosophy and science is
not the expressive rationality of identity-protective cognition; it is a rationality of objectivity. It demands
us not to constrain the space of feasible hypothesis based on idiosyncratic preference, no matter
how personally important. If we allow values such as sexual equality, natural egalitarianism, and
extreme politeness to constrain science and philosophy, I predict we will produce worse science and
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 35 of 56
philosophy due to spurious directions prompted by these values. Politically correct philosophy can
only thrive contingently.
40 Helen Longino used very similar words to summarize her most important work: I argued in Science as Social Knowledge
that social or non-cognitive values could and did serve as cognitive values [158] (p. 41).
41 Placing this distinguished philosopher in the same cluster as postmodern feminist critics of science whose output is of
limited quality is decidedly unfair. This general sentiment is also echoed, for instance, throughout essays in [159].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 37 of 56
contextual values is more efficient than reliance on alethic epistemic values. These include feminist
contextual values 42 .
For what probably is her most famous example, consider explanations for the co-evolution of
the hypertrophied neocortex and manual dexterity which are distinctive of our evolutionary lineage.
Many dominant models still place significant emphasis on the selective pressures for tool manufacturing
which would enable greater efficiency in the acquisition of animal protein by hunting bands of
male hominids [161]. Under androcentric background assumptions, the alleles of Man, the Hunter
become privileged theoretical entities as the female side of evolution, that of Woman, the Gatherer,
is overshadowed (for a historical overview, see [162]). Alternative empirically adequate models under
different background assumptions may have been neglected and undervalued due to implicit sexist
attitudes.
Consider now an analogous example in psychology. In what is now a contemporary classic,
psychologists Joseph Henrich, Steven J. Heine and Ara Norenzayan have argued that the status
of uncountable results from the behavioral sciences, taken to be descriptive of the human species,
may have been compromised [163]. This is because disproportionate amounts of cutting-edge research
in the behavioral sciences employ what may be the worst data sets possible to construe inductive
generalizations meant to be projectable to the whole of humanity. These data sets are populated
with information extracted from what the authors have dubbed WEIRD peoplethat is: Western,
Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic. To put this in perspective, a randomly selected American
undergraduate is more than 4000 times more likely to be a research participant than is a randomly
selected person from outside of the West [163] (p. 63).
Given these two examples in mind (and assuming they are correct), we may present the
following case; wouldnt the presence of undeniably politically correct values of equality, diversity,
representativeness, and inclusiveness (of women in the first case, of non-WEIRD people in the latter)
make the research more truth-conducive? That certainly appears to be the case; in the context of the
research programs implicated in these examples, these politically correct values are also, under my
definition, alethic epistemic values.
However, I claim that they are all dummy alethic epistemic values (Definition 5). That is,
theoretically, they could all be replaced, without loss of aptitude, with alethic epistemic values such as
statistical rigor and good old-fashioned empirical adequacy. Statistical rigor ensures that no sampling
errors are perpetrated and that sound methodology in data gathering is enforced (for instance, in the
design of stratified sampling). These alethic epistemic values are preferable since they do not prompt
spurious ideological content.
In order not to merely beg the question, Ill briefly advance some of the arguments brought forth
by philosopher of science Stphanie Ruphy [164] in her defense of the ideal of what is commonly
called value-free or value-neutral scientific practice, taken to be the picture of scientific practice
exempt from contextual or non-epistemic values.
First, background beliefs, even if largely pretheoretical, may be reconstrued and expressed as
factual claims. For instance, the background beliefs that motivate androcentric paleoanthropology
involve factual claims on the preeminence of selection processes in the evolutionary history of one
of the sexes (and not the other). If evidential relations are contingent upon background beliefs and
background beliefs, being bearers of contextual values, can only be criticized in the light of other
contextual values, this appears to lead to a regress of background beliefs embodying contextual values
42 Some of the feminist values or feminist theoretical virtues Longino advances to guide scientific reasoning, such as
old-fashioned empirical adequacy and theoretical novelty, are difficult to be framed as properly feminist or even as
related to social justice [158]. But criteria such as applicability to human needs as in preferring scientific knowledge that
improves the material conditions of human life instead of mere science for knowledges sake and diffusion of power,
under which explanatory models that incorporate dominant-subordinate relationships are to be deferred, decidedly strike
us as politically correct values.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 38 of 56
battling against each other, ad infinitum. Also, the program of contextual empiricism is itself deploying
an empirical theory on the causal constituents of the cognitive processes involved in evidential
reasoning and ultimately theory choice and thus, may be confronted with alternative accounts of these
phenomena throughout the history of science. It also predicts rampant empirical underdetermination.
As Ruphy argues in her analysis of key historical cases discussed by Longino, the settlement
of seemingly empirically equivalent rival theories sporting different background assumptions and
targeting the same data appear to be best explained as being eventually achieved when this equivalence
becomes an inequality and that it is possible for evidential support, externally considered from the
diverging sets of background assumptions, to point a favorite. It does not have to be unequivocal;
if the settlement is secured by non-contextual criteria pointing to a direction, this shows that it is
not impossible.
For instance, since Longino authored her opus nearly three decades ago, genetic
paleoanthropology has advanced dramatically. Strains of DNA from humans and extinct hominins
with over a hundred thousand years of age have been extracted from bodily remains and researchers
have devised strict protocols to enable their genetic sequencing with the highest fidelity [165]. Statistical
methods designed to detect the presence of natural selection in genomic data are being continuously
improved [166]. In the light of these technical accomplishments, the story of Man, the Hunter against
Woman, the Gatherer may no longer be a more hermeneutical exercise of just-so stories over the
deep history of piles of broken bones but a more precise direction course can be ascertained.
It can also be stated that contextual empiricism appears to render as vacuous distinctions between
science and seemingly obvious pseudoscience. For instance, flat-earthers reject the phenomena of ships
vanishing in the horizon (which may be as good as it gets as an example of an observation low in
theoreticity) as evidence for the hypothesis of a round earth. Some flat earthers (for instance, [167])
have claimed that naked eye observations of such phenomena are nonveridical experiences, perceptual
illusions which vanish by aiding the human eye with optical magnification (an ad hoc that can be readily
falsified by experiment). Under contextual empiricism, both conceptions may be just as empirically
adequate, relativized to their underlying assumptions. Following Ruphy, I take it to be implausible that
the standard normative stance endorsed by practicing scientists is creating a delusion by positing a vast
asymmetry on the empirical adequacy of these hypotheses.
Also, even in cases of full-blown empirical underdetermination, there also appears to be no
theoretical or practical impossibility for the employment of other constitutive alethic epistemic
values, such as ontological simplicity. Finally, the underlying claim that there cannot be a value-free
formalization of the relation of evidential relevance singling out the appropriate reference classes for
the explanandum of a theory can be disputed (for instance, [69] (p. 77)).
If the replacement of inadequate background assumptions for better ones is better explained by
old-fashioned, contextual value-free standards of empirical success, then the very case of feminist
criticism of androcentric ideology across the sciences becomes more robust. It would stand not as a ploy
involving arbitrary political victories of background assumptions from one ideology to another, but as
the replacement of constructs less conducive for truth for others more conducive for truth screened
out under standards of objectivity. The vibrant panorama issued by Helen Longino where scientific
knowledge achieves higher degrees of objectivity as an effect of the distributed social cognition enacted
in communities of scientists with a culture of internal criticism where background beliefs are put into
question may remain intact. As for the practical or pragmatic claim that locally, there may be contextual
values carrying the status of dummy alethic epistemic values which are indeed more efficient than
pure alethic epistemic values at attaining the epistemic goal of truth, I will have something to say on
the matter in both the next subsection and in Section 7.3.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 39 of 56
As it is, for this argument to work, it appears to assume the truth-aptitude of the constructs
outputted by normative ethics (P1), which in turn may require metaethical commitments such as moral
cognitivism. Let us grant this.
First, I repeat the same strategy from the subsection above; I argue that in this case, the sexual
inclusiveness of women is a dummy epistemic value. It is indirectly tracking the empirical adequacy and
statistical rigor of the content of human moral psychology onto the content of normative ethics due to
a sampling error. If moral philosophers were to diligently examine their biases and conclude that they
are not feasible according to truths of human social cognition, there would be no need for the value of
sexual inclusiveness.
Second, the conclusion is too modest; compatibility of social justice with truth-seeking fields
of inquiry. This compatibility cannot easily be transformed in necessity. The adoption of a value
that enhances social justice as a byproduct does not imply that social justice must be a conscious
goal. The fact that philosophy may accidentally promote social justice is a trivial matter, already
acknowledged previously.
Alas, we can be charitable and circumvent this reply with some additionally reasonable premises:
P12 For a truth-seeking field of inquiry, if the adoption of a dummy epistemic value tracking
an epistemic value is more efficient for attaining truth than its avoidance, then the field of
inquiry ought to adopt it
P13 The adoption of sexual inclusiveness of women in normative ethics is more efficient for attaining
truth than its avoidance
C5 Therefore, normative ethics ought to adopt a value that enhances social justice
C6 Therefore, normative ethics is a truth-seeking field of inquiry that requires the promotion of
social justice
Given the pessimistic picture I have issued with a model of epistemic appraisal, the pragmatic
power of dummy epistemic values cannot be understated and now appears to bridge a strong
connection between at least a major branch of philosophy with the ideal of social justice. However,
I hold that this particular case is not compatible at all with social justice. For that, I shall phrase
a counter-argument; for the sake of it, let us consider only endorsements of the value of sexual
inclusiveness of women which are motivated by considerations stemming from the ethics of care:
P11 If the adoption of a value by a field of inquiry assumes the truth of a politically incorrect hypothesis,
then the field of inquiry is incompatible with social justice
P12 The adoption of a value by a field of inquiry ought to be rational
P13 The adoption of the value of sexual inclusiveness of women in normative ethics ought to comply
with certain standards of rationality
P14 The adoption of the sexual inclusiveness of women in normative ethics implies acknowledging
the truth of variation in the moral psychology of men and women
P15 The variation in the moral psychology of men and women demands an explanation
P16 To rationally endorse a proposition which includes an explanandum requires the endorsement of
the best explanans available
P17 The best explanation for the existing variation in the moral psychology of men and women implies
the existence of significant genetic causes
C7 Therefore, to rationally adopt the value the sexual inclusiveness of women in normative ethics is
to acknowledge significant genetic causes in the variation of moral psychology
P15 To rationally acknowledge the truth of an empirical hypothesis is to endorse the research methods
that have led to this truth and their other truthful results
P16 The research methods that have led to the truth of the variation in the moral psychology of men
and women have concluded that there are socially appraisable traits where men fare in average
better than women due to significant biological causes
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 41 of 56
P17 To rationally adopt the value of sexual inclusiveness of women in normative ethics implies
acknowledging that there are socially appraisable traits where men fare in average better than
women due to significant biological causes
P18 The hypothesis that there are socially valuable traits where men in average fare better than women
due to significant genetic causes is politically incorrect
C8 Therefore, the adoption of sexual inclusiveness of women in normative ethics (due to
considerations stemming from the ethics of care) is incompatible with social justice
The empirical evidence for the case that existing patterns of cognitive, affective and behavioral
sexual dimorphism which are cross-culturally robust in humans are partly mediated by heredity is
compelling (see for example [171173]; for some social constructionist and environmentalist responses,
see [174,175] (Chapter 9) and [176].
If the above argument is safe and sound, this means that the lessons from the ethics of care are not
really socially progressive in the sense I have exposed. The acknowledgment of truths about human
sexual diversity rationally entails truths perceived to be politically incorrect. Theorist Nel Noddings
places the epicenter of the ethics of care is instinctive maternal love which predates humanity, and that
is shared with all mammals, linking evolutionary biology with normative ethics.
This line of thought is not new. It, I argue, is what may be lying beneath criticisms of the ethics of
care on the ground they expose essentialist stereotypes of men and women, violating the general
thesis of the social construction of sex and gender.
One could also argue that this very ideal of a steadfast disinterested pursuit of truth just
is more androcentric and sexist ideological introgression, the product of unfairly eulogizing and
cultivating tendencies of the male psyche 43 . If this is true, then science and philosophy guided
by standards of objectivity can be accused by PC adherents of unfairly manifesting a masculine
voice. For instance, it has been argued that women who enter the scientific community need to adopt
a masculine rationality at either conscious or subconscious level and that the scientific method
incorporates masculine features such as the objectification of nature [177]. If this hypothesis in cognitive
anthropology is correct, it will make standards of objectivity illegitimate; that would be a genetic
fallacy. The fact that the etiology of alethic epistemic values could originally involve as precursors the
interests and tendencies manifested in the minds of denizens of so-called oppressive groups does not
imply that alternative modes of inquiry with equivalent epistemic prowess at extracting truths about
the world built upon other cognitive tendencies and values are possible (as argued by postcolonial
theorists and feminists who defend the possibility of Afrocentric and feminist sciences).
43 And of the psyches of potentially other oppressive groups, such as White people
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 42 of 56
Critics may object that while that may be reasonable for descriptive political theory, not so for
normative political theory. And isnt the very same thing true for other normative fields such as ethics
or epistemology? It appears to be the telos of any normative theory to carry built-in practical goals.
For instance, standards of persuadabilitygood normative theories must be cogent for a particular
range of agents to be implementable.
If this is true under the framework I have described, it means that we should expect normative
theories to suffer from additional burdens in comparison to basic research. It is a testimony to how
difficult these disciplines are. The intrusion of practical goals would make normative theories both
less effective at attaining their goals and more susceptible to ideologies. This matter imposes upon us
additional reasons of why we ought to be extra careful at evaluating political philosophy. If ideology
is inescapable, then given the pervasiveness of cognitive bias, I contend that normative political
philosophies as fields of inquiry are at the imminent danger of becoming indistinguishable from political
philosophies as political ideologies. It is no accident that terms such as libertarianism and conservatism
name both political ideologies and families of theories in political philosophy and political science.
44 http://creation.com/journal-of-creation-writing-guidelines
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 43 of 56
The conflict I have depicted is not a clash between a cold disembodied reason against warm
bodily feeling; its values all the way down. Its a war where I hope values which are conducive for
objectivity in the quest for truth will overthrow values which are not.
If it is true that PC has wrecked the epistemic integrity and quality of academic philosophy,
how may we reverse the damage that has already been done? I have thus chosen three values which
I stipulate could help attain this goal. The first needs to be embodied in philosophical theory and
practice, the second at the institutional level and the third, onto the characters of philosophers.
45 Winegard et al. in turn are mentioning the approach originally described in [181].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 44 of 56
that your axiological and theoretical unequals will challenge your most treasured propositions [40].
Such scenario has the effect of suppressing confirmation bias and potentially disrupting epistemically
illegitimate consensus. Concerning a PC echo chamber, a way this can be built is by enhancing
the political diversity of the community towards the right-wing end of the spectrum. Diversity, so
much hailed with PC adherents, does not apply to political belief for many political beliefs are seen,
according to my analysis, as the breeding grounds of social injustice.
Political diversity is hereby posited to be a dummy epistemic value. It just is a proxy for
what ultimately matters, epistemicallystatistical rigor, explanatory power, empirical adequacy,
and so on. It may be, however, of enormous pragmatic value and the most effective way to build
institutionalized disconfirmation.
How may professional philosophy come to honor this value? A strangely ironic political dilemma
emerges; translated into policy, does this mean affirmative action quotas for non-PC philosophers?
Even if institutionalized disconfirmation could be achieved under a relatively low threshold of
non-left wing philosophers, this proposal is bound to elicit discomfort for conservative and libertarian
philosophers who are strongly opposed to affirmative action as a matter of ethical principle.
This prescription is congruent with Helen Longinos [158] picture of optimized scientific
engagement grounded on critical interactions among scientists of different points of view. If this is
the most effective way to attain objectivity, so be it.
But how well does this translate into philosophy? There are differences between science
and philosophy which hint at institutionalized disconfirmation being potentially less effective
for philosophy. Institutionalized disconfirmation requires nontrivial publicly shared evaluation
standards which may not exist across different philosophical traditions. For instance, inside the
analytic tradition of philosophy, a Thomist metaphysician may staunchly disagree with a scientistic
metaphysician concerning the epistemic authority of pre-theoretical intuitions and the boundaries
of a priori knowledge, which in my model translates into different rankings by both parties on the
importance of alethic epistemic values such as intuitiveness and self-evidentiality. An optimistic
answer to this is that successive critical metaphilosophical engagement between different philosophical
traditions may result in greater epistemic commensurability over time. A pessimistic answer is that if
the epistemic field of philosophy is bound to be an aggregation of robustly self-encapsulated subfields,
the phenomenon of institutionalized disconfirmation will only be local.
46 Not many centuries ago throughout Medieval and Modern Era Europe, this could have been a literal stake depending on
which heretical thoughts you uttered.
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 45 of 56
multicriteria decision-making problem, one in which the virtue of prudence emerges as a heuristic to
stump any dangerous desires and prevent the prospects of academic suicide.
If this is true, one of the most tragic effects of this state of affairs could be the existence of
an invisible but prevailing self-censorship. How many truth-seeking thoughts of prime epistemic quality
in a myriad of important topics may not have been recorded and shared out of fear? This imposition
of conceptual barriers over what can and what cannot be pursued by human intelligence may be
crippling for philosophical creativity.
Rome wasnt built in a day, nor was the enormous social infrastructure that supports PC. It took
decades of cultural evolution (Postulate 2.1). Reversing this trend will require hard work. I finish this
paper with a call for the masses of disenfranchised philosophers to embrace this heroically. To provide
a fitting end to my case, I have taken the poetic liberty to borrow some of the words as well as some of
the spirit of a certain German philosopher who was particularly articulate 47 .
Think dangerously! Build your conferences at the plain sight of social justice warriors!
Submit your truth-seeking politically incorrect papers into academic safe spaces! Live at an
intellectual war with your academic peers and yourselves! Be brave and uncompromising
free thinkers for as long as the PC thought police subsists, you seekers of true knowledge!
Acknowledgments: Foremost, I am extremely grateful for the two anonymous referees that have read my
manuscript and given me indispensable feedback and guidance that allowed me to substantially improve this
paper, alongside the editors who have been very kind and patient. I am also extremely thankful for my friend
Dante Cardoso Pinto de Almeida who has taken his time and talent to debug and correct some of the more
logic-heavy sections of this paper. Additional appreciation goes towards the encouragements, criticisms, and
corrections brought by Carlos Daniel Llosa, F. A. Doria, Giego Caleiro, Joao Fabiano and another friend who
wished to remain anonymous.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declares no conflict of interest.
Appendix A
Definition A2 (Comparative Structure). Let h M, <i and hR, i be a pair of relational structures where M
is the domain of a generic relational structure and < is an ordering relation. Then R = h M, <i is a comparative
structure if and only if (adapted from [184]):
An homomorphism : M R exists
For all x, y M, x < y ( x ) (y) ( is isotone)
The function is also called a monotonically increasing function. These structures form so-called
ordinal scales.
47 The excerpt was adapted from Friedrich Nietzsches The Gay Science, 283
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 46 of 56
Theorem A1. For a relational structure h M, <i, if an ordering relation < is total and transitive, h M, <i is
a comparative structure (for proof, see [185])
Definition A3 (Extensive Structure). Let h M, <, i and hR, , +i be a pair of relational structures where
M is the domain of a generic relational structure, < is a binary ordering relation and is an empirical
binary operation of concatenation. Then R = h M, <, i is an extensive structure if and only if (adapted
from [184,186]):
An homomorphism : M R exists
For all x, y M, x < y ( x ) (y) ( is isotone)
For all x, y M, ( x y) = ( x ) + (y) ( is additive)
For all x M and z R+, if 0 ( x ) is isotone and additive, then 0 ( x ) = z ( x ) ( is ratio-scalable
Given the prevalence of prototypical physical quantities such as duration and mass in the
experimental sciences, the classes of structures that uniquely specify ratio scales have been the
most studied in the axiomatic representational theory of measurement. Several different accounts
for the sufficient conditions for such an homomorphism to exist have been provided (see for
instance [146] (p. 226), [184,186,187]), often motivated by constraints of empirical decidability. I employ
a structure of this kind to characterize material wealth, but I leave it open which axioms are required
to flesh it out properly. For instance, it is unclear whether we need an axiom of density [146] (p. 226)
for there may be an infimum of monetary value (a certain fraction of a cent in an arbitrary currency).
Any whole whose atomic individuals are individual human beings will be called
a human population.
Theorem A2 (Suprema of Aggregates). For any two individuals x and y which are elements of S,
the association x y is the supremum for x and y with respect to the part-whole ordering relation @.
Postulate 23 (Suprema of Mereological Systems). Every set S from a mereological system hS, i has
a supremum, denoted by [S].
Philosophies 2017, 2, 17 47 of 56
This development was made explicit to allow the following; take the elements of S to designate
the 23 football players from Brazilian National Football Team. Then [S] is the aggregation x1 ... x23 .
Since the part-whole relation is reflexive, then [S], the Brazilian Football Team is itself a logical
individual z, z S.
Definition A7 (Species of a Population). For an aggregate [S] and an equivalence relation 1 over S.
The set of species S = {S 1 , ..., S n } of S are the equivalence classes produced by the quotient
set S/ 1
Definition A8 (Genus of a Population). For a set of species S and an equivalence relation 2 over S .
The genus G of S is the equivalent class produced by the quotient set S / 2 where 2 picks
a nontrivial superordinate property or set of properties shared by all members of S
In Social Oppression Theory (Appendix A.3), each social genus has at least two species. We now
deploy other adapted Bungean constructs, those of monospecific and polyspecific populations [188]
(p. 154).
Definition A10 (Polyspecific Population). An aggregate [S] is a polyspecific population with regard
to a genus G with n species if and only if there exists at least two atomic individuals x and y inside S where
x S i I and y S j I , I = {1, ..., n}.
Definition A11 (Material Wealth). A theory of material wealth is 4-tuple E = hS, W, N, li where:
This axiom is prima facie false for it makes co-ownership of a same individual asset impossible.
It was stated for purposes of simplification. A way to secure its plausibility is with the following ad hoc;
for an asset t allegedly co-owned by human beings and , t can be decomposed as the concatenation
of two distinct objects t = u v and we may have l u and l v.
Through aggregation, we may form human populations of certain social kinds. The collective
wealth of a social group thus simply is the concatenation of all the assets owned by its members.
Axiom 16. For a fixed system of currency $ and a concatenation of material goods w W, the monetary value
m of w is the image of a function f : W R+.
This axiom is merely the lawful assignment of monetary values to a collection of material assets.
Assuming the ratio-scalability of monetary value, the function f is of the form y = ax, where a is a real
number greater than zero. Conversions other currencies are achieved by multiplication with the proper
positive real number.
This axiom is inconsistent with the possibility of negative wealth due to debt. I am deliberately
excluding this possibility also for the sake of simplicity. Under this framework, debt would be
interpreted as the possession of an asset with negative value of worth.
The following axioms are the regimented versions of Axioms 1-7 in the main text (Section 4.6):
Axiom 18. The function f that assigns relations of oppression to social genera is bijective.
This axiom was defined this way to avoid cumbersome quantification over predicates, which
would require a second-order logic.
(xOi y) (|Si | = 2) (x = [S 1 ]) (y = [S 2 ])
(xOi y) (|Si | > 2) (x = [S 1 ]) (y = ([S 2 ] ... [S n ], n = |S i |))
mx my
Axiom 21. For all x, y S, for all m n R+, xOi y > .
nx ny
m1 m
Axiom 22. For all x, y G i , for all m, n R+, z, w G j , > 2 (zOj w (S i S j 6= )).
n1 n2
H is a set of atomic individuals, the set of all individual human beings H = (x, y, z...)
is the associative binary operation of aggregation among elements of H
The following axioms are the regimented versions of Axioms 8-11 in the main text (Section 4.9):
Axiom 24. For all x H, for all i I, there is one an only one n R so that i (x) = n.
Axiom 25. For all x H and for all i I, there is one and only one n R so that if i (x) = n, then there is
one and only one and n .
Axiom 26. For all x H, for all y H, for all i I, there is one and only one x , there is one and only
one y respectively for i (x) = n and i (y) = o. Then:
Axiom 27. For all x S j1 , for all y S j2 , for all i I, assuming that x and y are independent and identically
distributed random variables over G j , then Pr(i (x , y ) = 0) > 0.5.
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